The
Ship of My Brothers
I
was enveloped in a peace that I could not abide,
drifting
across the seas in my ship of old oak,
when
I spied a brigantine out of the corner of my eye
that
was racing to the end of the starry black night.
It
was the ship of the seven sisters,
with
sailors all beturbaned,
dreaming
and
crying out, senseless, to that wine-dark sky:
“Aldebaran!
Aldebaran!
Aldebaran!”
And
they plunged into the depths of true wisdom
that
only madmen can know,
as
they sailed on the back of the bull
and
went down, down,
foundering
into the horizon below.
And
I’d like to go with them,
but
I can’t go now,
because
I have a meeting with a ram and a whale
before
the sun rises in the east,
and
shines upon my bow.
The Shepherd of Many Turns
The door to the night
braced in ignorance and sweat
guards my trade:
I tend to my sheep
and bellow and whoop
my apostate song.
When I die,
I will pass from man
to ewe
to plant
to ant
to dust
in that great psychosis of the soul.
And I am afraid.
Who is there to comfort me,
for I am alone amongst my flock
astride the silent mountains of Calabria?
And you see,
we are so very afraid these times.
The Gods Who Rule the Earth
Let
us say a few words for our son in his trying time:
When
he was young
he
was already old.
When
he was born,
we
sang him the El malei rachamim
and
we will sing it again
before
he is done,
like
a lullaby.
Every
word he writes is erased,
cancelled
from
the face of this earth,
and
from the face of the other earths that may be.
Every
breath he takes cannot fill his lungs,
his
fingertips are black with plague.
For
we are the gods that govern the world,
and
you must tremble.
We
come in swiftly brokered tenuous peace,
like
a golden thread intertwined in the hair of fate,
though
even fate belongs to us,
and
rests within our domain
that
is very much like a feud, but eternal.
So
tremble,
because
we till the earth
and
will always till the earth
until
your teeth fall from your faces
and
you regret
ever
having been born.
Letters
I
have written you one-thousand letters
and
planted them between my aorta
and
my best intentions.
Only
when I am dead
will
you remove from my heart the letters,
so
full of “hope you’re well”
and
“sorry to bother”.
But
it’s on these pages that passion’s ink
has
bled by now
through
every bit of whitest square.
That Empty Jar
In
my cabinet there is
an
empty jar of marmalade
that
stands alone, unregarded.
I
think I’ll fill it with my hopes and dreams today,
that
empty jar of marmalade,
receptacle
of my youth on display.
Were it to shatter on the floor,
what
would become then
of
my hopes and dreams therein contained?
Would
they scatter to the air and dissipate
or
would they melt there on the tile
to
stain my every waking moment,
a
reminder of my youth laid bare.
I
think I’ll keep my jar hidden,
so
only I can reach it
locked
away,
and
my hopes, my dreams,
I’ll
eat them
everyday.
So
I won’t have to bear
to
see
my
life exposed, my will untested,
my
shame that pains me night and day.
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