AFTER YOU LEAVE
After you leave, a bell
deeper than the sea
strikes once
and my blood thinks it’s
a ghost of fire
and tries to evaporate;
gusts
of the most graceful
emotions,
eloquent clarities of
the heart,
shake me free of myself
like leaves and petals
and pages,
the tender radiance of
nightskies,
and I am astounded in the
openness
of an embrace without
limits,
of boundary stones being
hurled delinquently
through the windows of
ice-age mirrors
that have wept so long
and slowly
over the silver river
locked in chains.
How easy in this solitude
to declare myself to you,
to undo the delusions
and the fears,
to flip through the
chapters of the onion,
take
off this last layer of skin,
and
shed the final masks of snow
in the warming
recollection of your presence,
in the way your beauty
exhilarates me
then thrusts me like a
torch into a deep silence,
and my heart sets out by
itself toward you
scintillant everywhere,
gold
flowing out of the dark
ore,
as if the moon rinsed out
its own reflection,
the legend of a secret
constellation
behind the vital starmap
of fireflies
that makes me want to
shine for you so intensely
in this dark doorway of
pain and passage
that the light hurts
with the poignancy
of its longing to fall
like a key
from the spirit’s lost
and found
upon your planet;
to open gardens that have
no word
for fence or gate,
to bridge your streams
with the pillars and roots
of inspired stars.
My heart sets out for you
all by itself
like a lantern on a road
that unspools with arrival
at every step.
After you leave I am
possessed of the will
of an anvil and a forge
to become a chalice for
you, a sword,
an axle and a plough, a
strong bolt
against the miscreance
of battering circumstance.
I raise your reflection to
my lips
like a cup from a
watershed of wine
and in every single sip
swallow an ocean like a
potion
from the tears of the
moon,
knowing how dangerous it
could be
to miss you, to become
an addict of your light
at the first taste,
to wait for eras for the
return of the dawn
that unravels even now
like mystic lightning through my veins.
No
more than the sun from the vine,
the moon from the
dreaming apple
the stars from the
ripening vowel of the apricot,
could any torn net woven
of knotted lifelines
undo the vision you have
already mingled
like a nightrose of
fragrant fire in my blood.
Not to drift again alone
like an empty boat
ferrying the corpse of the
ferryman
through
the fog to a cold shore
now
that I’ve been washed up on your island
like the voice of a
salvaged star in a bottle,
a frenzy of light and
love in your tides,
a drowned lighthouse
coming to life in every
wave of you.
I want to be brave enough
to risk the possibility
of listening to the night
together
with the unveiled bride
of the moon
in the bay of my arms,
I want to be the sail, the
flame,
the gull of her
breathing,
the blue dolphin off the
coast of her mouth.
I want to swim like a
mirror
the sea holds up to her
face
to do her hair up with
starfish
she tresses like galaxies
in the depths;
I want to devote myself
like a candle
to the shrine of the
September moonrise
that saturates the far sky
over the sad hills
like a warm breath
glowing on chilled glass
when she smiles
like the wind over the
abundant harvest
of the ashes I’ve
stored against
this famine of passion
in the silo of the blue
guitar.
I want to place my life
like a feather of fire
on the mysterious altar
of lunar rain
that splashes like stars everywhere
in the telescopic
silvering of the well in her eyes,
and turn these deserts of
space and time
back into grasslands
crossing her thresholds
in whispers of pollen and
dust.
She walks into the room
to help me paint the
bedroom walls,
as I try to cover the
graffiti
of my vandalized soul
with white,
and a dove in a cage
panics
at her approach
before an open door.
She climbs the ladder in
rags with a brush
like the moon over a
lake,
behind a cloud,
through the branches of a
leafless willow
and everything in the
room
is enhanced by her
shining
and I’m rolling new
skies over
the scars and fossils of
old stars,
worn faces with plaster
patches
to rewrite the shepherding
lies,
the myths and symbols of
my solitude
in the sidereal
headlines of her transformative light.
Now it’s four a.m
and I’m pacing from
empty room to empty room
like the pendulum of a
heavy clock
that aspires to be a bell,
threshing
words like wild rice
under
an eyelid of peacock blue
to fill the empty hold of
a buoyant heart,
the small boat of her
hands,
with the eyes of a
precious gathering.
And the tender snow falls
quietly outside
on the crow limbs of the
winter trees
like flesh returning to
the bones of the dead
in a silent resurrection
more unsayable than a
veil of white
that puts its finger to
its lips
like an arrow of fire to a
bow of blood
to hear what the hidden
nightbird
under the eaves of a
burning house is singing.
PATRICK WHITE
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