Ledger Domain
By Peter Gizzi
A morning's silver announces sky
Speech bent the tree into a new posture
My smile is becoming different from you.
—becoming—and you crave an earlier affection
Where was the silver becoming from?
Who forgets that we dream—who forgets we dream
The dark is near! That loss was dark; there that's darker!
A page, we become
* * *
You read the page
—you read this page
Once upon a once there was a once
and that once evaporated into air
it was said it once was all over the sky
then once came back and died
You understood what I saw
You understood everything
—close the door now
It knows where to be
Here, can you explain?
A light bulb replaced the silver
* * *
The page is silvery—almost as silver
—announced a child—
When it went to the town
—it had changed
When it became the town
—it changed its shape
Afterword said it didn't have its own way
It didn't have a once in its life—
a once and for all
It took a wife . . .
The end, the ending
* * *
Children ran from the tree
Silver poured from the sky
—in the garden birds bathed—
bathing in the garden birds sang
It was dizzy in the air and rosy on the wind
Once once came along and spoke to the bride
It thought the wood enchanted
Afterword said it was empty
Afterword came too and spoke to the groom
It thought the world was wide
Afterword said it was narrow
* * *
Syntax bent the child
—playing on the page
Speech—be quiet!
To see you reflected in the smudged window now.
Night reminds one of fingerprints—
unlike a face
—in its orbit
Tips of hair sweep by like fronds
—"just like fronds!"—you exclaim
—show me the fronds if you please
* * *
Becoming a tree
—the children . . .
Becoming a page
—the birds in unison
From here to the nervous system—A body sang
Suspended above the page
Above the total mass of trees
Willows bend to console the child
From here to . . .
—a lovely thing—
Becoming a tree
* * *
Let us return to speech—
Silver morning—bent to break
—syntax
Up there on a stage
Children carry silver leaves
—carry birds on their heads
You fasten me with your songs
The Fables say—
where a page is a page
and a tree tree
I used to be a book
Now I am a book
All the endings say
All the dreams say
All the children say
* * *
Once upon a once there was a once
and that once evaporated into air
it was said it once was all over the sky
then once came back and died
It was said—
my smile is becoming a page
—becoming an adventure
It sang—
my smile is what the children say
Copyright Credit: Peter Gizzi, "Ledger Domain" from In Defense of Nothing: Selected Poems, 1987-2011. Copyright © 2014 by Peter Gizzi. Reprinted by permission of Wesleyan University Press.
Source: In Defense of Nothing: Selected Poems, 1987-2011 (Wesleyan University Press, 2014)