Saturday, August 12, 2006

From the top of the gondola, saturday, 11 am

I bring Mary Oliver
to the top of the mountain.
Tourists surround us, babel
and shout, argue and squeal.

I am silent.

My ears strain to capture
sound and sense but I don't
want to understand.

I speak to no one.

Not even Mary.

I only want the wind to translate
its intent directly on my skin.

I wish I were a camera lens.

I long to saturate myself
with all the colors of wildflowers
without the endless pressure of names.

Contrast draws my eye; blue against green.
No.
Light. Dark. Light. Darker
dark, bright patch, and shadow.

I am cold.

I try to categorize, measure
the temperature. Can't I let it go?
Be only cool brushing warm?

Let it go. Let the air steal
the heat of my blood. Let me
become sluggish, a basilisk drowsing
on this moss-furred rock
always waiting for the sun.

I am only dangerous with words in my mouth.

I must move or die here, frozen,
with poems log jammed in my throat.

2 comments:

  1. lovely! I saw your work in "stirring" and stopped by...so glad I did.

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  2. I am only dangerous with words in my mouth.

    I must move or die here, frozen,
    with poems log jammed in my throat.

    Beautiful! Totally captures the poets dilemma of trying to soak it all in, fill the well, without always having to write it all down. Such a conundrum! Love Mary Oliver, too. She travels with me always.

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