The Innisfree Poetry Journal
www.innisfreepoetry.org
by Katherine Young
TRAVEL OVERLAND
Odd rendering of pleasure, no more than the feel of strange pavement beneath the feet-- no broader than crack-spined stairs dared to ogle Brahma's sacred bull, no finer than middling-good table wine uncorked in a trattoria festooned with plastic vines--requiring no language or faith, no companion but the map and a vague grasp of legend to compel one's interest. Just the willingness to suspend disbelief, the firm and mystic certainty that none has passed this way before--whether in monsoon, the velvet season, or the time of naked ice--none but this self, whose understanding of things hovers gossamer and exquisite on dragonfly wings, just out of focus, just out of reach . . . .
DRIVING THE M8 Russia, 1996
There are bandits on this road, though only rarely do they lurk beneath forest's eave where the road narrows here at the edge of Vladimir oblast'. They prefer, instead, to broker the trade in towels, Mickey Mouse waving gamely from every clothesline for twenty miles past Sergeyev-Posad. They patrol the cars parked by the roadside, hoods weighted down with enamel pans or curtains or crystal chandeliers, payment in kind for work not worth doing, sell it or starve. They count out their cut from the jars of fresh pickles, the pails of potatoes, the buckets of cut daisies clustering at the feet of an--invariably-- empty stool that leans against a gate in a hamlet made up of a dozen or so knock-kneed cottages. All the cottages sag in unison towards the church, whose star- speckled dome has split in two.
STARS WITH BLAZING HAIR
I have watched them up there, flaming across the sky, twirling on orbits still unlearned, arcing, wheeling, scattering wild sparks that light up the heavens, forming constellations never before seen by mortals beneath . . . . Even those who flicker, flame out, leave trails of ash that linger in the sky, stinging to tears our rapt, upturned eyes.
LAST FLIGHT OF THE GYPSY KING Tomsk, Siberia
(for Elizabeth Miles)
Guttural cries suffuse the hall. The clerk gestures skyward, where a crowd of gypsies mourns the death of their king in the upper departure lounge. "Overdose," says the clerk, ink-purpled hands tearing, stamping, stacking my ticket. (Does the dead king, too, require a ticket? Is he charged as cargo, counted with the crates, nailed shut, tagged for final destination? For what destination?) I pick a path past parcels swaddled in string, past drunks snoring chock-a-block with fond mamas sharing breakfast among their broods. Way station: the "t" between here and there.
In the ladies' room, a gypsy girl wipes wet eyes with her skirt hem. "I thought gypsies wouldn't fly," murmurs an American to her friend. "Watch your purse, Jean." Jean settles the purse beneath her arm (zippered pockets secure wallet, ticket, tissues: amulets to ward off most minor discomforts). "Their king has just died," I say, to no one in particular. What difference does it make? Tomorrow these same gypsies will take up their old tricks: alchemists of dross and crocodile tears, traffickers in our innermost dreams. They will choose a new king. On the tarmac, men wrestle with cargo. The sun lays a finger to the cement horizon, swathed, now, in mist. The waiting room blossoms with the acrid, alarmed scent of unfamiliar animals herded together, involuntary mourners accompanying the dead king on his journey. Over all, the gypsies wailing, bitter, unearthly. As if no one had ever died before. As if grief itself were being invented anew--of sun, of cloud, of cold spun steel--on this, first morning of the false-bottomed world.
© Copyright 2006-7 by Cook Communication
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