The Innisfree Poetry Journal www.innisfreepoetry.org by Do Gentry THE BOOK OF SUPERSTITIONS is certain to die first. THE INVALID Each morning in the same acacia, the same mockingbird mimics the crystal gazer who channels Hindu sages and Atlanteans, the astonished twitterings of the little gypsy who pretends to read my palm. Then the thermometer with its ominous silvery rising & falling. Warnings & variations on warnings: an evil karma in the shadow of each darkly handsome stranger. A hush follows the mockingbird's admonitions: the crystal clears: the sprinklers come on. Over the rose beds, an awkward silence. All night, dreams nudge their densely worded messages beneath my door. Over the breakfast tray, I decode them: passports & foreign currency always portend a death. By afternoon, the morning's cut roses are feverish, collapsing into the wilted foliage of evening, when I hold the pendulums--still--above my fate until it swings: yes
no
maybe --until the candle gutters and the floorboards creak and I turn to ask, Is that you? ASKESIS Soul, you remind me, does not reside in bone. Soul peers out of the unlikely flesh the way a deer mirrors the forest's stillness, a single clear sound all around it, a bell-note calling the heart away from the world. As you speak, I'm secretly distracted, thinking of how his shoulders felt beneath my hands, the fabric of his shirt thin and damp, but that's not thinking, it's the body trying to locate a single path to follow through the unmapped forest of desire. Which you tell me is impossible. With practice, I say, I can tempt the deer forth into the empty meadow. She feels safe there, breathing the cool scent of moonlight, the taste of salt almost sweet on her tongue. © Copyright 2006-7 by Cook Communication |