From “Love Letter to the Future: A Book of the Land in Eight Acts”
act 1, scene 1: do you know what it means for our survival?
Fog spun into silk
on the knee of the comptroller,
propelled toward the crest of Ontario,
the old, faded star, steambreath onto the windshield.
To orient in the finest sense
of cackles, mute chrysanthemums,
funneling inordinate nakedness,
absorbed, absorbed, immediately absorbed.
Ohhhhhhhhhhhh,
we stay
limber,
each line
choreographed
from a tremendous mouthful
of swamp, skunk cabbage
brining at the jowls,
acquiesced to pestilence,
and exaggerated diffidence.
Do you know what it is to clamp your shell
an extra foot into the silt riverbank,
kissing the soles of passersby,
silky grains churning the earth over?
Makeshift ceremonial dances,
fine textiles culled from thrift store bins
display brightly-colored throats who feed
stacks of cash killed on recycled names.
There is a golden tapestry
on the berry-stained
bottom of Wealth Woman’s
basket of abalone.
Beneath it are the exhausted
faces of her babies
grown old in the length
of the inhale, and a facsimile
remains from all the cycles
spilled over, since nature
cannot acid wash, since
frizz canvassing the ozone
always carries over.
Geometry for days, countless days,
spin-cycled through a craftsman’s
circumpolar hands. There’s always
another grotto or chamber
where things dwell, they say.
Wandering skitterers we are,
the Northern Lights vacuum pried-open skulls.
We cover ourselves with hides and entrails,
overripe elderberries, looking to steal a moment
of letup from the glare. The limbs of the Old Ones
shunt aside bare toes, stripped solid
and indifferent as a bear’s den
or an ant’s apartment.
Don’t be so much in charge, the frogs say,
of coalescing wolverine trails
huddled in 60-million-year pellet tracks
when the wetlands dried out.
The way soaked, green corpuscles
rasp each other’s mouths and hands
braiding the woof of God’s mind,
that’s how it is, says
the giant rat’s captive wife.
Even if you can only faintly hear
the eighth narrative told in the corner
of the babbling wooden-slat house,
that is enough leftover hooligan grease
for the gods with killer whale ganglia.
Knuckles rasp proscenium floorboards,
splattering herring peck at scops owl’s waist,
spruce branch
lowered,
scrapes conglomerate bedrock.
Mother-in-law’s atonic hands lunge for stewed milt.
One can conclude it’s a virus
to plant burdensome layers
of topographic crust on self-renewing
limbs, like there was more to it
than rustling fingers at the end of the line.
All components must be in order,
or it’s an ulcer here, a bladder infection
there, a baked-out parking lot,
fizzing in trampled-over, chastened hairlines.
Hold, hold, hold, hold in your palms
the Steller’s jay that beats its wings
on glaciers lying high and straight
over rivers slicing into cool nettles.
Sea lions suck up a quick breath, dive
and waft on the outskirts of ballerinas
who gyrate in like-mind
to classics bubbling up from Sedna’s citadels.
I’m here to show you what you can do
with this sandbar dialect,
says the humpback whale
and the goatsbeard moss, and the ore
of iron oxide in the shoreline cliff.
You must trust, she says,
your swimming blood, joints
lumbering in shadows, the dolphin
clicking out to you, far above ground.
And we should feed just as much as eat,
says the heart your body formed around.
Source: Poetry (June 2018)