All the Unmapped Stars
Oh,
we see the stars, all right,
their
brittle cold mystery
but
if you took the gentlest
of
knives and pushed open
the
top of my head like clay,
in
my body are all the warm constellations
one
could dream of, a star nesting
in
every fingertip, Polaris in each eye,
a
Milky Way dripping down my spine.
Here
are all my unmapped stars, the candles
of
my small hopes, always there inside me, and look,
there
are a few of yours too!
In the Bones of the Fire
I
must stride into this fire, step in
like
an exorcist and command the poison
out
from the wounds of self-loathing so
bitter
on my skin, my feet cooked crisp
in
a skillet of burnt failures.
I
must imagine myself into a light
I
cannot yet see, read words still to be found
by
these restless-songbird hands.
Look,
I have gathered kindling and crackling
branches
as bones for a fire. Watch me
stroke
this match aglow, shake that old
Phoenix
bird awake out of her complacent nest.
Watch
me lift with her, take my edge of sky
like
a smouldering memorial left over after
the
inferno of war.
Your Beauty 2
I
adore how you wear loveliness
in
the crinkles around your eyes
so
that the beauty you see becomes
part
of your face, you marvel,
you
oxygen.
That’s
how I want to love –
with
my heart as expressive
as
your eyes, receptive as sky
to
the edges of my breath.
I See How Things Are in the World
With my right eye I see things as
they are,
the surface bumps, the contours,
shade and wear.
All the presenting faces, the books
and maps of things.
With my left eye I see what is
mostly unseen,
even behind me. As I age, it sees
what evades
the right eye: shadows, energy,
mystery.
Now the skin of my entire face is
evolving
into a vessel of sight that becomes
more perceptive
the older I am, a new kind of eye
looking at all times
and directions at once.
Is this what the third eye is? I
wonder.
My left eye knows things that slip
by grey and
unfocused, like the shadow-people
my mom saw
all around her house and yard.
What do they want? I asked her but
she didn’t know.
They caused no trouble; they were
just always there.
Now I am seeing things like that
too, questions that
are almost but not quite there, the
unworded twilights
and mysterious glyphs, all the
push-down talk
I never should have said and the
outcomes returning for
retributions, all wearing their
perishable colours of feelings.
Jennifer Pratt-Walter is an Elder and Pacific
NW native who works in poetry, music, digital photography and Earth-based
spirituality. She loves exploring the
small, ordinary or overlooked things.
Jennifer is a free-lance musician on the harp. She has three grown
children and a husband and lives on a small farm in Vancouver.
Wonderful. I especially love In the Bones of the Fire.
ReplyDeleteWonderful.
ReplyDelete