Thursday, January 27, 2022

HAIRCUT

 

There was a time when you would
never have let her get this close,
a time when neither of you could be in
the same room for more than a moment.
Her touch was not of your concern,
her words no longer yours to decipher.
But you have no one else to ask
to help with this most ordinary of tasks;
so here you sit, pale and shirtless
in the porcelain chill of bathroom light
as she trims and snips, seemingly
at random, cautiously maneuvering
the electric trimmer across the contours
of your skull, rounding the arches
above your ears, stepping back to consider,
then moving closer, as a lover might
that moment just before a first kiss.
You will not speak of this as an intimacy.
You will manage a simple Thank you,
reaching quickly for the worn shirt
hanging haphazardly from the radiator,
as if suddenly realizing that you were late
for one appointment or another, or that
something you could not quite name
had startled you into movement.

Wednesday, January 19, 2022

USED RECORD STORE

 

You can smell the basements of long ago
here within these cardboard sleeves,
slender spines creased and breaking apart,
can almost feel the dampness seeping through
the cold cinder blocks, stale cigarette smoke
and voices turned suddenly into ghosts.
You can hold the shroud of another world
half-awake, waiting to be rediscovered,
can wander aimlessly the long, narrow aisles,
the way you did when you were still a kid,
hungry for any sign of life to find you.
You thought those songs would last forever,
the way summer did in every chorus,
repeating endlessly into a silence not quite.
You thought that girl who taught you
to kiss would stay just a moment longer.
the sound of her laughter like the incantation
of something just beyond your reach.
You are still searching, thumbing the racks
for something you may have missed,
still looking and listening for a message
that has taken so long to find you.

Friday, January 14, 2022

BROTHER SONG

 

Brother, have you at last earned
the peace and solitude
which somehow eluded you
on this side of the earth?
Perhaps you speak now in ways
I cannot hope to understand:
the repeating parentheses
of gently falling snow,
insistent pulse of a birch tapping
against the window glass,
sudden shock of a crow wing torn
and frozen to the sidewalk.
You, who saved up your words
like trinkets for a rainy day,
offer no reply but this,
the space you have shaped
in your former image.
Or perhaps your silence has
become your song at last,
the one you had been secretly
rehearsing all along.

Monday, January 3, 2022

THE MISSING FINGER

 

(for Nels Natus, 1896-1959)
In one version, your grandfather walks
purposely through the gently rustling field,
his steps only slightly wider than usual,
jaw clenched, mouth pulled inward,
holding in one upheld hand the finger
which the shears have suddenly removed.
In the barn, the sheep wait, perplexed,
half-kneeling, dark blood not their own
already seeping into damp wood and straw.
In another telling, he angles the gun
as though it were another limb, one eye
closed to the world of dancing summer leaves,
of soft breezes and silent water winding
back upon itself. He is an easy target
for himself, the burnt smell of flesh strangely
familiar, as the war draft notice flutters
on the kitchen linoleum, nearly rising into flight.
No one is left now to remember, or to claim
this as anything other than simple curiosity.
Yet in your mind's eye you can clearly see him,
his worn denim sleeve waving tentatively
to someone in the distance, someone whom
he cannot make out, his face nearly concealed
by a passing cloud of sepia and dust.
But you know it's him by what is missing,
the way the moonlight slashes through
unexpectedly -- once, then again.

Monday, December 27, 2021

IN THE ABSENCE OF

 

Lately, my daughter has been having brief episodes of leaving this world. What were once generally referred to as spells. Or perhaps, it is the world that is turning away, walking past her periphery and into nothingness. The world of things simply needing a moment to collect itself. The world of images suddenly with nothing new to offer. Perhaps she is discovering, as she must, that the universe is made mostly of absence, that form is yet another emptiness, and emptiness that which we perceive as form. "Just now," she says, "when I was talking to you, for a minute I couldn't see or hear you." "But I was right here," I remind her, "Even when you thought I had gone away." I want her to remember this, many years from now, want her to rest easy in the absence I have created solely for her.

Thursday, December 23, 2021

GHAZAL LOOKING EAST, THEN WEST

I come from a language that has no future tense,
where love itself is measured simply by standing still.
My mother's ancestors brought bad habits but good songs,
their hungry ghosts lingering around the whiskey still.
You told me once that loyalty was a defect of character.
My heart is a three-legged dog following you still.
Perhaps it's not love if something doesn't get broken.
When everything shatters, even the world becomes still.
My daughter spied a dolphin in the Mississippi last week.
A child's eye can do that, can hold a great river still.
We listen closely to the arguments of winter crows,
the air between each shriek all the more still.
My thoughts weren't all that interesting, so I let them go.
They wore themselves out, pretending to be still.

Monday, December 20, 2021

MATHEMATICS

 


My scalp prickled with tiny beads of anxiety. Everyone had left school but me, and Mr. Heaney, who hovered like an unwelcome shadow, rising occasionally from his desk, hands clasped behind his back, his New Balance sneakers silent in their slow, measured steps. The blackboard had been wiped clean, dark as the night sky, only a few ghostly wisps of another world showing through. I was trying and failing, trying and failing, at long division, the paper wearing through from my endless corrections. "The universe is made of numbers," I was told again and again. "You must know this, if you are to know anything." I did not doubt this, though it was a language the Creator had somehow chosen to keep from me. I labored on as the afternoon light gradually shifted, and the clock ticked out its seconds, each with a small sense of finality. I could imagine the invisible threads connecting all things, though I gave them neither name nor meaning. I could hear the voices of summer outside rising and falling, could almost make out the words that elicited their sudden laughter, though it all seemed, in those moments, to be light years away.

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