The Innisfree Poetry Journal
www.innisfreepoetry.org
by Rosemary Winslow
BLOOD/WINE 1
Drink. Changes. Love's mouth. Nuzzle and nub of protection, after the workmen cut the gas lines by mistake, weeks after the terror. From a high window, I saw them pour-- out of the dormitory, their arms waving like motherless trees, in the disaster that might yet be. They were together and laughing. They aimed for the corner bar. On my way home, I saw them lounging the bar, laughing, talking, merlot, cheap whites, ale, spilling on chins and sweaters, communion of gladness as they waited, not eagerly, to go back where they live, living in cells, where they learn and learn and are not yet very much afraid.
2
Not very much afraid, the disaster canceled, I went down into the metro to go home. We railed up above ground on tracks over- hanging the city. We stopped for no reason we knew of, for an hour we sat in the train, night coming down, lamps lighting up, dimming the houses. We waited and joked and told stories. We almost slipped by the next station,
the desolate platform, the washed down concrete, we barely slowed down--we wouldn't have known except for the news, how while we had waited and laughed uneasily, a desolate red streaming dress, its heaviness, was lifted gently (yes gently) onto a gurney. 3
Eleven o'clock news--suicide on a gurney, counted to Christmas depression. Dis- counted, ill-fitting pair of shoes nobody wants to put on. Irrational-- Out over the edge, quick charge of the live track, and each viewer a witness, each survivor an heir to the knowledge of lapsed reason.
How easy is it to feel that flame the TV's rumoring wind fanned to ash the very next second in the slick icicle commercial? Did she wear a necklace? A lost lover's heart? A cross? An initial? Suitcase of grief riding with her over the rail?
4
Suitcase of grief, quick fix over the rail of the bar, latched by sparkling ice, a flash of insight arrives in the negative everlasting comma of night, spindled as X-ray, sheer bone left visible, grave half-life, ending's medicine crossing the brain's speeding life--
Every one writes in the Book of Pain. Each page opens onto the next person's. Terror makes its marks in innocence harshed out in Xes, crossed paradisal swords. You can't go back. Grief's cell is cramped. Stone angels stand at the door. Pages bleed into others. Changes. Open the book. This is the body. Drink.
5
Drink in flood-tide, one sinks, or survives. Listen. The stringent sibilance calls you. What will you do? Do you think it desires you alone? Every moment the door stands open. Every moment any one can walk through and meet the others. Each a particular of sorrow. By repetitions of division the cell grows. Root, dicotyledon, leaf, then bracted flower. Strength comes in numbers, adage's eternal witness, thread through ages. But look. They are walking as we walk, leaning on staffs or arms, taking the leaned to the pool of freedom. It may be a bar, a bedroom, a temple. Stirred, ready to enter.
6
Stirred. That's how we entered the red flowers, rose fragrance, to glide together on tree-shined water, two with oars, face to face, one direction, sharing power, love bound. The clenched hand loosens, offers its salty palm. It wants to let go, the suffered taste. She. He. Brachiate, it opens. They drift through white lotuses, afternoon light sifts through motes and mosses, swims, rests, swims, rests, on white saucers. A hand lingers over boat-edge, another, water like skin, smooth satin, edge of the world. Lovely to move toward evening, a fire, a roof, a soft bed, a lover’s promise, solaced home.
7
Solaced home, to feel the water's skin, our skin, an amazing thing, to live, forgiving it all. Disembodied saxophone moan in the next building grounds my being. I am here.
I don't like to think nothing will become of me when I die. Concrete mausoleum, its secret of satin, a slow waste, the hot unpyred commercial fire too homely.
I think I'd like to be laid out in the good earth, in my faded blue sweatshirt and jeans, in a pasture under a good tree--an apple-- to feed what I love. As for the remainder of me, whatever that is, if, may it nuzzle at love's mouth. Drink. Be changed.
