The sun is a total green of light
inside a single mimosa seed riding
inside the sky-green and river-
green of its buoyant pod canoe.
A black tern holds its feet flat
against its body as it wings
through the green skies and currents
of an earth winging through sizzling
star celestials. A ship, a speck
passing by above on the green
undersurface sky of the ocean, has no
notion of the volcanic flow seeping
from a sizzling crack in the earth
miles below, the only line of light
appearing on the ocean floor.
It could be a frond of fern sizzling
and spooling, unfurling its green
wing within the current and wake
of the day, the only frond of fire
appearing on the rain forest floor.
Remember the eye of the tern,
a speck of sky in which rides
for this moment the full wake
of summer and its green currents,
the spool of the sun in its dawning.
It could easily be a shawl of light
placed around a woman's shoulders
as she rests beneath a mimosa,
unaware of a seed drifting high
above her on the green undersurface
sky of July. See how the green fronds
of the rain unfurl, spooling away
in the ocean's current. Look again.
A crack appears across the universe
of a buoyant pod. The first throb
of the seed's green fire is dawning.
Once I saw a field of bluebonnets and fiery
paintbrush so solid with flowers it seemed
to be a surf and sea crests across which a ship
might sail petal by petal like a shadow passing
across an otherwise unbroken evening.
And I was the field, blue crests, stem
fire and surf. I was the shadow ship.
I was the evening passing. Everything
there in those moments was as inseparable
as the rhythm of the sea is inseparable
from the words of an old chanty sung
long ago by seamen inseparable
from a time no one now remembers.
At the shallow edge of a pond, I watched
an underwater nest of floating jelly-pod eggs,
a translucent, swayable heaven holding a thousand
eyes, bold dots of black, all seeing with one
flawless sight, and I was their vision.
I remember flying a summer migration,
each of us the flock indivisible, headed north
to breeding grounds. Paradise: our silver
feathered bodies, hearts and bones, solely
identical, all separate calls one single
sound emphatic. Our open wings were
the wheel and purpose of the sky turning
the earth exactly like the stars do.
That leaf indistinguishableâor that one
or that one, each magnificently anonymousâ
is bound as an entire mountainside of autumn
aspen. Each yellow spinning is the piece
and the whole of the standing forestâalone,
unique, synonymousâmoving with the Moving
that moves the aspen-altered wind and me.
A weaver, this spider, she plays her eight thin
black legs and their needle nail toes across
the threads faster, more precisely, than a harpist
at concert can pluck the strings in pizzicato.
Although blind at night, she nevertheless
fastens a thread to a branch of chokecherry
on one side of the path, links it to a limb
of shining sumac opposite, latches the scaffold
to ground stone and brace of rooted grasses.
And the structure takes dimension.
Skittering upside down across and around,
she hooks the hooks, knots the widening
spirals, the tightened radii, orbs and hubs,
bridges and bridgeheads. We can never hear
the music she makes as she plucks her silk
strings with all the toes and spurs and tarsal
tufts of her eight legs at once. She performs
the reading of her soul.
Oh, remember how vital her eyes, the eyes
of her gut, eyes of her touch gauging the tension,
her eyes of gravity and balance, of purpose,
steady eyes of reckoning. Don't miss
the moment when she drops, a quick grasp,
catches, swings forward again. An artiste.
She expands the sky, her completed grid
a gamble, a ploy played on the night. The silk
is still, translucent and aerial, hanging in a glint
of half-moon. The work is her heart strung
on its tethers, ravenous, abiding.
Listen . . . all white foxes, all white owls, all snowy
silver geese. Attend . . . all casual fish holding on
in the icy beads of a silver current. Snow leopards,
white bears, silver baboons, mottled white mice nosing
at autumn seeds . . . pause in unison, lift your heads.
Still your wings and heed . . . silvery blue moths fluttering
like flakes of moon. Long-haired, spike-horned goats
on precipitous cliffs, white spiderlings floating
mid-cloud . . . take note and remember.
Each barb
of every feather, every black-tipped ivory hair, every
luminous scale and fan-like fin, each knuckle of spine
and nail, each red drop at the pith of the marrow,
at the root of all glare and mettle,
every breath quiver,
every one, every single one, is beheld and declared.
I don't know if Jesus ever walked
in snow, through a storm of snow
blowing icy pieces stinging against
his face, in his eyes, snow melting
and freezing again in his hair until
it hung in stiff cords on his shoulders,
against his forehead. I've never seen
him pictured that way.
I don't know if he ever witnessed snow,
Jesus the Christ wrapped in robes that couldn't
keep out a winter wind of the mildest kind.
He would have had to swaddle his feet
and sandals in layers of cloth to walk through
the snow of a mountain pass, using his staff
along the narrows of slippery rocky paths.
Once in a May storm, I saw a hummingbird
hovering momentarily outside the window,
caught in a late spring freeze and snow-filled
fog. He was tiny iridescent feathers of green
and rose. He was a flittering bead of living color
taking off against the gray monument of winter.
