A MAINE WINTER
Down from the north,
winds descend on the village,
question the need for light,
or calm or warmth.
And their wilful probing
addles the responses
behind red eyes, blue lips,
cheeks penetrated
by a thousand syringes of chill,
and bodies bent toward
the freezing dusk,
as they struggle to negotiate
iced-over remnants of puddles
sidewalks of bilious snow.
Sure, it’s just weather,
but imagine if it was some kind of monster.
It’s the worst of winter,
but what if it truly was a malignant force.
A woman falls down in the streets,
is immediately set upon
by the brumal beast,
by the frigid evil.
So, it is these things.
I apologize for mentioning them.
A BOY AT A FATHER’S GRAVE
You are not responsible.
Your fists were too small.
And your kick wouldn’t budge
a soccer ball,
let alone hurt a man
five times your size.
And the knife could barely cut bread
let alone a human heart.
Same as the stuff you threw:
stuffed animals, plastic cups,
spoonfuls of mashed potato.
They were harmless,
no matter how much
your brain weaponized them.
He dropped dead from
myocardial infarction.
It could have been diet.
Or even hereditary.
Your worst thoughts
had nothing to do with it.
Yes, you can still say sorry.
But regret is not confession of a crime.
EARLY TO BED IN A FISHING PORT
Moments before sleep, I hear men -
I'm wedged between listening and dreams -
it's the waterfront – the tide not merely
about moons and ocean
but strident voices empowered by fog -
winch engines, the loud drop offish -
church bells in white vestments -
the last boat honking into dock -
everything scattered, then enlarged,
by the thickening curtain of men's light
and God's dark/
and there's always a truck, in and out of
the warehouses,
packed to the brim for a night on a distant interstate -
and this is before the drunkenness,
the drops of salty rain,
my window braced for weather
and my head for where I live these days -
but I'll sleep well enough -
even at its worst, the bay's a pillow,
the gloomy harbour,
soft, straightened sheets -
even at their rowdiest,
I pull the people up over me -
somewhere, out there in emptiness,
low clouds spill into wind and chasten -
all reasons for waking are whisked away.
HOW WE SEE OURSELVES
Here’s
the place where
the
Chinese miners were murdered.
It’s the
Snake River.
Don’t worry.
You can
go near.
It won’t
bite.
It’s the
spot
where the
usual drunken hotheads
descended
on the camp
guns
blazing,
firing at
anything brown-skinned
that
moved.
It’s safe
now.
Even if
you’re a tourist from Korea.
More
American history shame
as if it
didn’t have enough already,
what with
slavery
and the
slaughter of the native tribes.
But these
were just a few Chinese miners.
Not an
entire race.
You could
even say
this was
just a blink
in the
way we see ourselves.
The
bodies are buried.
The blood’s
been scraped clean
from the
rocks.
So open
your eyes.
It’s okay
to look now.
THIS HOLD
I can’t let go
the first girl
I ever held tight
to me.
I can feel her in my
arms,
still just fourteen
years of age,
down by the quarry,
with its white
cliffs
and deep cobalt
blue waters.
The back of her
waist
is in my palms,
her brand-new body
is full against
mine
and the quiet dusk
is in just about
everything.
No love there of
course.
Maybe a spark.
But first times
intensify with the
years.
The veins won’t
release them.
Nor the bones.
I won’t let go
till I let
everything go.
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