THE DAY
And so the day came after the spring of loving my mother after the summer of letting her go under the limber pines I lay on my back arms stretching out over me over the house holding me to the blue sky soft how the green melted and spread over me and settled fluid mobile the tight upraised shoulders of my childhood let loose their protection settled as the tense bands of muscles had let go in the spring from against my mother and I had loved her then without harm without wanting her to be anything she was not and I was hardly noticeable the movement of air barely touched the ribbons of planks beneath me and the blue-green tufted needles above I was large rich I was gone
And not for awhile did I rise up, walk in the day.
MOTHER, THEN & NOW
I
I see her perfect open lips moving through a song standing over the kitchen sink, a steady ping of whey from a bag where cheese is being made keeps perpetual time in a shiny pot on a white stove under a wooden drying rack. I see me drying dishes, singing along, her thick hands in gray suds, her hair drowsed. As always she is elsewhere and meat for supper burns in an iron skillet. Smoke piles up in the room.
Sometimes it was "Clementine," but "Abide with Me" and "Nearer My God to Thee" were her favorites. It didn't seem strange to me to want heaven instead of the life we lived.
Evenings she would sit under a lamp with a broom-length stem and a bleary yellow shade. A tiny needle was in her hand weaving threads over a hole in one of our socks. She was so tired her head kept drifting toward her breasts like a stuck record. In another part of the room father quieted finally and snored while the TV blared then fuzzed out to a wad of cotton.
One time (was I eight, thirteen, ten?) I watched her descending the stairs in a black chiffon dress, hemmed in by shadows and plain plaster walls. Her skirt splayed out from the belt, umbrellaed the narrow passageway. Her hair--I remember so well-- was arranged as in the drawings father made on scraps of paper and scattered about the house, loose generous ripples falling about his ideal womanly curves, the bright red lips too full to be real.
And yet I never saw him kiss her, or I can't recall, but when she bent to kiss me that time, I was transfixed by the transparent sleeves over the skin of those kitchen arms turned all of a sudden to smoky magic. A scent of spices trailed her, stranger than pies, and her lips' good night good bye to my cheek had the astonishment of blood on snow, so warm they were and bright, and her eyes up close were large, they had a sadness deeper than I could fathom then, encompassing and vague like the fabric where it drifted across my arms, and father pacing across the worn linoleum like a cat wound up between us and the door, darting looks at the clock.
II Outside a fit of wind blows the maple and Queen Anne Cherry leaves, flying up their pale undersides. In the kitchen and over her bed pale wallpaper is slipping down. I watch her fitful rest, the red-orange flowers on the paper are bridges of the air, curling down over her faded hair, and the brain stricken and spilling the family secrets.
I lie down next to her, on the bed she tells me he bought for them, he brought her here after the honeymoon, she says it as if she loved him then, he brought her here, to this house with the .22 caliber gun notched by the door, the house her father-in-law built, whose house this was, by law, but not the bride, who wasn’t his, though he tried to take her. And her husband my father loved her but soon determined he'd rather have married her sister with the pendulous breasts (I remember this) or else the neighbor with perpetually red lips, waved hair, and the wrong religion.
And then she watched (this part I add, I know) her children scattering elsewhere away like her in darkened corridors. And other things happened to her and some to me and some the same, it seems a gulf across the room, my feet careful as if the floor might fall, her cheek like gauze, my hand there, my mother, her sadness sinking, wringing my own face-- How young and beautiful she was! How she is going away from me forever.
BESLAN, ET ALIA
I cannot see it, but I see it. Stepping Out on the porch tonight I hold The silvered skin of the half-moon's Waking in my palm. It has no feeling.
Nature is Innocent, and comforted. Even the woman terrorist last night Who belted explosives over her womb As her hand fondled the cord
In the lamb-white diaphanous light. A milk-tooth gnaws westward Across faint stars from Beslan, Children with flowers in hands
Under the thronging bells, Shrapneled and stilled. They will be strewn with flowers In the bright September air.
They will not breathe it any more Nor talk nor eat nor skip nor wake. And there will be more. Do not tell me not to mourn,
The world dwells in unschooled Silver. Sleepless feet rake planks, Unreasoning night, leaves sough Above my head, shine White as wafers-- How many gone? Restless, home, I wait for news, Dread the light.
--September 4, 2004
Copyright 2006-2012 by Cook Communication
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