Messages from the dead
who ghost a child’s closet
and far bedroom corners
with whispers of dust
are more cryptic than
the classic mausoleums
and plebian stone stiles
that mob Queens’ green
hillsides like a rebel army
of raised shields besieging
Manhattan’s imperial towers.
Or so I must believe
their voices a chorus
around a moon-remote
woman when I lie down
for my afternoon nap
just before twilight wrings
me anxious, arctic Lucy
beneath me in her fluid
Heloise guise, lips at work
on a tingling earlobe.
No wife calls from her grave
beyond the garden gate
nor boy (after escaping
church) from a used-car lot’s
unlocked Chrysler where black
gospel songs rock its frame
to truant brothers’ glee.
No baby sister sighs
over an unlived life, her
small blood sign swept blank
by a ruthless ceiling fan.
Face down in defeat and
faux “noontide” desire
I climax a stifled groan
that lumbers through an old
house to startle awake
three rescued kittens, they
alone knowing who walks
and mourns here.
Bionote
Ed Butscher author of first biographies of Sylvia Plath and Conrad Aiken. The most recent collection of his own poetry is Child in the House from the Amagansett Press (2010).
No comments:
Post a Comment