What do I begin with this ongoing
omni-directional conversation of ours,
these fever dreams where meaning
evaporates just as everything is about
to make sense? So many doors but—
turn back and the hall becomes a maze.
Going forward solves nothing.
I begin again where I fail to be.
The fever breaks. I am in a strange room.
I am no longer afraid. The white sheet,
which is the wind, caresses me naked.
Fire cools me. Everything is in reverse
and unraveling. Finally, I can breathe.
A hummingbird flits through my rib cage,
pauses on my sternum. I have no sugar.
I know the passing hours by their colors
and sounds, and I with them—
an ancient tooth in the tide, visible—then gone.
asha
Torn Page
Confessional
Come my dear deformed ones
who live after the fire,
my darlings blistered and raw,
whose eyelids have burnt off,
who sleep with open eyes.
Come you jackals of pain.
But there is a screen between us,
the confessional screen.
I can barely see you in the gloom.
A spider is caught in my side, a fly in yours.
I grab the mesh with my six legs and squint in.
You are dressed in black, sweating.
I lick the wire to taste your salt.
I hand you a tiny drum, ask you to accompany me
as I confess. You weep.
I hand you a violin, ask you to play for me.
My dreams walk behind me with hollow footsteps.
There are so many echoes I cannot sleep.
You are reading a magazine.
You hand me a gun so I can shoot myself.
I watch your booth fill with water.
You are circling mindlessly in the middle of it,
awaiting my confession—but the land is miles off.
No matter how loud I shout, you can't hear me.
You press your eyes against the screen so hard
their jelly oozes in through the openings.
A thousand images hatch in the dim space,
writhing over one another. Some live. Some die.
Your eyes have a fiendish fervor.
You hand me a clock that runs backwards.
You give me an hour.
AN HOUR!
Already the clock is disappearing in my hands,
images clogging its gears—legs, feelers, screams.
It’s a horrible sight.
You stand up.
Vanish.
Then call back,
"Sing the Alleluia Chorus three times.
Bathe in blood. Give your teeth to the poor".
asha .
New Madhuban
For Gajendra — West Virginia
this forest,
planted for a loaf of bread
and a dollar a day,
is a solemn place
the hill
it has taken possession of
drops sharply
to a holler
too steep for pasture
a place where small skeletons
slowly turn to stone
this is a good place to be alone
the sun seldom finds entry to this grove
is a stranger here
off his path
its probing beams
only deepen the darkness
and threaten to ignite the brittle trees
one may only be here . . . carefully
this forest has no need of company
birds know it
they do not nest
or sing
here
there is no undergrowth
nothing pierces the needle mat
but the pines themselves who
have shed their lower branches
becoming heartless
pitch-steeped trunks
with shattered limbs
that offer no place to rest—
who comes here must stand alone
who comes here to dream—
must dream
indifferent as the dead.
asha
Reconstruction
One word, one sentence at a time I will reconstruct the story.
I've done it before. One world, one sentence at a time I will
reconstruct the story. Forgive me. The original order has been
lost amid a countless succession of beginnings. I rely on you
to restore the details. One word, one sentence at a time I will
reconstruct the story. Forgive me. The original has been lost
but I promise to stay true to its drift. One word, one world
at a time. Forgive me. The original version of this story does
not exist. One world, one sentence per time, this is the drift.
The notes are scattered. No. Not scattered. The notes—hastily
jotted down, scribbled on scraps, scrawled in notebooks, penciled
on flaps, saved in a succession of files—are lost. They were
seldom read. They were never read at all. They cannot be collected.
The words, disjointed, were set down and abandon. No. Not abandon.
It is a story in threads and tatters—images, ideas, phrases, paragraphs,
the disembodied alphabet reverberating, returning haunted—
but I digress.
asha
Dead Reckoning
For Joe
WINTER
In the evening we
carry down our dead
they leave our hands willingly
above
Dog Star watches
cold, white
as on ancient evenings,
Dog Star—
bringer of rain.
SPRING
Listen to the grass
leaning
soft green
through the fence
singing.
Listen to the green
crawling
slowly
away from the yard
where the bones lie—
under their feet,
under the dandelion's,
the yellow dandelion's feet—
listening.
