When we meet now, we meet always
at dusk to play. The hard sun soothed,
easing off, is a mere sky of placid sea,
a pale plain of dimming blue and dun.
Even against the forest of walnut,
sassafras, and scrub oak hedging
our court, I can see his silhouette clearly,
as if he were a distinct piece of night
broken away, the sureness and potency
of night taken shape and set before me.
I imagine a greeting.
I serve. He receives. We play.
He's quick, anticipating me, meeting
each volley squarely. The
thonk
of the ball
found and sent speeding back and forth
is a smooth, fulfilling pleasure in the body,
as keen, as sweet as the swallow
of warm bread dipped in vinegar oil.
My aim determines his position; his return
predestines mine. I like what I become.
I adore his reckoning. More than once, I want
to jump the net and take him down. Pin
his shoulders. Kiss his face. Our game
is more than memory and prophecy.
Gradually the screen of trees dissolves,
disappears; or else the night expands,
absorbing the spaces inside each vein
and limb; or else the forest and the night
switch names, trade places. I lose sight
of him among the cast of stars.
His return comes from farther
and farther away, the thrust of the ball
sounding more and more of shadow,
its journey back to me a longer
and longer message. I can still judge
his angle, still hear the nuance
of his strategies. I know his study.
I dart forward, swing high,
send the next ball back with all
the might of my several minds, watch,
listen, ready in my stance, wait
for as long it takes.
Approaching two handspans from dusk,
he is an infinitesimal fraction of the day
concluding. As he looks west, his shadow
lays a line pointing due east. His spine
is as straight as the walking staff he carries.
He strolls through the center of a grassland,
seed-headed weeds and wild rye swirling
around him in a gold glinting wind. He walks,
as well, within the memory of a circle of fish
he once saw similarly swirling, a living ring
flashing silver in a silver sea.
He is three degrees northwest of madness,
three steps beyond glory, standing alongside
a bank of sunflowers up to their necks
in madness, up to their necks in glory.
He passes through a coordinance
of fragrances: yarrow, nectarine, salt,
a vagueness of myrrh. The presence
of his place is validated by a yellow-headed
blackbird who watches with its one
appropriate eye.
Reflecting an angle of attention, he pauses
as he attunes to the sounds of insects
chirring in the weeds of a rain-filled delve.
For a moment, he is located both inside
and outside his vision of finding that storied
baby hidden in a basket among water-filled
weeds and the sleepy strumming of crickets.
Would he take the infant up in his arms?
He gauges in the same way the spreading
branches of the fig tree calculate. His face
equals the sky he surveys. He enters the night.
He is more than the darkness as it dives away
backward now toward the soundless roar
of the stars appearing from all directions.
It could make a person dizzy,
those spinning, circling heavens filled
with knots of stars, swirling blue
stars approaching, blue-shadow stars
fading away. It's a mayhem of reeling,
a scattering blue dust of star clouds
circling the circling centers of spiraling
galaxies wheeling forever toward no
known horizon.
Someone, immersed
in the deep beauty of these blue celestials,
could get lost while waiting for hands
to deliver perhaps an orange, perhaps
an apple, scarlet or gold, a sprig of green,
a blossom, pink dogwood, spring plum.
Inspired by
“Golden Horn” Tondino
The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Texas
We feared this most in those days:
the black moon in a white sky.
On waning nights the glossy black
gleam of this moon's beauty inching
toward the west was a ponderous
pearl too heavy to admire.
During the nights of its fullness,
however, there was no lunacy
in the black moon but a lunar pall
pervading the countryside, touching
every hearth and field, as they say.
Any soul, inevitably so entered,
succumbed to that dearth. Remember
the wearisome wringing then.
And the hooded witch flowers
spawned by this moon in the damp
of midnight were no lilies. White
moths born of their black seeds
were the art of those blossoms,
foreboding their theme.
We feared the endless depth
of the black moon, the impenetrable
entryway to its wide-open tunnel,
the paralyzed swallow of its toothless
mouth. Is it true, an abyss can create
shadows of energy? We often found
dreams in the threat of the black
moon, in the same way as we often
heard voices coming from the empty
sockets of the graveyard skulls.
The black notes of the black moon's
music penned on parchment were
as vacant as the black dots of the stars
seen in their constellations against
the white night of the black moon
For the comfort of nostalgia, Maestro,
here is a coin. Play again the dirge
we danced to in those days.
The screeching cries
of the killdeer in the night create
their own narrow channels through the blades
of broken grasses and sharp-edged
dunes lining the shore.
