Five part poem about mortality. |
How the Rats Felt Pink eyes wandering, Bony hands reaching to the high places Twitching and trembling with the sounds We introduced them all to darkness We all felt the quiet synaptic plunge. The Lord is with thee The owners of the dead Made a solemn procession. Leaning over into the flesh bag, Gently, gently laid the bodies to rest. We all washed our hands like Pilate Among all the dead ones, we helped others Some others were allowed to live. Blessed art thou among rats Vapors from the shallow breaths of the dead – Oh, we breathed them in, life through our nostrils And they wisped out of our trained fingers, Seeping into the living ones, And they breathed easier, I swear. We were the ones who did not kill that day He restoreth the souls Blessed be the one who gives us life for a while. Walking Among Gravestones He is not dead, but sleepeth. We talked all big and alive, There among the stones of old, Kicked up cold dust and the crinkly grass Abominations, irreverences, Like the wooly worm, the conqueror on the stone Blood in the earth cried out against it. Yea, though I walk through the valley, We shall meet again. I expect to meet an angel Maybe one of the stone ones come down Mourning and grappling, crying with the dead Bless me, I say, I will not let you go. Blessed be the one who gives us life for a while; What we promote now Resents change in rank later. I will not let you go until you bless me. The Dead Girl The sea Gives up its dead at night Full of salt and seaweed Salted those bodies away Down in the smokehouse of the sea, The Great Sea is the only name I know. Dead girl walks out of the water, Seaweed in her hair Moon dripping from each finger With just one thought left in her Fish-rotten mind One thought left, and it was enough To keep the sea creatures From her pale and sodden skin She walks there in the moonlight Moon dripping off every finger She walks She listens She hopes And she thinks that one That very one thought Fear not, for behold, Thou hast found favor with God. The birds came out, Those dignified taskmasters, Silent and feathered, wings against her lips Blessed art thou among women. Requiem The great rolling machine of the passing of things Surrounds me with noise, Things that are not quite as real as you. I have searched the sky and dug in the earth My burrow, my good soil has been spoiled Graves are no good for gardens. O the goneness of things, Like you, o my grandmother Noble like nothing ever was Even when you were dying And they bore you up in all their frantic arms Your lioness head lay on your chest And you were thinking, yes, Thinking that very one thought O my legend You were thinking hard of a way to fix things. It was a rude interruption We were going to talk, you see, We were going to speak well to each other again. Our pink eyes wide with inevitability, Aneurysms and other things lie in wait Handy tools to those who would be rude. Handy tools to those who give us life for a while. Wisdom I am not a wise woman I slap my palms on the dusty ground Grinding my essence to grains I have shot my house full of arrows, O God And I am no wise woman Sages slap their palms in the dust Raise their hands to the higher power While I live in vegetation, graze on the flowers Hear, o hear, I beat my palms in the wastelands, Raise my hands in the place of the desert. Slap out the cracks and wait Wait for the rains, Wait for the God, Wait for the answers, the oracle The sand is hot and dry. |