Found
in the Rushes
It is
wondrous
to
hear your silence
for
your paper
wind
has created
once
more the universe
You
cannot imagine
the
amount of petals
fallen
on me since
our
eyes rolled
to the
different winds
It may
be
the
new era
it may
be
the
sweeping of antennæ
across
night’s marbled court
that
has turned
a
scattering of stars
to the
incandescent knot
of
morning
Hot
breath wakes my loins
but
cool and infinite fingers
reweave
your name
in
aqueous convolutions
in my
brain
You
are here
my
heart is soaring
Manhattan Waltz
When I
read your loveable bombast, Walt,
of
American men and women more
than
great—divine!—I myself divine
a
touch of devil in the wings, since
your
theatre has cast me in myself
moulding
nature on nature
in
folds that scarce can wait.
Myself
reads you with a life
of
preparation yet unknown
with a
preparation of lives the same
as a
rush of knowledge reaches to exacerbate
although
the cosmic catalogue repeats savant
repeats
your lesson in a solemn gust
a
flaunt of solitary pages whirred
on
infinite horizons, dust:
and
rains
of solid peaches
(Persimmons!
you would say)
You remind me of a friend
who
wrights a poesy that preaches.
The
world is crying out in gambols
Teach
us. Teach us. Teach us.
But the dream
is in
disclaim. And the song of the head
rolls
through countless antechambers
antic
in its echo, arctic in its heart
(Can
this suggest a polar art?)
Through
the Umbrella
Where does one look
when
the ribs are bare
and
the jewel falls
from
the hollow middle
silk
raps on raw warp air
bone
hones dry song
black
silver face
marble
knight
is
gone
but
left his lace
rooks
no more
a
raven gone—the queen
was
wishing her hair
as
long—as long as longing
and as
long gone
and on
and on
Alexander A. Klimenko is a poet, an actor, a linguist and a translator. Born in Manhattan, he grew up in San Francisco and has lived in Paris, now, for many years, working in radio, television, stage and film. The poems he offers up to the Divine Spirit and readers, alike, are excerpted from his manuscript, Love’s Leaves.
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