ALZ Ghazal
For my sister
It’s the same house, same rugs, same wallpaper, and bedroom repeating;
same dresser; same rocker. Same window and frame, repeating.
Same birds at the pane, same pots and pans, and—on the alarm clock,
the wall clock, the phone clock—the same time, repeating
each hour’s increment in a lived life. But, This is no life, each day like
before and to come, repeating.
The furniture set in a known pattern. The rugs there, like always, inking
the blueprint of home, repeating
jewel tones on the floor, but what was once north–south now seems to lie
east–west—who moved the rugs?—in sum, repeating
the familiar, but sideways. Your inner axis has shifted, the landmarks
somehow changed but the same, you repeating
Why do they keep moving the rugs? The desk, the chair, your keys?
Home its own balm, repeating
the familiar, but neither keys nor your purse can be found—I know
I just had them—repeating
the questions yields the same, that is, no real answers. Your sense of taste
gone, like eating chum, repeating
the same million small motions: fork to plate then mouth, then back down,
always the same, repeating
the flavor of cardboard. You used to love to cook, that joyous jazz variation-
on-a-theme now a repeating
like pages of musical staffs, xeroxed blank with no notes. Lately, you refuse
to eat anything at all. In a poem, repeating
lines compose a refrain and, echoed again and again, the sum of refrains
is a song. But there is also empty repeating:
zero plus zero plus zero still zero, a void. No accretion, no growth, no life,
no thrum. Then again, birds—some, repeating
one clear note, are said to singing without tune—and, the same set of sounds
from a beaten drum, repeating
means nothing and everything at the same time. The gene runs in families
and can be followed like breadcrumbs, repeating
the precise map for getting lost, down through generations. She took the same
route to work on the town tram, a repeating
my sister relied on. We rely on a plum to taste purple when our teeth break
its skin. Some numbers go on ad infinitum, repeating
that reminds us of architecture and God. Rings of a tree, whorls of a shell,
sections of a lime, repeating
a sequence that re-enacts growth and change. Meiosis, mitosis, Eve cleaved
from Adam, other kinds of repeating
so life can go on. We are “pattern-seeking animals,” Hass says, and even
atheists pray in a jam, repeating
lessons learned as a child: “Now I lay me” like the promise of mercy, like mercy
itself, soothing and warm, you repeating
your talisman against terror. After your nap, I worry you’ll wake confused,
but then you resume, repeating
Where are my keys? Why do they keep moving the rugs? Always theft and loss
the theme, repeating.
They say you’ll forget my name, and your own. How to talk, small mercy
then, you no longer doomed to repeating
your aching questions. They say you’ll forget how to swallow, to breathe—
O God, will you forget to breathe?—just succumb, repeating
the pause in place of the heartbeat? The doctor says keep things simple
and flat, no drang or sturm, repeating
“Is it nice there today,” and “Have the tulips bloomed,” conversations dull
with the same datum repeating
catechism and cliché. You no longer work on your dollhouses, potting trees
the size of your thumb, repeating
postage-stamp paintings on walls, building one-inch-to-the-foot the lavish life
you never had or presumed, repeating
a litany of loss enlarged from what-was to what-will-never-be. The Christmas
tree shadowbox in simulacrum repeating
the childhood obsessions. Some of your dollhouses have tiny dollhouses
within them, repeating
themselves in infinite regression. All that helpless sap and surge of creation,
your xylem and phloem repeating
what to make of a diminished thing. You say you’ll burn them come spring,
without reflection or qualm, the future repeating
and eating the past. It’s happening so fast: a page torn, a book lost, then
whole libraries gone dumb, repeating
erasure until only erasure remains. O trochee, lilting your 10-beat line.
O river, O iamb repeating
the tide. Bishop called loss an “art.” I last saw you at home in October,
a glorious autumn repeating
saffron and scarlet against azure sky. Outside now, a robin taps at the pane,
ravished by her own image, an eye-rhyme repeating—
there’s been one bird each spring. Some beat their beaks bloody and die,
some stay for days, numb with repeating
their broken routine. Who moved the keys? Who moved the goddamn keys?
Your patient husband is grim, repeating
they’re-in-a-safe-place-so-we-can-keep-you-safe. We are all of us trapped
under a great dome repeating
our words and the cries of wild birds. This is harder in some ways, he says,
than Vietnam, repeating
his pledge to stay till the end. He tries to give you small pleasures, picking
and handing you the plum repeating
all you can recall of lush purple juice run down your chin, but at best,
it’s a dim meme repeating
as holograph plums eaten before. Soon, where are my keys will dwindle
to where keys, the totem repeating
as keys, then just key—what matters, the way out of labyrinth and code.
A chant or psalm, repeating
open vowels like water or rain. Luck—the river in poker, the silver ball
spun at the wheel’s rim—can be repeating
until it turns, and isn’t it possible to hear a persistent tune as anthem,
not ear-worm? Can’t repeating
strengthen a seam, or knit a long row? After you fell, I imagined you there
on the floor, the refrigerator’s hum repeating
its cold comfort until the ambulance came. Your husband cradling you
on the linoleum, repeating
presence in absence in presence in absence—cognitive dissonance—
or an inscrutable charm repeating
its mysteries. Your hip and arm are mostly healed. The house is still there,
but an interior door slams shut every second, an alarm repeating
its warning: all doors soon will be sealed. Where we stand in an earthquake
is an empty doorframe. Soon, repeating
itself will disappear: all language flown, a slaughtered lamb,
a shattered paradigm. Will your repeating
heart just—miss its cue? Will you forget how to swallow? O Fates, come, come,
/ Cut thread and thrum, repeating
its end-times refrain. Your jacks and pick-up sticks—you still love any game
—played now with your left arm, repeating
that makes of small movements an art, like dance. Your little jokes,
like the “ALZ tip jar”—now crammed—repeating
the ring of each coin dropped in. You pull my leg when I call, pretending
to forget who I am, repeating
Becky who? Becky who? until we both laugh, the sounds that sound so much
like crying but with a whetted edge; in time, repeating
a knife against stone will bring forth a terrible blade. O sweet sad funny sister,
you are the bird who flies away in my dream, repeating
its looping script on the blank page of sky. An unhooded hawk, a wild bird
freed. Calling Key? Key? Key?—repeating, repeating, repeating.
Source: Poetry (May 2021)