MY VOICE REFUTES ME
to the memory of Ted
Plantos and Shaunt Basmajian
My voice refutes me like
the skin of an old enemy
I once honoured with
scars that glowed in the dark
and there is no end of
the cemetery windows
I keep hurling myself
through like a planet or a rock
or a bird with a vertical
horizon
stubbing its neck on the
blue lazuli
of the freak sky that put
its foot down
on the throat of an
impossible freedom
and solidified into a
mage of glass and ice,
a corpse in front of a
crystal ball,
a rebel satellite defying
its own ripples
trying to evolve
feathers of fire
to get the voices out of
its head
and fly where it wants,
probing what it will like a humming-bird,
or a mosquito with more
than a taste for blood,
or a junkie tying off to
shoot a movie. Never
let it be said that I
didn’t go looking for myself
under every avalanche,
after every deluge
as if the omega in the
word hope
were a vowel that
survived, not just
the last word of another
expiring number,
the expansive amplitude
of an indecipherable
nothing,
a kamikaze zero with
explosives in the fuselage
that never hit anything
on the desperate way down to victory.
Like any human being I
took my stand on quicksand
and drowned in my own
foundation-stones,
dreaming of mansions
fixed in cement
I churned from blood and
tears and lime
in the hourglass of a
deserted heart.
Abject and unabsolved
of my ferocious
delinquency, my thoughts now,
as the suppositions of
the years regress,
are more of the
provisional nature
of moonlit tents, Saharan
waterlilies,
than
the time-defying antics of the pyramids.
I
don’t want to last anywhere for long
where the fires aren’t a
legend of stars by the morning,
or the wind isn’t the
biography
of an infamous
ghost-writer
who could drink an ocean
dry
with
just a single fountain-pen.
And
I know there are those
who gargle their poetry
as if it were just
another mouthwash,
a distillation of mint,
pink-tongued poets
plashing in municipal
bird-baths,
their haikus cleaner than
fingernails
and a deodorant for
every passion
that dews their pores with
sweat, and others,
years after the protest,
dynastic radicals
laying down dry bouquets
of predictable placards
like cardboard lilies in
a graveyard
to honour the
established dead.
Knights of the thumb, let
them pull down their visors
like thimbles, and
raising the lance of a needle
dangerously crochet the
tiny exploits
of their pillowcase
crusades in the stray threads of blood
they unbound like nesting
birds
from the stronger rope
of a wounded bell
that, night after night,
lay its head down
on the hard stone of the
world to die.
There are those who are
born
to know the net, and those
who were meant for the sea;
and then there are
others,
though they made no
larger waves,
sounded no greater depths,
discovered no further
horizons than these others,
because their muse saw
beyond the obvious
blossom of the moon
to the frenzy of life in
her tides,
her true reflection,
startle the heart in their
passing
like a field consumed by
thousands of black poppies
on an island that rose
in the night
to carry their name like
marble
or a
boy on the back of a dolphin
leaping
like a liberated apostrophe
into the more intimate
renown of a favourite constellation.
PATRICK WHITE
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