Sunday, September 6, 2009

Homesickness, or: A Slightly Less Tragic Variation on Donald Hall’s “Without”

I scrape myself into the corners of this place
Like the sighing black bear surrendering itself to its cave:
A cyclical empty necessary waiting room
I cannot breathe in without
Hills rising and falling and cradling
My home without storm symphonies or bird bands no
Horizons no blushing forests no polite coyotes no
Scent of wet fire curling down my throat reclining from
No beds of damp sweet leaves just

Glass gravel garbage ground
Into flat defeated grass without
Clover without rabbits without apple
Trees without water songs dripping after rain I am
Drowning without tomatoes pressing wine onto my tongue and
Blind without the sun in the morning
And the afternoon
And the evening and

No light no wingspans no thaw unbearable
Nomadic homeless monsters screaming
Smashed moonlight huddled into clogged gutters
No cinnamon no cattails no chicoree creeping
Sky blue against the willful river no fog rising
Away from the clouded quartz surface at dawn no
Frozen silence fragile as glass

This winter without mercy an imprisonment this hole
No seasons no sleeping no sound the wind it suffers
Without snow without sediment without space
Between my fingertips I longed for a garden wilted
Without thistle without milk without amen
Without warmth without footprints without nests

1 comment:

  1. A poem in response: The Turn of Seasons

    The brilliant white and yellow spheres descend
    from the crowns of buildings, and focus into the eyes of cars.
    Where once I looked up and saw lives staring down through glass
    I now see trees grow.

    What happened to the activity, the vibrant skittle-colored life
    that made my heart beat to the pulse of a community?
    I wonder now as the small town houses shutter their eyes
    and sleep
    at ten:pm.

    I wander home through parks where no musicians play,
    where an artists could paint the bricks with sand
    and people could come to see each other below the trees.

    I fight against my slowing pulse
    willing myself to stay awake although there is nothing
    open besides a smoky billiard hall.

    The only comfort on this slow night is
    knowing that you and I are living different lives under the same moon,
    and that soon, we will play in the same snow.

    ReplyDelete