Thursday, March 1, 2018

So...

Yes, it has been a long time. So what? Things have changed. But that's not why I'm here--to tell you that. Everything changes for everyone. What I want to say is this: I found some poems! Or, they found me, maybe. There are only 2 new ones, but here they are. Each is dedicated to a specific person. One of them is dead, so he'll never know. The other person is still alive, and he already knows.


Hummingbirds
            for Mark

I dream that the wife who divorced you
sits beside me on the patio. It is mid-January, but
the sun is warm. She has brought with her the harp
she plays at weddings, and she draws thin fingers
across the strings.

She asks me to tell her one thing that I know.
I regard the sun. Hummingbirds crowd
the feeder above the redwood planter box.
I turn to her and say that you told me
of dressing for dinner one night before she left,
that you had bought a new ring and said to her how
you would always love her, that she should stay.

She nods. She dampens the harp’s strings with the palm
of her hand, and the commotion of hummingbirds
ceases. She turns to me, then, and stands to leave.
She points to the two sequoias, noticing that they are
browning from the top down.
She rests her hand on my shoulder and presses her fingers
into my skin in a way that makes me see how any man
could love her. Lifting the harp, she frowns and turns
to leave. The hummingbirds are gone. She
raises the corner of her mouth, smiles, and whispers
that you are still dead, and that each waking day
I must know this.


Evolving
for Shawn
What fish feel,
birds feel, I don't know--
the year ending.

-       Basho

In the winter of my sixtieth year I remain
ignorant of how the heron knows to fly south,
how the salmon knows to find better water.
I have risen hours before sunrise to sit beside
a small lamp to alternate between
Birds of North America and The Total Fishing Manual,
hoping to find this morning’s answers.
This habit of leaving the bed so early is new.
I want to ask someone—my sister’s therapist,
perhaps—if the change is typical, if I should
be sleeping more. And my eyes do grow tired
so quickly now, another change, and I have started
writing down questions to ask my young physician
who nods so well.
“Are these still my eyes?” I have written twice.
Soon I switch the lamp off and press deep into the chair.
How does this make you feel? my sister’s therapist might ask
while ignoring my eyes, and I would answer with arms
that were once wings, lungs that were once gills.