Likewise,
the nightjar's whistle cuts a passage,
like a stream, across the open desert.
Only the nightjar knows the stars
of that passage, just as the limpkin's
wail is a direction only the limpkin forges
through the marshlands.
The furrows
of the field cricket's triplet chirps and shrill
courtship trills transform the sorrels
and doveweeds in the ditch, fashioning
needle ways and grids of space by the run
of their own notes.
And the thin cough-bark
of the bobcat establishes another sparse and arid
stalk among the rocks and brushy land where
it roots and withers.
No one can fully explore
the corridor made through the dark by the coyote's
jagged shrieks and clacking yaps, those yelping
howls like sheer descending cliffs, a noise
jumbled like rock-filled gulches and gulleys.
None but the coyote.
On icy plains, the snowy
owl occupies the cavern of its own silence,
a cavern formed by its quest for sweet blood
of lemming or hare. Within the polished,
black-and-white crystals of the freezing
night air, the owl watches from the warm
hollow of its stillness.
The inner eye of the Cat Goddess recites
without pausing the blood verses of foraging
mice written beneath a snow-covered field.
The Basking God of the lyre snake, red-
bellied snake, and blue garter snake
is explaining the coil of the galaxy.
The Upside-Down Creator of the nuthatch
descending the tree headfirst in circles
is willing the sky and toe hooks to hold tight,
and they do. Seers and Soothsayers are casting
lots at midnight to determine which beetleâ
the elegant checkered, the nine-spotted
or two-spotted, the willow leaf, whirligig,
or harlequin cabbageâwill be Lord Inheritor
of the Following Day. By her shifting, soaring,
rearranging, and scattering wisdom, the Prophet
of Autumn Winds makes visible the art
of the atom. And the Composer of the Sun's
Radiance is conducting the chords, the keys
and harmonies, of colliding ices and cold celestial
showers, flowing molten lavas and metals
and all migrating herds and tribes. She counts
the measures of the evening rains murmuring
like sleeping birds, numbers each single note
in the shimmering stanzas of Saturn's rings,
in finger cymbals, temple bells, and carillons,
andâthere tooâin the cadenza of the white
rose worn behind her ear.
except for the smallest white button
of mushroom leading the rank-and-file
up the rotting trunk of the oak, except for bulb,
corm, pip, and spore and the passive mien
of the autumn field when the off-kilter
scatter and skyward rattle of grasshoppers
have disappeared and except for the crowd
of acacia thorns pointing toward all destinations
possible in every direction out from the stem
center of their circumferences and aside
from the moss-and-mire covered bones
of stripped roots and crippled branches left
piled akimbo to molder among the beetles
in the sinless murk of the forest floor,
except for gorge, gulch, gully, and ravine,
except for the moment waiting in the fist
of the sycamore's tufted fruit and in the sting
of the loon's longing before it cries
and in the poise of the desert swallowtail
before it lifts from the dry mountain
wash and in the aim of the alligator's
undeviating glare before it swirls and sinks
in the generative and ancient slough, except
for the moment waiting in the green walls
of palm spikes, pendants and rosettes, knots
and currents of saw grasses and orchids,
in the tight weave and bloat of prayers
and weapons, in the moment before I move
out into the empty plain of the open sky silent
with sea-light, as if I were a wild and divine
thing myself, to be going I know not where.
Verses 6â10
6.
Deer passed the day quiet in this unmown
meadow. These grasses pressed to the earth
are the beds where they lay.
7.
My nose to the earth, I followed
the passing of the field mouse weaving
through the wheat grass, leaving seed husks
where she stopped to feed. I sniffed
the rank marking of the weasel's
passing on a rotting stump, rolled
in the scattered twigs and shell
remnants remaining after the passing-on
of the kingbird's nestlings, looked up
to the sky-scent and cry of the red-tailed
hawk sailing past overhead.
8.
Remember the only purely good man
to walk this earth? It could simply be
a wish contained in his myth that gardens
of tiny ferns, roseroot, and calamint,
meadow rue, white blossoms of baby's
breath, sprang up in the hollows
of his footprints, wherever he passed.
9.
A thin scarf of clouds draws itself slowly
over the face of the moon as the moon
passes over the stars and disappears behind
the arches of a stone gate, itself passing
with the earth through midnight and heading
toward the home that is morning.
10.
Like daylight passing through gold
glass beads stretched across a doorway
or the scent of wine grapes passing through
a latticed arbor or a feathering wind
passing through willows beside rippling
water passing through their shadowsâ
so a spirit, a ghost, a goblin, a god, created
and palpable, passes through every word
written, spoken, sung.