Igor
Contemplates his Master
Do I love my master when I
carry
to him what is grey and
dead?
My master with his small
and twisting lights,
his jars that bubble blue
and red in the dark.
My master goes away—when he
returns
he bears the bright smell
of the air.
A violence as dense as
insects.
Words that thrum and sting.
I have words as
well—butterflies
that ride the light and
shade so easily
I can’t say if they are
white or yellow.
Wings alight in sky and
upside-down on water.
My master says the darkness
doesn’t know
it’s dark—dark creatures
cannot find the light.
But I see many things:
things that have died
and not elided upward. They
are so bright to me.
The
Centaur Chiron
This one’s rare. The
monster
who forbore enough of what
he was
to teach the art of being
human.
The humans nudged his
laughter,
a loudness in his heart
that galloped
as he made each hero good.
He followed what was
difficult
like white stones in a
garden.
A path that lay close to
wildness.
When he disobeyed the gods
and had to die,
even they said they were
sorry
as they tied him to the
starry sky.
The Uncertainty of Omens
I can sigh his story out,
implying
with a shadow and a
hesitation.
With words or creatures
from the sky.
But are they blot or mirror
to the light, those
uncertain birds
I say the gods have sent?
Must visions always point
to heroes?
Soldiers glorious as
poppies
folded in a brief, red
hour.
It's dreadful to envision
war. Worse still
to paint it brightly for
this man
who waits so quietly in its way.
A Sybil's Wish
As a leaf casts one shape
upon
the sky and many blowing
shadows,
so, too, I have a shadow
wish apart
from what I say of death
and monsters.
That somewhere there’s a
door—
a frame of light that
anyone might open,
in which all are
disinterred
from their sins and the
weather.
Where all can be as that
bird
glowing by with its wing
in the seams of the wind.
Patricia
Nelson has worked for many years with the "Activist" group of poets
in the San Francisco Bay Area. She is working on a book of poetic monologues by
monsters and seers.
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