The Poet realizes he is not a Poet Warrior. From Bottle in the River.
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The Clearing Light filters through pregnant rain clouds, washes down walls— trees sitting on edges of ravines, where a bird calls. Call the butter in milk, soft and flexible, there if you stir things up. Call the oil in a soybean, full of nourishing texture, unknowing its plight, if only the soybean would combine with a thousand others, we’d feed an army, led by birds under the dark morning sky, marching to the day when all birds fly, marching to the day when all birds call, in the moment’s pulse, a thump in my chest, quickening in response to the call, soft and flexible, melting in the filtered light, seeing it awakens the dark with the good, and the soft— awakened by the sound of a raindrop, splat on a leaf, holding nothing but my gaze, which then moves upward and up, up and up to the mountainous sky, full of heavy water, ready to cry, to cry in joyous relief— the army was a dream— I am not a warrior! I am merely ready to pour through the clouds, and chase the sunlight down to me, to wash me clean, to clear my heart and mind, to soak my face, to let me let go, to let go of the mud and dirt and grime I’ve collected on the way to this clearing. |