G. C. WALDREP
Canticle for the Second Sunday in Lent
To be the son of a poet is to lust in a great circle.
Places both of you will
visit,
for instance—Iowa cornfield, New England farm midwinter.
A mill-race.
Plaque for the bell factory hidden now
By upthrust suspension, spray from which flow freezes
even gravity's steady
ictus,
compressing this river into a held note. Somewhere nearby
a clock
ticks
But not loudly. One draws a breath, holds it in
the pale hour between delight
and grief
aware of genetic precomposition, the chest's scripted rise
and fall.
The idea that history
Is more than the sum of component parts glosses
pain with sentiment, yet we
do it
all the time, sitting together with friends after the roof's caved in.
Bitter
words from the beloved—
A wild complaint, as in the Donal Og with
its impossibilities and smooth-
stripped
compass rose: It was a bad time she took for telling me that;
it was
shutting the door after the house was robbed. . . .
There is the lament, and then the assignation; shocks
of ice piling up in the
lee of
the dam, and voice plucked knife-edged from a chill breeze.
In the
fable those children and that livestock
Were replaced, not restored, two different things.
This evening the sky leaves
wind-knots
tied in your footsteps, bits of string and grass blown up
from
some uncovered place.
No longer a scrawl. In which some letters may not
be spoken. You write
around
them as on the rim of a wheel revolving slowly to the rhythm
of sleet
against a kitchen window,
Promising nothing this time: no ships, no towns,
no seaside courts. Only the
tannin-dark
water you came from. And the green fields in the high
passes
to which you will go.
for Geoff Brock
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