Sunday, February 20, 2011

When the sun comes...


...and hangs around a while, then I will be happy. Oh February, what a tease you are.
I am steadily revising what feels like everything I have ever written, so there is not much new to give you. Here's a first draft that I keep meaning to chop up and make better, but you can have it raw:


Some Elegy
You stand separate from the crowd,
and still I cannot find you
in this place packed tight with bodies—
I never asked to breathe these smells.

So you find me, and weave,
more feline than thread,
through the rest.
At your approach, my first thought:
Who wants a woman with stick legs and a round face?

We were beautiful children,
we moved in light, in circles,
embraced the awkward and the lithe;
we smelled of snow.

Here you hold yourself so still,
not statue-still, not stone.
Yours is the stillness of bones
that have given up on flesh.

You used to refuse all skirts,
borrowed blue jeans from your brothers.
I remember you rosy and dirt-faced,
your weak spots so well-hidden
I believed you had none.

You have embellished yourself with shadows: 
long hair that hangs down,
kohl, the illusion of cheekbones,
clavicle and wingbones
more prominent than what they hold.

I don’t believe now that you ever were a girl.
But I like to imagine you on a bicycle,
or putting in order feathers, small stones and shells.

Determination would suit you better than pallor
if you still possessed a will.

With those hands,
the gardens you could plant!

This wan waifishness
disturbs my sense of you
who used to be a finer creature: 
glossy, wellfed, wily and soft.

The way you slipped between trees,
evaded every thorn and wayward root—
you had talent then, native and untamed. 

You are smug and fragrant now
in the most mundane of ways:
talcum powder and rotting fruit.

I would like to see you with apple in your mouth,
red skin like blood on snow.
I have no hope that you will ever taste
the world’s blood now, that dulcet mineral.

You do not give.
You are not strong.
Every promise spoken comes to you in foreign tongue.

I think you used to sing.

Nothing I give you can draw your eye
or breach your skin, all pale fickle flash,
one long impenetrable grin.

I have for you no name.

You crave color for your hair eyes lips and fingertips.
You have no color of your own.
A collector of longings,
No pulse ever stirs your surfaces.
You stretch like a cat, and yawn.

No different, you say, than any other.

But you hide your sorrow better,
dress your sickness warm and rough and well.
You could get away with a corset or a veil.
Rhetoric and rules, historical traces do not apply to you.

I used to think of oceans when I watched you,
of riverbanks overrun.

You stretch the limits of proper, of beautiful:
nothing normal about the ability to appear so ill
and so at ease in these skins that suit no one—
the way you shrink yourself, then swell.

Remember, there was wholeness in your every gesture;
your vocabulary was your limbs.

Your body a tool you are learning to use
with the coldest precision,
a locked box you’re learning to pick.

I hope you don’t give yourself.
I hope you don’t freeze.
I hope I forget you.
I hope that you don’t.
I cannot care any longer
for your words, for your limbs.
Don’t put stones in your pockets.
I taught you to swim.

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