Monday, November 25, 2013

Night Waitress

Reflected in the plate glass, the pies
look like clouds drifting off my shoulder.
I'm telling myself my face has character,
not beauty. It's my mother's Slavic face.
She washed the floor on hands and knees
below the Black Madonna, praying
to her god of sorrows and visions
who's not here tonight when I lay out the plates,
small planets, the cups and moons of saucers.
At this hour the men all look
as if they'd never had mothers.
They do not see me. I bring the cups.
I bring the silver. There's the man
who leans over the jukebox nightly
pressing the combinations
of numbers. I would not stop him
if he touched me, but it's only songs
of risky love he leans into. The cook sings
with the jukebox, a moan and sizzle
into the grill. On his forehead
a tattooed cross furrows,
diminished when he frowns. He sings words
dragged up from the bottom of his lungs.
I want a song that rolls
through the night like a big Cadillac
past factories to the refineries
squatting on the bay, round and shiny
as the coffee urn warming my palm.
Sometimes when coffee cruises my mind
visiting the most remote way stations,
I think of my room as a calm arrival
each book and lamp in its place. The calendar
on my wall predicts no disaster
only another white square waiting
to be filled like desire that fills
jail cells, the old arrest
that makes me stare out the window or want
to try every bar down the street.
When I walk out of here in the morning
my mouth is bitter with sleeplessness.
Men surge to the factories and I'm too tired
to look. Fingers grip lunch box handles,
belt buckles gleam, wind riffles my uniform
and it's not romantic when the sun unlids
the end of the avenue. I'm fading
in the morning's insinuations
collecting in the crevices of buildings,
in wrinkles, in every fault
of this frail machinery.

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by Lynda Hull, 1986

Monday, November 18, 2013

The Broken Bowl

To say it once held daisies and bluebells
       Ignores, if nothing else,
Its diehard brilliance where crashed on the floor
The wide bowl lies that seemed to cup the sun,
Its green leaves curled, its constant blaze undone,
Spilled all its glass integrity everywhere;
       Spectrums, released, will speak
Of colder flowerings where cold crystal broke.

Glass fragments dropped from wholeness to hodgepodge
       Yet fasten to each edge
The opal signature of imperfection
Whose rays, though disarrayed, will postulate
More than a network of cross-angled light
When through the dusk they point unbruised directions
       And chart upon the room
Capacities of fire it must assume.

The splendid curvings of glass artifice
       Informed its flawlessness
With lucid unities.  Freed from these now,
Like love it triumphs through inconsequence
And builds it harmony from dissonance
And lies somehow within us, broken, as though
       Time were a broken bowl
And our last joy knowing it shall not heal.

The splinters rainbowing ruin on the floor
       Cut structures in the air,
Mark off, like eyes or compasses, a space
Of mathematic fixity, spotlight
Within whose circumscription we may set
All solitudes of love, room for love's face,
       Love's projects green with leaves,
Love's monuments like tombstones on our lives.

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by James Merrill, 1947

Monday, November 11, 2013

Composed Upon Westminster Bridge (September 3, 1802)

Earth has not anything to show more fair:
Dull would he be of soul who could pass by
A sight so touching in its majesty:
This City now doth, like a garment, wear
The beauty of the morning; silent, bare,
Ships, towers, domes, theatres, and temples lie
Open unto the fields, and to the sky;
All bright and glittering in the smokeless air.
Never did sun more beautifully steep
In his first splendour, valley, rock, or hill;
Ne'er saw I, never felt, a calm so deep!
The river glideth at his own sweet will:
Dear God! The very houses seem asleep;
And all that mighty heart is lying still!

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by William Wordsworth, 1802

Monday, November 4, 2013

Thoughts on a Still Night

Before my bed, the moon is shining bright,
I think it is frost upon the ground.
I raise my head and look at the bright moon.
I lower my head and think of home.




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by Li Bai, 740 AD