FOR ALL MY FRIENDS
We’re
like cordwainers
who
add to our worth
though
our friendships have not been strategic
and
often counter to self-interest.
And
we're mariners
unsure
of our watch.
Memory's
children occupy today,
but
tomorrow may have no place to stay.
Like
bored gardeners
grown
tired of the dirt,
homes
and households have changed their occupants
as
relationships altered, and time went.
But
we're carpenters
who've
built our suburbs
as
cities wandered all across our maps.
Our
lovers have shuffled us through their hands,
finely
calipered to assess how much,
dealt
us as our circumstance warranted,
and we
drifted like corks in the current.
Many
harriers
have
pursued and cursed.
Time
-- the presence or absence of movement --
the
magician who does evolution:
that
one barrier
is
perhaps our crutch.
THIS
VESSEL IS ONLY
Parents
of art and dust:
the clay
is the cousin
of
marbles and granites.
Now my
kiln is in ash
and my
pots are all thrown.
This
vessel is only
moulded
from memories.
The
past is achieved.
My
ocarina speaks
barbaric
dialects
which
few others can share--
nightingales,
canaries,
zisha
clay kettles, and
marching
piccolo men.
AT
THIS, OUR NUREMBERG
This
patriot was once drafted
into
your cruel army of love,
but
long ago the force decamped.
Now
let our tribunals judge.
You
always loved a parade
to
honour your dismembered.
My
duty was to obey,
my
fear was to surrender.
Can
the gauntlets become just gloves?
Will
the raven follow the dove?
The
oaths we together swore
were
vows of desperation.
I was
not your uniform
and
not your occupation.
I rose
quickly through your ranks
and I
wore all your medals,
but
though I covered your flanks
I
never shared your battles.
Can
the gauntlets become just gloves?
Will
the raven swallow the dove?
JEREMIAH?
POLLYANNA?
Why do
we always hook the prophet with the flame?
Why
not link a promise to a spring?
Who
must kindle, who shall draw?
What
golden shall consume, sodden shall save?
Which
mansion, which hovel, will sink in fire?
Whose
penthouse, whose tenement, will rise, will gush?
Burning
questions.
Answers
afloat.
RE-SARTOR
RESARTUS
Here
you stand – bleating outside your attire,
a
naked cashmere goat in early spring.
But
beneath your skin, hatred hides; hunger
for
sins lies under the layers of skin.
And
nobility, too, adheres inside,
all
your human guides to morality.
You
can put those clothes back on that cover
defects
and blubber. They just strike a pose.
Duane Vorhees is an American poet living in Thailand. Before that, he taught University of Maryland classes in Korea and Japan. Hog Press, of Ames, Iowa, has published three of his poetry collections and is preparing a fourth.
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