AN ANT
An ant carrying the last
bell of a flower,
the heavy weight of
knowing how it ends,
the autumn left to clean
up after the party,
I have nothing to say to
the crows in daylight,
sitting a bough above me
like quotation marks,
the heart afraid of its
own farewells
as the geese stream across
the sky like a shoelace,
and I am more alone in
the world than space
as time shows me passage
after passage
of wounded poppies
bleeding like a hooker’s lipstick.
I’m tired of pushing
the sail of my life
like a solar wind to the
edges
of the knowable and over
into the unintelligible
abyss
of a dictionary compiled
for the dead.
And the stars are
beginning to look like nails
in a large coffin without
a rudder
that sank in drydock,
and stone by stone the
cemeteries chatter about life
as they did among
shadows, hoping and guessing
the pious vehemence of
their chiselled certainties
doesn’t drop a dime
on the number of urges
they’ve had
to fuck a teen-age girl
into oblivion.
And there are clarities
quick enough
to open the lovers like
letters that never came,
and mental corals
that will rip the hull out
of the moon,
and hives of venom and
honey
that hang like lanterns
and ambivalent kisses
above the tongue that’s
fool enough to taste them,
and a night so dark ahead
only the most
star-struck understudies
of last year’s
constellations
are eager enough to
shine.
I wish I didn’t know,
I wish I didn’t insist
on seeing
and my blood didn’t set
out looking for me
with a message to
assassinate anyone who hides.
PATRICK WHITE
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