Schismatic at a Wedding by the Sea
I.
I was lost in ribs of stone, fixated
on mossy shadows of angels winging
from behind your ears. When you said
you didn’t trust my eyes, your words
bobbed me back from my grave
of details, but your breath
formed a nettle which made
me still more upset: You had drawn
attention to yourself by referring
—like curtains ungathered in a boat
of glass—to a place the sea
does not reflect. Mirrored nowhere,
not even in the belly of the moonfish:
a personal sea of tranquility.
I understood too well to choose
not to let your face sink
in veils of Camel smoke. I remember
mostly your small teeth, your tongue,
the flounder of deep-sea love between.
My dream of your features, your face,
was drowned in a grave bereaved of intrigue,
as beyond that instant when the beam
of a lighthouse spiders through
the misty rigging of a clipper, turning waves
of what might have been black glass
into bright leaves bubbling with veins
of white film. It’s the glass, I guess,
which intrigues me because it might not
be glass, but a medium for other things
living but centuries old,
like bleary oaks in the bathroom window
or heads in closet mirrors, small children,
or better still, when I was scared like them
(this is only one pretend reflection),
just like what I gathered deep-sea
diving with my uncle. Read my mind.
II.
I want to act out what I mean, to make
you see I don’t know how to act;
I can just pretend to do a thing like that.
I should tell you: He’s a madman,
my uncle. We dropped far down
from the boat, floating in murk, when
he grabbed onto me. I wanted to go,
but his hand was so cold. Dying,
I realized I was only a child, only acting
like I knew how to swim—as I am only
pretending to remember what
happened. To deny it is to find a way
of saying it is true. To a madman
the world is only a lie. Even children
like the one I’m pretending to be
are for me what the world is
for them. A missing world comes back:
I lie as stiff as shoulder bones in bed, the heads
on that wall becoming more real,
more real. I know your lips are moving
and I’ll listen even though the sounds
you’re making (you have to understand)
are stagnant as the body
of water from which I drew my body
(in wake of a drowning you just don’t
understand) is stormy, on the move. Again
I don’t know whether to sink
into doubt or focus on you, my vagueness
leaving your teeth half slurred
into white gowns which keep dragging
behind, merging with bric-a-brac
on lawns where grass turns wet and sluggy
and blue as the huey ocean. If any one
place can seem safe and distinct only
in the context of another, I come
halfway back to your face
because I have to, but only halfway
back because my nonsense makes me
Christlike. Oh sure, it isolates.
Among the Yellow Eyes of Succulents
I.
Raindrops, tadpoles
breaking on our noses and hearts,
exploding tiny motives in the air,
we once lay side by side from noon to moon.
II.
Now we’ll take a minivan to the edge
of the petrified mounds,
a surrender to the weather’s orchestration.
Even the mules, wet and matted into tufts,
slant toward slate.
Above their horny backbones,
mountains of cloud, not a hint
of white light in that body of dark vapors working.
III.
If myth is part of the mortal tale,
carry the last icon to me silently, not as a lash
but a faintly incandescent woman
of silica filled with ambergris,
herself cradling a tiny corset
of black thorns.