AT NIGHT, IN NOVEMBER, TRYING NOT TO THINK OF ASPHODEL
No one is ever taking anything with him
to that deserted island which allows
you to check just one thing,
like some cheap airline whose jets fall
apart on the runway. One book
or one album or one wife—
we’re always choosing but never going
and it bothers me. How quiet
the place must be, and clean and possessed
by an expectant air: soon, soon,
they’ll come, packing light
but preciously and they’ll have to stay,
sure, but they’ve brought
that which they could not bear to be
absent. Such a place
would hum, I think, with longing to be
lived in. Such a place
does not exist and if you listen
the world is louder
for it. In the air that is always too close
with alarms, with sirens,
with the sad shamble
of a train, it is hard to hear trees speaking
the language we just made
up. Or I did, thinking
of you. You will lament your appearance
in these words, just
as I regret my own
in the police blotter
someday for stealing armfuls of oranges,
for running away with
the sun. Maybe,
I’m wrong: I could live with that much infamy,
I could speak to the morning
and the mirror
in the strange tongue of the pine trees.
If I had never known you,
my choosing would be
easy, because in all the world to which I belong
something would remain
that mattered enough
to bring. But here I am planting that flower that grew in hell.
8 comments:
Okay, you need to stop writing so many damn poems.
I'm outta control....:)
a brilliant poem! thank you.
Thank you!
This is gorgeous. Man.
Sad, true, pretty you.
!
beautiful
no, really beautiful
Thank you, Annmarie.
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