Book Read Free

The Witch of the Inner Wood

Page 21

by M. Travis Lane


  here on the warm sands of the shore

  the beautiful men

  play soccer.

  Skidding and leaping —

  goalposts an oar, a washed up palm —

  kicking the sand,

  they sparkle like sea spume

  or like the bouncing wavelets where

  their little bathtub dinghy waits —

  Wynken and Blynken —

  in their wood shoe . . .

  II

  Of course I know there are savages

  Of course I know there are savages,

  trimmed feather points,

  a jagged edge on the beach,

  bones, though not human, imperfect tales

  of woman against woman, child at child —

  I have my goat and parasol,

  like Bishop’s Crusoe, islanded at home,

  my hours against the mealy bugs —

  What do you want I could do instead?

  Those ships that pass and pass and never come

  are islands like this one, this bed —

  just tourists, bleating at the sea.

  The wars remake themselves.

  Far out, I do not visit them.

  But in my dinghy I can row

  to visit lives marooned like mine

  among these gentle pelagoes, or,

  clutching my paddle, wade

  in the steady rain of my neighbour’s grove

  where furies nest like nightingales

  and winds make too much noise for sleep.

  These are too much for me:

  else wheres, else reals,

  else others’ pains.

  This private ward

  is dear to me.

  Perhaps I should write a letter,

  perhaps should call.

  I pace my garden back and forth

  leaving no mark upon its sand.

  Easier, nothing to explain,

  and never that awkward moment when

  I can’t ask what I want to know.

  *

  Sky Island

  Sun casts its blond remission.

  Cast away on an imperfect peacefulness

  as if I rode a raft on others’ seas

  (their whirlpool lives sigh under me) —

  Over the combers, heavily,

  a long line of brown pelicans

  streams staidly south.

  Bobbing over the leaden sea

  the printless pocks of living tears

  freckle the day stream.

  I lean against these absences

  as they recede. The waves

  are the grey hills the valley holds

  at the far sky’s line.

  My glass cell hangs above

  a tiny, dirty city fringed

  with dusk, spruce, aspen gleam.

  Sky Island, this white hospital,

  an Astolat where everything through glass

  on glass reverses, fades, and ceases to be true —

  my window on the universe.

  *

  Everything’s safe

  Everything’s safe. It’s all washed up on shore

  above the recent tide wrack, stowed away

  the things I never learned to use

  or now have lost the trick of:

  skis, a wrecked piano, needlework,

  a little raft of cookie tins, prayer books

  and star charts, mandalas

  of what I thought I ought to know.

  And the unuseful reference books

  that never list the things I search

  but other stories, other tracks, sherlocks

  to other homes than mine,

  outdated even as they speak.

  News like a wreath of seaweed drapes the rock.

  You’ve been away.

  I did not know how long you were.

  Each day

  seemed its own monument:

  granite, huge.

  I flounder like a half-drowned fly

  at a bathtub’s edge.

  I haul

  my mind as from a pit

  to the bright surfaces of day.

  Music

  still draws me,

  sunrise,

  birds,

  the homely chink

  of dishes in the corridors —

  your voice —

  and it is good,

  all things.

  No.

  No.

  Not all.

  III

  Dawn, with its usual hospital scent

  Dawn, with its usual hospital

  scent of coffee and sour rags

  filters across the clammy room.

  My hands are puffy, like soft

  indecent roses frost has plucked.

  Usual noises: the ambulance,

  the fire alarm (which is always “a drill”),

  the rattle of the gurneys, breakfast trays,

  the humming machine in whose web hands

  I dangle, passive, hooked and tied,

  the weather lashing on the walls.

  Outside on the rain-streaked roads

  faint pricks of light,

  sky dense with reflections, purple-orange

  like an old bruise, thick

  as the matted wool

  of a dog’s blanket.

  Here, it is always the same.

  Always that floor wax and vomit smell,

  urine, bedpans, soaps —

  Shelved on the hospital windowsill

  among the browning roses, borrowed books,

  my teddy bear, icon of guilt —

  the child I will not make.

  *

  A hand’s work

  When we drove up to St. Anthony’s

  that grey, cold day,

  I thought I could not live out here

  where damn perpetually braces, braced,

  propped up, and swaddled as I am.

  Half dozing in the heated car,

  the sun in shabby patches on my sleeve,

  I watched the muskeg barrens shake

  like a wolf’s fur, silver, below the morne.

  We counted at the highway’s edge

  scrapings of humus, fenced

  with a marker rail or labelled with a rag,

  plots scarcely a metre square but thrust,

  a hand’s work, into the universe.

