HEAL SOFTLY, LOVER, BURN
GENTLY
Heal softly, lover, burn
gently,
the moon is full on your
windowsill,
and the stars haven’t
gone down
over the eyes of your
bells
or made a fool of your
tears
over a jest of ashes.
You are
the nightbranch that
reaches for me
and I’m the bird that
returns
to your cherry
chandeliers,
the ripe goblets of your
fire-plums,
and the stars in the
quince of your eyes.
And there are
blackberries in your blood
thorns and vines,
simmering eclipses
broken gates and lonely
doorways
where I’ll always come
to shine,
where I’ll wait like a
ghost beyond death
for the eyelids and
bridges
in the breath of your
wine.
Eternity isn’t time
enough
to hold the sea I bear
you
nor a mountain robed in
snow
nor a valley heeding
voices in the depths,
more than a wound and a
toy
to the love I feel for
you.
Heal softly, lover, hear
me, see
in this dreamtime of the
flesh,
how the lanterns
of the lady slippers glow
with honey
that fill the hives with
light,
and the doe sleeps
softly
in the silver grass that
jewels the water,
and the fireflies outlive
the brass
of graver monuments than
these
that write our names on
the moon in shadows.
I say it in bees and
bruises and orchids
in apples and eglantine,
in roads and doors and
thresholds,
in skulls and scars and
sunspots,
in grapes and scarlet
runners,
in the slips of the
cucumber seeds,
and the lips of the
velvet borage
that kiss and overflow
the stone,
you’re the harp in the
throat of time
the spider weaves
to hear the morning
play.
No widow of burnt guitars,
no journal of summer
pressed between the
pages
of the nightshift shales,
no blood on a chain,
or raven lost in the
rags and ribbons
of her own black sails,
not
frost on a garden that
fails,
or a lock that’s lost
it keys,
or a rock that grieves for
its plundered ores,
you are the candle and
the seal
of all my mystic
urgencies,
the gentle thief of my
confessions
at the circuits and
sessions
of a doomed man’s last
appeal
to die in the bay of your
arms,
a dolphin, a bottle, a
snail
that craved its way to
you.
Heal softly, lover, turn
with the herbs
that follow the sun like
clocks
and when your day is
done
bathe in the dusk with the
birds
that fly through the air
like autumn,
and scented by the
apricots
and peacock blues that
pour out of my heart
like the eyes and inks of
a prelude,
a painter, a pitcher of
words,
rise from your ancient
solitude renewed
and dressed by the wind
in your scarves and
veils,
in your nets, your shawls
and auroras,
in anklets, chokers,
loops and chains
in your nebulae and
orbits
and the lunar rain of your
earrings,
wait for me as I will
wait for you
where the nightjar sings
to celebrate his lover’s
soft approach
with every quill and
feather of his wings.
And no world will
deceive us,
no flame expire, no
radiance cease,
no fracture mar the
jubilant fire
that recast its heart in
hell
to love you long and
well.
PATRICK WHITE
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