BRIGHT MORNING
Bright
morning, blue, and the clouds gossiping with the treetops and the
fallen ladders of the impossible horizons. I sustain six lives
simultaneously in a wounded apartment that’s been bleeding for
years, continents of plaster out of the walls, the cartography of
aging, rewriting the maps as the world drifts like a cinder across
the seas of its weeping eye. The trees sway in the wind like smoke,
and I sit at my desk, waiting for my hair to dry, smoking, drinking
black coffee, happy to be enthroned in my solitude as my dreams pale
like stars in the extremity of the light. Lost. I couldn’t tell you
who I was if you showed me, and the mirrors have grown bags under
their eyes like the heavy pollen of time in bee-satchels, silver
wombs that are still trying to get my birth right. I’ve become an
apostate of reflections, erasing my face with a sleeve; or watching
it shrink like a warm breath on a cold windowpane. Maybe the hive of
a mind somewhere is turning me into honey. And I remember lovers I’ve
had, and lovers I will never meet, and all the changes of a comet as
it approaches each one to glow luminously in the darkness of the
bottomless watershed that is always within me, the familiar one-eyed
abyss. And there’s a wing of my heart that opens and passes over
them like a generous eclipse to bless them all for the time I spent
in their mansions of blood and tears, for the candles that ached like
joy in the mystery and led me to the eras where they wanted me to
stay for the night. They left a desert by the bed and I drank it like
an hourglass, true to a calling that exceeded us both. Like the wind,
I left a note, extolling their beauty to the webs of the morning,
hanging on the bell-ropes of the flowing diamonds that wander the
labyrinths of the wet peach hair and Appalachian earlobes I dampened
with my tongue. A language of one, I drank from their intimate stars
and played the skeletons of their burning harps in a controlled fury
of power and hunger as the earth convulsed with islands of flesh,
bolts of black lightning that illuminated oblivion in a flash of
annihilant ecstasy. And habitable planets were born of the encounter,
two children, old enough now in their passage of nights and days to
know that it’s life that flows, not the river, that their wings are
bridges of light and blood and breath that once offered themselves
like the crutches of winter trees to the sky in a paradox of love
that wanted to lay down roots and fly. What a dream it all is; what a
vast and amazing hallucination of darkness within darkness, shadow
writing on shadow, a confusion of gates trying to enter one another
with both eyes closed, fire obsessively trying to coax the hydrant of
the heart to open up before the house burns to the sky and the
ground, uncertain whether it’s a root or a flower, a bone or a
star, a desert of light, or the whisper of a billion gestural
galaxies.
PATRICK
WHITE
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