I wonder if people would have followed
Jesus, climbing a mountain through the snow,
gathering around him there to listen, the wind
screaming its own beatitudes, whipping up
sudden gusts and shifts of snow descending
again over them like night. Hooded,
crouched down close together and sleeted
with snow, they might have resembled
a flock of sheep huddled on the hillside.
Once I saw a work of art lying abandoned
in the hoarfrost and snow of a forest clearing,
Van Gogh's
Starry Night
lying frayed among
the stiff and rattling grasses, that deep swirling
blue sky of bursting suns and splitting stars slowly
being buried by pearl on icy pearl of drift.
He could have told them the parable
of the blindness of snow-filled fogs
and white-outs, or the parable of the linking
prisms and patterns of any single flake,
or the parable of the transfiguration
by snow of needles, thorns, and jagged
stones. The breath of his words might
have been seen as a holy ghost of warmth
in the paralysis of that killing cold.
I don't know if Jesus ever witnessed snow.
It may never have snowed in Galilee,
although it is written that he rose
to heaven in “raiments white as snow.”
Anything could appear to me here now,
walking in this obfuscation of snow and fog,
a true blizzard, if the wind were swifter.
Totally veiled, I move on legs I can't see,
parting endless screens and doorways
of chilling silk and ice-threaded smoke.
A black swan might float before me
at any moment, a hand's breadth
from my face, emerging suddenly
through this solid alabaster, a swan
so black it's a mere vacancy of bird,
a perfect absence of itself. I could easily
proceed, entering the fall of its body,
its wings spreading into their own deep
hollows as it vanishes with me.
And it seems altogether probable
that a white wagon hung with ivory
orchids and pale ferns and pulled by white
sea turtles could pass silently
above me, trailing slithers of pellucid
flying fish and ribbon eels twisting
through swells of icy dust.
Many crippled angels attend me here,
hovering on all sides. My breath,
the same color as this storm, floats
through their snow-filled wimples, swirling
their gauzy pantaloons. Coming in and out
of existence as I touch them, they regard me,
holding their muslin canopies over my head,
reciting prayers of blindness. In my vertigo,
I posit these angels now, not as beings,
but as fictions of time creating
the framework of a necessary place.
This dizzy loss, this dizzy loss is the same
loss, the same gain as dancing slowly
nowhere, eyes closed, with a boy I remember,
a boy who draws me closer, taking me in,
as a winter landscape filled with drowning
seas of descending snow takes in
and transfigures all previous boundaries.
Just now a christ with white eyes
touched my face. I felt the drift
of his hand across my forehead, his fingertips
brushing with Braille lightness once
along my cold lips blessing thus aloud
each and every one of his missing bones.
It has its places, in the grains of frigid gray
dust on the moon, in the descent of a barb
of feather lost from a jay, in a rasp of leaf
released by the sky and sinking to winter.
Distinctly present in a stone hand lying open
on rubble, in a clear glass marble embedded
in place of an eye, in the shorn hair of dead
women taken for wigs, it is itself and actual
across hillsides before threatening thunder
begins, in hollow, in cavity, in null,
on the surface of the lake where the heron's
wavering reflection lay before the heron rose
and disappeared. It is there in the workings
of wind around isolated spires of rock, through
abandoned trestles, picking at the rotted wooden
beams of condemned bridges, there among dry
tares and tarweeds, in any shard of buried
pottery, any crust of insect hull, any fragments
of crushed shell spilled like splinters of bone
thrown for dice on the sand, as the sun's dark
light in the east at dusk. In the steady haunting
waiting here and now, it is replicated and fact.
as an easy wind circumnavigating the land,
spreading slender grasses, their tawny sheaths
and dry bristles bending and swinging
in my wake, or lifting seeds, the keys of white
ash, the cottons of white poplar, carrying
their promises within my boneless presence;
to be a gusty wind in winter, an airy
cloud of resurrection raising the fallen
snow, surging skyward off an open hillside,
a swirling spiral of icy light circulating
within me like blood;
to bring the native fragrances of ripe
orchards, vineyards, and cedar oils,
the fecund damp of mountain rain forests
into the streets of the city, becoming myself
the odors of sweet perfumes, frying meat,
and liquors, the yeast of loaves rising
on their racks, smoke and steam my allies;
to give to the august and muted needles
of the piney woods sounds harmonious,
to release chords of voices inside the spires
of red rock corridors or make visible the art
of light in motion on dew-covered vines
of morning glories, or bestow leaping
pirouettes to languid dust of abandoned roads;
to be an easy wind smoothing the skin
of a lake at dusk, barely touching its radiance,
to pass over those waters as negligibly
as a shadow passes over the eyes, as silently
as the spirit of deliverance passes over each night
without notice, soothing, barely touching,
the hands and brows, the lips of the sleeping;
it could be grandâan eternal breath like the wind,
transcendent and old, to be in death always
ancient in the way the wind is always new.