When I climbed down the cliff by rope,
a heron fished from a boulder below, stretching her neck
the way a monk in prayer
leans toward a page of chant.
A seaplane, blustering animal, took flight,
but did not distract her, nor did I,
nor the migrating clouds,
the massed choir of pines.
From their nest of twigs
a pair of eagles rose,
hovered in wind over the stone
crest of the hill,
and like the presence felt in a room
where someone has died,
I almost glimpsed
what I was before entering this world.
Sometimes my father is big.
Sometimes he is small.
There are nights
when my father is young,
and days when he is old.
Tonight he is his father’s
father’s father,
reading by light of an oil lamp
in this rough cabin.
The print strains his eyes.
He holds his glasses aside,
tilts the page to catch
the light of flame.
He cradles the book like an infant
in his workman’s hands.
If I enter the room and say his name,
what would it be?
Winter Moon? Wind-shaped Cloud?
Rose past bloom?
And yet he is as perfect there
as the complicated arrangement of stars.
Tonight, wind circles the logs of this house,
forms the words on the page.
His eyes grow weary
following their swirl. The words
do not want to be still.
They tell him how much time
he has left in this life.
They form a clock with recalcitrant hands;
they chime the hour
with the owl’s fluted song.
One day, they say,
he must leave his books behind,
his papers, the shapes his hands
have rendered.
He will travel alone,
a susurrant sea, the night
a darkness without stars.
At this place in the story,
God climbs in your window
while you sleep,
while the moon and the sea
pray to each other:
hallowed be thy name
. . .
and God stands beside your bed
watching your breath rise
and fall in your chest,
as it has without fail since your birth.
He opens his book of names
and pressed flowers fall
from the pages.
The cats rub themselves
on the frayed hem of his robe
while God studies your scars
and whispers,
Don’t believe
everything they tell you
of your own failings,
it’s just that ancient sorrow,
the same old stones
weighing your pockets down,
the endless failure
of the blossom
to remain blossom,
of clocks to keep still.
The first morning is inside you
waiting to be born.
And God sweeps the floors of your house
and gathers up the dust
which small birds carry to their nests.
All you see when you awake —
the moon setting, and the sea,
and God’s shadow,
rumpled as a cloak
at the foot of your bed.
counts the solitudes, restless hours,
quickening days, every small
birth and death
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of my father's life.
Each moment significant, each
must be counted:
the time between darkness
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and birds,
between waking and the dream
that walks backward into night,
the instant just before
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he pours tea into his cup â
my father's watch must keep account,
mark the ledger
of his accumulated years.
Its quiet ticking is the sound of dripping water
which is the first music â
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concerto for heartbeat,
continuous percussion of the feet.
Sometimes his watch
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counts back into memory,
and then my father's hair loses its silver,
the colour of moonlight
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on still water;
his hair grows darker, thicker,
and my father, briefly young.
But the watch will not keep still.
It counts the hours my father sleeps
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and each second
sleep stands outside the house
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and refuses to enter.
My father's watch, stoic, deliberate,
marches into the future.
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Iris swell and blossom
and dry like inky paper on the stalk.
Leaves uncurl their fists,
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become the colour of blood
and sail into air.
And the moon face of my father's watch
keeps counting,
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alone in its lonely task
as my father grows old
and the stars, like distant porch lights,
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switch on, and on.
for Patrick
With needle and thread so fine
I can’t see,
you stitch the pond to the blossom,
leaves to their stems, stones
to the damp earth.
Your threads a thousand hues,
this garden
your coat of many colours
the birds fly to each morning,
where they unfurl
the bright embroidery of dawn.
On your knees as though in prayer,
you carve rivers in a map
of the known world
that furred creatures visit
and might mistake for Eden,
its curious god and his wide hands
pulling chaos,
planting order.
And if you sing or pray
to the small gods of stones,
or to the hand that ripples the water,
I won’t tell. And if at times
you leave your body
to view your creation
as our Father in Heaven looks upon it,
I won’t tell that, either.
Both day and night are gates
in and out of this life.
Our shoes dream dust and shade.
Our hands move like the shadows
birds make when they fly.
And when I ask,
set down your stitching and tell me
of the past lives of roses,
and how Time tangles itself
in the basket
where its threads are kept,
our past and future
impossibly knotted together,
then tell me again how this garden
is a book of poems
the moon memorizes when you sleep,
and how you’ve wakened nights
and lain in the dark,
hearing him
whispering verses to the sea.
after lines by Patrick Lane
I went searching for you. The voice
I heard behind my head, fierce,
quiet, was my own soul singing
above the moving tide, over the stones
shining and wet beneath the moon. Already
she had flown to you on the other side
of the mountains, beyond the shadowed
face of snow. I wasn’t afraid.
I have found and lost you many times
on this earth. There is no other way
to come home but by walking
past ponies grazing in their winter fur,
rusted skulls of abandoned cars,
past the unconcerned grass, boulders
in constant prayer. It is what I must do:
wash my face again and again in the stream
until it drips with the sun’s light,
the soles of my shoes worn
to a holy O.
for Rob
You didn’t choose me, I chose you.
I chose to come back. I missed darkness,
dogs barking all night, the lament of geese
on a journey they’ll never know the reason for,
but fly because they must, because the sky
longs for the bells of their loneliness.
I wanted grief again, my back wet and cold
against the earth, your slender finger raised
toward each constellation, changed into the shape
of someone or some thing we have loved.
Around us, trees mapping their new buds,
green stars pointing the way to summer.
for Nancy
The delicate hand of a mole
our cat discarded on the path.
In January, all that’s left:
the skeleton of last summer’s leaf.
What my dog carries home. Once
it was a whole frozen turkey.
Winter trees lined with snow.
The stumps our slash fire didn’t burn.
Tonight’s sliver of moon.
When your body went up in flame.
Now you are everywhere, my sister,
and nowhere. In the air
inside that bleached skull of a deer
with spring grass in its eyes.
for Drew
My heart, blind fish, dreams light,
love, its oxygen.
My heart, little rabbit, has memorized
your smell, your handprint on my skin.
My heart, little snowflake, leaps out of sky,
dizzy for its own cold joy.
I can take a little boat across the night.
I can find you again and again.
How did we make a language only we understand?
I have known you a long time.
There is no end. Only a veil, illusion, a mirror.
Astonishment the oldest song.
Even my breath flies into the past.
At wind’s touch, the bell shivers,
but, faithless lover, wind moves on.
And don’t get me started on how many dead
we’ve laid in the ground. Long ago,
I climbed down from the sycamore
and became a woman. What
was the sense in that? And just last night
I touched your stubbled face in dream.
How like breath you vanished at dawn.
But I shall sing
to the bloodied dawn
and settle the stars
into their nests
my darting eyes
quick among the stones
and blossoms oh
how I will dazzle you
with my song
where you waited, little moth, just before
you fluttered into the womb of your mother,
and where you will wait for your body
to release its last held breath. Don’t go
looking under stones, or sea foam, or petals
strewn at the edge of the road.
It is right behind you.
You can’t turn fast enough.
Quietly it follows you,
picking the wildflowers
it holds in the small of your back.
The rose is an argument with grief.
Birth, an argument with death.
Music, with silence.
The fence, with infinity.
Love, with finality.
My ragged shoes, with your distance,
the road a vehicle for longing,
the wind arguing with my hair,
this heart who has set her face
and will not give in to despair.