SUMMER
Sometimes we take
our measure from the dead
as from a stone that
sits unchanged
amid the changing seasons
like a departed shore
the dead mark
how far we’ve come
through mystery
and how far
we’ve yet to go.
FALL
—Solve et coagula
The small things go first
over the blue salt
edge of the world
followed by a
deconstruction
of their tracks
by the wind
that covers
and uncovers
the same finger bone
my own
where it fell
in confusion
trembling
at the slow moving
wheel
of the desert's rim.
asha
La Tormenta
Yucatán Peninsula
for Lee
for Lee
This is how the world was
lightning on the rim
and a small boat
moving away forever
lantern swinging
over a veiled sea.
We had the world to ourselves.
I was the veils,
You were the boat.
You were the lantern.
I was the swinging.
You were the lightening.
I was the waves,
You were the sea.
I was forever.
We were the horizon.
You were moving away.
We were the storm.
asha
Border Crossing
... excerpt from Obra Inconcluso — Mexico
Leaving my language behind, I enter the labyrinth. Its streets are narrow and old and crowded with small fruit-colored buildings made of mud and stone. Here dogs speak in tongues and saints make deals with passers-by. I am greeted by a cockroach who kindly explains their price, plastic flowers and bottled flame. I see within the wicker shadows of their tiny huts how each saint stands stoic and faithful before their candles and the litter of past offerings; blackened, shattered glass and dusty clods of petals and wax but, at the hour the church bells ring, they wince in their solitude. I ask the cockroach if anyone else is in the business. The dogs, she answers, adding that I best consider carefully before choosing among them. Before I can ask more she scuttles off, disappearing into the crack of a flame red wall.
asha
Reminiscence
I am sure it was you
looking back at me
hand reaching out.
I knew you would come,
you waited there
just below the surface—
moon over my shoulder—Hello Moon.
the only way I remember you is sadly.
I hesitated as though it would be too easy
to touch your close-enough-to-touch face,
then there was no time left,
just a dream almost breaking through—
almost
one last touch
from the world
beyond the watery sky.
asha
Desert Crossing
This dark blood that binds us
cheats us of our truth, brother
only a desert's dead center
can compare
but this creeping emptiness
like a desert devouring itself
oasis after oasis
has a true ring, does it not
a solidness, a comfort
we survivors can depend on
come on, need me brother
without a truth
no heartbreak is enough
I seem like one going
to meet a lover
but behind my eyes—
sighing, shifting ashes.
asha
Skin Trade
Mother,
There is always a market for flesh
even now
sunlight in thorns
they are hungry for us
make ordinary what is not
dying
the innocent know this
they reach back
future to memory
faces repeating themselves
a lime-green inch worm
toiling over jumbled foot stones
in the membrane
the breathing cage
there is no short cut to the old cities
in the necessary air
I am sitting in a chair
imagine me
I move my right hand
move yours from the dirt
touch me
it is easy
this regeneration
a habit natural as spring
we the living have come to
expect it
you know it is a gift
the last thing
the dying pup saw from the heap
after they skinned everything
but her eyelashes.
asha
Pele
Somewhere nearby a fly is the last
friendly voice of earth where—
with broken pieces glinting
everywhere—
and unbraided fire hair
the literal eye shuts—
lured beyond by what
cannot be seen—
what has not begun
stretches out—
what cannot be imagined—
takes shape under my feet—
the bloody red sulfuric
sweaty birth of future worlds.
I never wanted to return,
she says,
never wanted to leave
the white plume—
the stinging rain.
But we come back
from the boiling point
of hurricanes. We—
walk back together
over burnished glass,
Anna Sadhorse
from the fire-eating sea
and me, back past
tiny ferns busy in their
grottoes digesting
the volcano
within the thin
moist shadows
caught in the upheaval’s
crust.
It has never been so fine,
here—where the foot
does the thinking
finds momentary
balance before
the body falls—
again forward
into unforeseeable
circumstance.
Pick any thread
from the loom of chaos,
she whispers. The wildest will do.
It is our job making sense of nothing.
asha
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)