Зимородок - [8]
His comings and goings are not predictable,
Are not governed by my concerns.
It would be a human conceit
To imagine that the cat intends
To teach me non-attachment.
But I learn, nonetheless.
In the supermarket,
I pack seven cans of “seafood dinner” into my bag.
The purchase is an act of hope.
I have not seen him in weeks.
The cashier asks with genuine interest:
“What kind of cat do you have?”
“I do not have a cat.”
Responding to her unspoken question,
I add, wistfully:
“This is for a friend.”
She stares, perturbed.
I wade deeper into the truth:
“My friend is a cat.”
Self-knowledge
The early bird gets the worm.
The early worm gets a one-way ticket
For a trip down the bird’s intestines.
Therefore, seek self-knowledge.
If you are a bird,
Do not feather your bed overmuch.
If you are a worm,
Do not delude yourself into expecting
That your wings will be sprouting any day now.
Instead, dig deep
And stay away from alarm clocks.
River Lethe
On love, on grief, on every human thing,
Time sprinkles Lethe's water with his wing.
Walter Savage Landor
Dr. William T.G. Morton, who first publicly demonstrated the use of ether as an anesthetic, called his ether «Letheon»
River Lethe,
Your name
Flows from the distant myth,
Stealthily seeps
Into the language
Of the here and now,
Glimmers
In the shadowy words:
Letheon, lethal, lethargic.
Your luminous waters
Wash away
All loss,
All longing.
Your silver whirlpools
Sweep away
All burdens,
All bonds.
It is not yet my time.
I walk on solid ground,
Though my feet
Sense the soft path
Sloping down to your shore.
I do not quench my thirst,
Though I know the taste
Of each syllable
Of your name.
River Lethe,
River Lethe,
River Lethe.
After the end. Lamentation
I love this child of mine
Like no other.
I remember
This one rising,
Striving, passing
Like no other.
My wounds still fester,
I still burn with fever,
Convulse and shudder
With the aftershocks.
I am still haunted
By the bitter end
To all the building,
Worshipping, contending,
To all the restless seeking…
The bitter, self-inflicted end.
This child of mine
Was not content
To live day after day,
To let the seasons
Revolve without change,
To let each generation
Pass through life
From start to finish.
This child strove
To subdue the flow of time,
To master life,
To conquer death,
To slip out of my embrace.
To this child any bond
Was bondage.
But still I love,
Remember,
Long for
This one child of mine
Who was like no other.
I keep the imprints
Of the footsteps
Pressed into my clay,
The bones fused with my stone.
The soaring, crumbling towers
Reach for the sky.
The rusting bridges
Sway across the chasms.
The words still sing:
Praise,
Lamentation,
Knowledge,
Love,
Despair…
The words still sing,
Though there is no longer
A voice to give them sound,
An ear to hear and comprehend.
The words still sing
On the singed, moldering pages,
Even as all that was created
By this child,
My child,
The human,
Returns to dust.
Pine Tree
This pine tree does not end
At the tips of its needles.
Its shade soothes wilted grass.
Its seeds feed a squirrel
And a family of grosbeaks.
Its progeny can be found
As far as the next ridge.
Its sap sticks to my fingers,
Holding my words together.
Longing
Silent waters are swiftly rising,
Engulfing dead leaves and last year’s grasses,
Deepening
Under the rippling lace
Of the inverted bare trees,
Darkening under the bright reflections
Of white clouds in the April sky.
This flood of longing
Is unlike all the upheavals
That I remember:
The scorching dust-devils of desire,
Despair’s armor of hard black ice.
Back then
I retreated,
Hid in my house,
Shuttered the windows.
Now, enchanted, oblivious to danger
I draw closer, closer
To the water’s edge.
Roots of memory
How tenacious
Are the roots of memory!
Their grip endures
Long after the tree is gone.
In my dreams,
I still turn to you,
The way a blind woman
Turns her face towards the sun.
September 11, 2001
You were wrong.
There is no God
Outside of how we treat each other.
Lusting to carve your names
Onto eternity's tablets,
You darkened the sky with a symbol
Written in blood and in ashes.
Its meaning could not withstand
The flood of tears.
It was undone
By the first shuddering sob.
Manhattan. February. Tuesday
Driving rain, thick fog.
Skyscrapers have lost their heads.
New Yorkers press on.
Umbrellas
A steady stream of umbrellas.
Some shelter couples.
A few are bobbing, jostled
By a laughing company of friends.
Most are held
By people walking alone,
Hurrying domes of silence.
Sunrise
The smoothness of the lake is marred by wrinkles
Of morning ice.
A single raspy cry dropped by a crow
Drifts slowly
Through the empty autumn air.
Squirrel
On this frozen day,
A squirrel quilting the snow
Gets the world going.
Inattention
Splash! Circles spread out.
Was it a frog or a turtle?
Too late to look now!
Dance
Up! Down! Loop-the-loop!
A sparrow chases a moth.
Life dances with death.
The 7:54 train
The 7:54 train rumbles past the yoga studio.
Our supine bodies absorb the shaking of the floor.
The train of thought that had whisked
My attention way past the desired station
Of calm contemplation
Grinds to a halt in its customary tracks.
Distracted from my distraction,
Eyes still closed,
I take in the soundscape.