  Last fall, raking the fallen leaves,

  tanbark of summer’s circuses,

  we found a primrose eastering on its own

  among the cardboard poppy pins

  and rotting jellies from the crab,

  and, watching us, a squirrel with its tail

  upstanding like a flame.

  Nothing is too small to say.

  (I love you.

  What do I bring to you?)

  *

  Pane after pane

  Pane after pane cracks open to the sun:

  red sores, red flames,

  a swelling over the trees —

  now like a streak of syrup,

  maple, apricot, lavender —

  striations of rock in a cut bank —

  a Jacob’s coat,

  and

  under the window,

  the parking lot:

  asphalt splashed with hard nights,

  the night staff leaving the hospital,

  sleep rubbed away.

  Wisps of music, a little blue,

  baroque diminished by distances,

  tug at my inattention.

  Submerged below the rustles of the hall

  the noises of the highway,

  distant woods —

  the jet trails its white sentences

  dissolving,

  never quite saying . . .

  IV

  Sonata for flute

  Coffee, “the drug of choice” you said.

  And music. Sonata for flute.

  “Shot silk for James Galway;

  velvet for Rampal.”

  And I thou
ght of you

  when the flute played over and over

  against the soft, autumnal drums

  of the Malecite. More like a loon’s

  soft hooting.

  It was Ned Bear,

  whose mother I know, her black fur coat

  transmuted into his masks’ black hair,

  their mouths emitting silent notes

  that deafen the observer:

  pain,

  slag — earth’s face stabbed

  with the horns of trees,

  a clear-cut like a migraine, hills

  broken for charcoal.

  You play your flute in the other world,

  silent in this. You make

  a music in the middle night when you awake

  (as you so often waken) — keeping watch.

  (I steal this poem from you.)

  You tell me what the skies say,

  their suns and their auroras, angels,

  shooting stars helplessly falling

  like tiny hail, unwritten, unsung, a dignity

  outside of measure — the shaman’s stick

  drumming the heartbeat we seem to know.

  Also serving, you only wait.

  I must learn from you.

  *

  An eagle’s feather in red cloth

  The gift goes as it came.

  The eagle’s flight

  brushes God’s face with its human prayer.

  The shaman’s drum

  gathers together the continents,

  bridge that the stars pass over,

  trailing blood,

  with spotted wings like the

  pierced-heart dove, shrike’s larder —

  like a livid peak

  in the undecided moment sun and storm

  sinking together shed

  their incarnated glories —

  red

  godheads —

  The eagle speaks

  higher,

  speaks to the dragon’s eye,

  sunspit

  the eagle’s voice.

  Listen, deaf children,

  our shabby hands

  beating like wings against our drums

  spread poems out to the sunlit sky —

  (feather wrapped in a red cloth) —

  rise higher,

  flight

  of the eagle’s prayer.

  Meanings I cannot decipher yet

  (the buds in their winter shapes,

  corselet and shield,

  the evening shedding its yellow flakes) —

  *

  Sky

  Sky, with your blue rose

  windows of dove feet,

  your cold sea-amber,

  your combers pounding the new day numb,

  infinite barren longing, ocean, prayer,

  to your community of grace

  elect our lonely island selves!

  Your mornings come

  like living coals. The pain

  we must endure; the light

  pass on.

  “CRACKED”

  One imaginary letter to me from my partially cracked poetess at Amherst.

  Colonel Thomas Wentworth Higginson to Anna Higginson

  i

  I was a whole, a cypher, a white knot

  until that blow

  divided me.

  Like the doubled rag doll I’ve no feet.

  My dress is my address;

  I can’t get out.

  My polar heads

  (white Eva up, or,

  up black Pip) —

  Topsy topside,

  Moebius egg,

  inseparably twinned.

  I write on paper like my skin

  this Friday print,

  Elaine reversed in mirror glass,

  Crusoe alert

  boat-keeping for the Visitor

  who never comes.

  The blow that forced my being split

  me from my wholeness,

  fell

  on the clear waters of the air.

  I am a meadow,

  enclosed,

  walled in,

  shut door.

  ii

  Daffy with weakness my black self holds

  the secret of my strength.

  Pip’s tambourine

  shivers against the gaping cracks

  of those white nights.

  What music creeps across the sands,

  those blocks of ice,

  that tumulus

  of coral?

  Running to freedom Eliza crossed,

  but dropped me,

  daisy,

  in the sea.

  I sank,

  lead plummet,

  pendulum.

