All
My Other Lives
To sun, to feast, and to
converse
and all together — for this I have
abandoned
all my other lives.
Robert Francis
My pirate life, lived wild on the
open sea,
my sword life, my star gazing life,
my rough
hands on the yardarm, my knots and
gold doubloons.
Gone my life in the tower bent over
dusty tomes,
my tea life, my eyes red and aching
life,
my joy in the multitude of
words.
Finished my convent life in cold
halls, my singing life,
my days spent writing a script that
leapt to animation
as fire glowed in the hearth. No
more my flying life,
my cloud life, my life in the
trees.
All night we sailed beneath the
moon,
we hunted and sang. I left my life
in chains,
in mines and prisons, my life in
the kitchens,
polishing silverware.
Once in a beautiful life I walked
through walls,
no more flesh than a shadow quickly
seen
and gone, nothing but a glimpse
from the corner of your eye.
House Fire
When the house burned, I dreamed.
I watched as souls drifted
skyward
in the black smoke.
When it burned, I felt
nothing.
There should have been
terror,
like lightning, like armies
tearing
through the forest toward the city
we loved.
There was heat, of course,
and somewhere people must
have
huddled together.
There must have been mourning
as timbers crackled and
crashed
to the ground. Maybe the stars
wept
in their distant cold, but I have
my doubts.
Maybe the sea swelled in
sympathy.
I wouldn’t take that bet.
I wouldn’t even open my arms to
gather
ashes or flames. When the house
burned,
it was quiet on the street.
Lamps glowed and the old woman who
rolled
her shopping cart stopped for a
moment,
looking at the bewildering
scene,
until she passed through
shadows,
limping toward the outline of her
open door.
The Centaur’s
Blood
The tree had no name. We sat
beneath its branches
eating fruit we had picked that
morning
in the orchard near the
entrance
to the Appalachian Trail. By now
the heat
had turned terrible. Together we
savoured
juices and bitter skins. Branches
swayed
above us in the hot breeze.
Hercules once aimed an arrow at the
sun
because it shone too brightly on
his lion clad body.
Strong but stupid in all those
stories
our granddaughters loved. When he
writhed
in agony from the cloak rubbed in
centaur’s
blood, his mortality burned
away.
He became a god, so maybe there’s
good news after all.
No comments:
Post a Comment