MY HANDS WERE ONCE
My hands were once the afterlives of birds
that caressed the cheeks
of the sky
and brushed back the wind
from its eyes,
and took a finger to
intercede with a tear
not to start a pilgrimage
without a little laughter,
and I am of the stuff of
three stars
and a fire in my loins
that inseminated space
with planets
and wrought red iron into
bells of blood,
and leaned on calcium for
ladders of bone
and taught the four-armed
shivas of carbon to grasp life
and dance for the wheat
and the grapes and the poppies,
and man lying down with
woman
in waters urged by the
fires of thought
furiously rooted in the
gardens of the stars.
I am the ancestor and
offspring of everything
and even my solitude is
the loneliness of the mountains
sleepwalking over their
own seabeds,
and the way I love, a
trigger of oxygen,
and the way I see, a
whisper of time and space,
a feather of moonlight
dipped in the ink of the night.
I have within me,
deep in the vaults of my
wounds,
swords from the wars of
the grass and the trees,
and words that sang like
arrows in the sacred groves
to answer why I live and
what I’m looking for
and why all my foundation
stones are shoes worn out with roads,
and who is it looking back
at me like a dark echo in a dream
to see if I’m coming
like a shadow with a voice.
And there are mysterious
robes lighter than a breath of silk,
auroras and lightstorms,
waterskins of the water-walking stars
that have plied themselves
like the rings in the heartwood of a tree,
journals of light and
rain, to sailor my spirit in a chronicle of flesh,
and be a brief thing in a
brevity of eras, to know
why the tiger dies looking
into the open, its eyes
yellow lamps in the bluing
of the early morning
as if its death were
already achieved a breath behind it
and a man crawls toward a
meaning on his knees.
All the deaths are mine,
the births, the names,
and my heart is the shrine
of the moonrise and the dawn,
the blue honey hive of the
stars and the wildflowers in their fields,
and the wind takes down
what the mute rocks repeat for my sake,
and every face is a
blossom or a leaf or an apple from the bough
of the orchard that
seasons my emotions to advent and passage,
to the transformative
oceans that drink to the bottom of themselves
and leave their empty cups
on the moon to be filled again.
I have within me a
beginning and an end
that open like the wings
of a single gate
I passed through long
before the birth of time
like the prelude of a
world I hadn’t read yet
because I hadn’t
finished living it in tears and blood,
running my fingers over it
like the tender braille of a breast,
lapping it like blood from
my own skull to see what kind of drunk I was.
And there are lifelines on
the palms of everyone’s hands
valleys, rivers, nerves,
creases, roots, deltas, lightning
that together make a map
to every dream I’ve ever lived,
all the tragedies and joys
of fugitive spirits
trying to shoot the rapids
with a broken oar,
and secrets that put a
finger to the lips of the dead
like the horizontal
threshold of a man who stands
like an infinite pause in
the doorway of waking up
and just looks at himself
with nothing special in mind,
a commotion of swallows in
the radiant spoons of last night’s rain.
But there’s you now, who
is not me,
because I long for you
like a tide longs for its island,
and can find nowhere
within myself the likeness of your face,
and though I know the
water knows you like an ancient migration
it leaves no trace of your
vines on the lips of its waves,
and there are skys where
you shine among the stars for hours
where I’ve found threads
of your shadow
torn on the thorns of the
constellations
like rivers unravelled
from your wilderness skin,
and even once I found your
footprint like a boat on a beach
but you were not in it,
and the emptiness was out of reach.
And I think if I find you,
if I look hard enough,
if I stare into space as
still as a lizard or a telescope,
if I check every leaf the
doves bring back in their beaks,
every eyelid of snow that
lowers the pines into sleep,
and lace the wind with
fragrant spells and tragic pleas,
if I can break the code of
the rocks that ore their silver secrets
like love-letters, like
poems, deep in the throat of the earth,
if I grow new eyes for the
seeing from the oldest wines of my being,
and the sky has to turn
black forever not to have you pale like a comet,
not to lose you like a
chandelier of fireflies in a galaxy,
not to reach out and touch
you like the creatrix of the creator,
I can part from this life
like a gift I left in the night on the stairs.
PATRICK WHITE
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