The Innisfree Poetry Journal www.innisfreepoetry.org by Perry L. Powell
All the More Reason to Start
No, no, no! This is no time to start that trade war with your past lives. Or to stand bereft as an old man who's forgotten his pants, while this squalid house squats on its
haunches and waits. You have a deep ringed mind fermented like spirits in an oak barrel. Carrying on with all the artistry of an old sinner, between the ferris wheel
and the wrecking ball, you can surely find something just shy of a meaning. Work out that incantation in the park. Don't wash your laundry. Strike your gong and
drive away the evils. A busy buzzing world may not want to hear you, but I do.
Leaving
Leaving only their absence, they pack the rest in the wagon under the flopping canvas and waddle westward, slow as the solstice, fed by what heaven they can hold.
Almost there, on the mountain, the white snow covers any thought of return; each man or woman silently plodding into the passage, drinking water that burns the throat,
with hair so cold it snaps, and hands clinging to stomachs, and stomachs clinging to vertebrae, and vertebrae clinging to nothing. There are stars that seem to gather for such journeys.
And planets in retrograde across the ecliptic. We may imagine visions and purposes. But the reason is always that one hunger, the one never named. That simple need to be in some other, some new place.Copyright 2006-2012 by Cook Communication |