Almost the longest night.
Before real darkness arrives,
travelers set out.
*
Some leave, some arrive.
Flaggers waving lit-up wands
before the train station.
*
For a few moments,
the silhouettes of trees pressed
against the sky's burning throat.
*
Domestic vs. extravagant
space: a parade of placid geese
not yet leaning into the wind.
The Noble Plan
"Make no little plans."
~ attributed to Daniel H. Burnham
Like most everything else, it began
as a kind of dream. But grand, both
in scale and purpose. Each instance
toward the manifestation of the dream
became practice, a testing of principles
first laid out on drafting paper, to bring
a sense of imperial order to the new colony
in the East. Outward from the core of government
and the hub for commerce, a network of radiating
grids laid upon the wilderness. Here, the air
was bracing and fragranced with pine: a tonic
for those languishing in the provinces'
tropical heat and malarial fevers. After
the roads, a sanatorium was built on a hill:
as charming as any in Simla or the Swiss alps,
promising rest and recovery for the tubercular;
fresh food and sunlight. A City Beautiful,
whose monuments and buildings were scaffolds
for ideals of civic and moral virtue— whose site,
cleansed of unsightly elements, would support survival,
beckon trade, arrange functions for urban refinement and
aesthetics. An eye for immediate defense and a long future.
marbled
flame-colored and obsidian spokes, trapped in marble orbs—
children flick these into a circle, serious but at play.
to be ground-level, eye-level, and sense the tremble
of what you can't see beneath the only surface
you know: echos of passing traffic, daily clamor
from rushing to or from some important purpose.
describe this strange vessel which we inhabit,
our feet rushing to or from some important purpose.
you know the echoes of passing traffic, daily clamor
of what you can't even see beneath the only surface.
meet it ground-level, eye-level, sense the tremble
as childen flick globes into a circle, serious but at play.
flame-colored and obsidian spokes, trapped in marble orbs—
Apnea
A high pile of pillows in bed, tufted
mattresses, double-lined quilts. Side
sleepers, face-down sleepers, flat-on-
the-back sleepers chasing the elusive
dream of sleep. But we lose count: sheep
show no signs of quitting their high jump
marathons. The moon keeps training
its too bright spotlight through
the window. Is it that we've grown
too soft, too dependent on the idea
of sinking as release? In one museum
alcove, shelves of wooden and porcelain
takamakura, curved to cradle the neck and
head of the sleeper in such a way as to
provide both a cooling effect and preserve
elaborate hairstyles. Perhaps they were on
to something, all those geishas and others
who lay on a mat and rested their heads
on these pillows, even while entertaining
the suitor that slid into the chamber at night,
having first slipped a poem of supplication
into the hands of a lady-in-waiting. Soft
light from the moon filters through screens
as though it did not have an iron core
and a silicate mantle. When I purchase
a sobakawa or pillow filled with buckwheat
hulls, I'm thinking only of how tilting
the chin upwards lifts the tongue away from
the back of the throat, straightening the airway
to better aid the flow of air into the lungs.
Breathlessness can be involuntary; can
also be the climax of heightened emotion.
Losers, Finders
What you lose that someone else finds:
a note slipped into a fold in the cloth
of time; another that slipped your mind.
Not the first time you feel as if blind,
flightless as a domesticated silk moth.
But what you lose, someone else finds—
Luck had nothing to do with your state of mind.
Gravity pick machine, numbered balls in the broth
of time. One after another they slip in your mind.
In thrift store bins, jumbles of left-behinds.
Atlases, maps; mismatched crystal, dish cloths.
What you lost that someone else finds
one bleak day, rummaging idly only to find
luck that flew out of your hands. It sprang forth
out of time that for a moment slipped your mind.
One day, will you catch up to find
it accidentally broken, changed in worth?
What you lose that someone else finds
at another time slips into your mind.
Process Analysis
Relief
at finding a bathroom
She says she feels
almost like a new person
If we are always tethered
to some idea or state
when are we most
ourselves
Pauses show
how silence is a palimpsest
of meanings
The instability of
surfaces and intentions
At the end we are rendered into
pulp and bone
Only some things sift
completely into ash
A practice in which the exterior
makes the interior
visible at last
Long Night Moon
Bodies of water with a menace of teeth
beneath the surface.
Silvered arms of trees, unleafed, suggest
a longing for taxonomy—
How to remember origins,
where we began.
Trace them back to the root.
And farther back,
past the level of groundwater—
where there's less evaporation in deeper
layers of soil.
While we're asleep, our hearts
send telegrams into the frozen skies.
Tragedy
The story is that an eagle mistook
Aeschylus' bald head for a rock,
and dropped a tortoise upon it.
Did it shatter his skull or give
him a giant concussion? In any case,
he was supposed to have died instantly.
Aeschylus, described as the father of
tragedy, wrote: He who learns must suffer.
And even in our sleep, pain that cannot
forget falls drop by drop upon the heart.
What of the tortoise— did it incur any
injuries? In Maso Finiguerra's pen-and-
sepia-ink drawing of the scene, the idea
of catastrophe makes a light impression.
There's the writer, seated placidly by
a stream, book on one knee, nodding off
perhaps because of the leaves rustling in
the grove. Strangely, the before and
after of the turtle's fall is rendered
in the drawing. One moment it hovers
mid-air like a cartoon alien ship.
In the next, it's landed smack
on its back on the artist's head.
The eagle itself wears an expression
of mild dismay, perhaps having just
then realized it aimed at the wrong
target. But such is the nature of tragedy—
how the small, seemingly inconsequential
thing leads to the undoing.
Cynicism
My student was talking about a film
he described as terrible— about terrible
human beings and how they did terrible things
to each other, with no relief at the end. Not
even a shot panning away from the broken window-
pane and into the shadowed hills, not even the noises
animals make in the woods, magnified by the dark. Why
even does it exist, he asked? why do people watch it?
A movie can be like a poem, and a poem like a movie.
Nested images, personae, mood, some kind of setting.
A poem can seem to have several movies nested inside
it. But even the bleakest poem couldn't have complete
cynicism: otherwise, why was it turned into a poem?
Someone took all the koi out of the small pools
by the entrance to a battleship— nine guns, three
main gun turrets— now turned into a museum.
We recall seeing the flash of orange and gold
scales as fish darted through moss-green water.
Chained by two anchors, the ship almost doesn't
seem connected to something as terrible as war.
Deep Cleaning
Behind the small folding bookshelf
in the guest room, I find three
canvasses. Each one bears traces
of the start of a project— landscape,
portrait, indeterminate still life;
none of them complete beyond a first
thin layer. I must have seen things
then that beckoned as finished visions,
but that now I must conjure if I want
to complete them. Not to make
a copy of the thing, but to manifest
the heat that cut through the distance—
wheel of yellow, bowl teeming with fruit;
girl blowing a profusion of dandelion
seeds into the wide open sky.

