The Carpenter
1 I look at my hands
In a dark hour.
They are my wife,
Another life,
Fawnal,
Explicitly made.
I compare responsibility
To journey:
They are pitch-black
Whirling in the outside world
Left behind like a native—
Possessed.
2 We are older:
Toil is our long way
Back home.
It works.
Causes the space to beat
Like a heart.
It is a part of the poem
That appears
And appears on its own.
It goes on
On its own,
Mystical as evil
But, it is called freedom.
3 I’m sorry:
I was telling you about my hands.
How well we are married.
It follows,
I recognize all truth
As some part of ten.
Spirit is my thumb,
Passionately.
Without thumb
I would be nothing.
I have met some who believe in reason.
They have had too much wine,
Confess cause and effect—
It has been painful.
4 I told you it is unreasonable:
I guess I should say here,
I am your carpenter.
Ethnically, dark wood
Is my life.
I could show you my story better,
Sanding,
Then where I speak
You would hear
Africa
Africa
One more thing, my love.
I have discovered in this dark wood
A skill you have called our loneliness.
I sand it down for you
Until our bodies fall off.
Copyright Credit: Primus St. John, “The Carpenter” from Communion: Poems 1976-1998. Copyright © 1999 by Primus St. John. Reprinted with the permission of Copper Canyon Press, P.O. Box 271, Port Townshend, WA 98368-0271, coppercanyonpress.org.
Source: Communion: Poems 1976-1998 (Copper Canyon Press, 1999)