  Pip was my heart. His music was

  pure firefly with no fathoming,

  but

  coward in the graveyard, whistled,

  leaped —

  He heard the sailors shouting far away.

  The black waves buoyed his body.

  His mind drowned.

  This body has no legs to leap.

  The coffin that upholds me drifts

  secured in a closed pasture.

  Sea

  is my white wedding dress.

  Oh carry me,

  lost bird,

  to my drowned Ararat,

  my Captain’s fabrication,

  his whole cloth!

  iii

  A storm sometimes in the outer world

  beats at the shutters.

  The twin

  stirs,

  shuddering cygnet,

  signature,

  who sings like a fly trapped in this room.

  You who live in the processes,

  what can you know,

  unfractioned, unreflecting,

  nailed to the unlettered literal —

  a pebble in the gizzard of the Lord?

  The sea had jeeringly kept me up.

  I could not drown

  but led by lazy music fell ashore.

  I looked, you looked, he looked —

  No one was there.

  iv

  I climb the ladder to my room

  drawing my writing after me

  like a long rope.

  Each day,

  among the rattles of the birds,

  the mad girl’s cry from over the pond,

  another real world shuts its door.

  I had my finger on the thread;

  it snapped.

  It wrapped around my neck.

  They pulled an unsigned tablet from the sea —

  (bloodstains

  on a white handkerchief,

  brown as the sherry the visitor leaves —

  is leaving . . .)

  Didn’t Pip sing those summer nights?

  Dancing, as if his feet cut glass,

  lighting the whiteness of the sea

  with tinsel exhalations.

  Heart of a daisy.

  Such innocence.

  In what forge was my firefly forged,

  my cowardice?

  Captain, You told me, “Stay.”

  I rust.

  This hand

  which held His, watched his troops

  die with Him, a black victory.

  Among those marble senators

  my voice

  creaks like a dory.

  Deserting Him

  I made a desert where my twin

  who goes before me where I go,

  yet tags my heels.

  v

  In Eden there’s safe rowing

  but not here.

  Cracked head,

  cracked heart.

  Jack in the corner, my father, crow,

  pulled out my heart, a ruby plum,

  and spun it toward the tropics,

  whipped my cord.

  And didn’t I spin and spin and spin,

  and didn’t I ramble?

  White letters, shrouds of summer,

  a white flag —<
br />
  this hand

  will nail its message down.

  Each day

  the smells of home: baked bread, sweet ginger,

  honeycomb —

  the heartless, joyous, juvenile

  eternities, bee-lovely,

  waft me toward what shores

  what tropic luxe,

  what paradise?

  I could not stop.

  I had gone souther than the pole

  toward Arcturus.

  Beyond earth’s magnet apron strings

  white clouds flapped like dishrags.

  Shall I leap?

  Abandoning my Father’s house,

  out through the walls and the barn’s back door —

  a swimmer, dying a thousand times,

  dives down, at last, to the miracles.

  from

  TOUCH EARTH

  TO PERSEVERE

  1. Hour after hour

  Hour after hour: crows, browned cedars,

  house after house in last year’s Christmas lights,

  dumps, sheds, cattails, roadside trash.

  We’ve passed that car two times —

  that one with the table and four chairs

  strapped to its top as if picnicking.

  Here’s where the road salt kills the pines

  and there’s the mammoth shovel that holds up

  a “star”-topped fir tree in its beak.

  Over brown fields the winter sky

  glimmers like the inner horn

  of some hard seashell. Malls

  flare their orange lights.

  The margin of the road

  seems scribbled all over: weeds,

  rags, swatches of old snow.

  The penmanship of dusk checks off

  each item: moon

  (print of a thumbnail pressed in dough)

  numbers the issue.

  The evening, like an empty hand,

  seems portent with meaning, unsayable.

  2. The young grackle

  The young grackle sat on the feeder top

  with open beak.

  Sometimes the young seem never to catch on.

  But were we really quicker?

  Puttering about in our memories,

  don’t we dust, rearrange, rewrite?

  The sky is as open as ever was,

  and the little shadow after me

  I think of in the image of a hawk

  changes its shape as the weathers change.

  Sign of the times, difficult always.

  But are things worse?

  The diaries in the attics of the dead

  are like these letters that I write:

  don’t say what words can’t find to say,

  but what they must.

  3. “70 under at Baker Lake”

  “70 under at Baker Lake.” The caribou

  browsed last night at the end of town

  by the almost empty storage sheds

  that ring in the wind with a metal sound.

  Winter with all its tentacles

  is stronger than we are, more absolute.

 

‹ Prev