WHEN GRIEF GROWS SAVAGE AND THERE’S
NOTHING TO HUNT
When grief grows savage and there’s
nothing to hunt
and all your mandalas are turning back
into cave paintings
running down a limestone wall like
spears 
in the tears of weeping shamans, and
you want 
to tear your heart out and eat it to
nourish your emptiness 
but you’re not sure if it’s still
the noble enemy it used to be, 
or if the power of its sympathetic
magic has past 
the expiry date, and you think you
might be 
the last of the big mammals to go
extinct in the ice-age, 
time to sit down on the ground and have
a good laugh 
at how the things we take most
seriously in life 
make sacred clowns of us all in the
last analysis 
just before enlightenment. Put your
lifemask on again, 
coax a star or a firefly out of the
tinder of that nebula 
you’re blowing on until you’ve got
a good blaze going 
then throw all your grave goods on it
as if
you were sending them on ahead of you 
while you danced the pain away like the
sky burial 
of the ghost of another age that’s
been haunting you
like a glacier that’s slowly
beginning to wash itself clean of itself
as the numbness in your heart thaws
like a baby mammoth 
that fell into a crevasse of ice, and
your fingertips 
are melting like elk horn candelabra at
a native exorcism. 
And, yes, it stings for a while just as
things are starting 
to warm up, but that too will pass like
a wet snowfall in April, 
when your blood will begin to flow
again  
as if it were teaching the wild
columbine and gypsy poppies
to waltz to the picture-music of the
wind without banshees 
howling and scratching at your eyes
like dead branches
as if they were raking their
fingernails against the glass 
of a cold, crystal skull disappearing
like an ice-cube in a night cap.
Sit down on the ground and have a good
laugh 
on the tab of everything that’s ever
wounded you 
and you just watch how easy it is to
wipe 
that gruesome grin off the face of the
moon 
like the sabre-toothed Smilodon that
mauled you 
and replace it with the smile of a
Chesire cat 
that just ate the canary in a coal mine
of fossilized constellations
because grief can intensify the
darkness into diamonds 
that can see through the translucency
of the tears in your eyes
new stars breaking out all over like
waterlilies in the night skies
waiting for you to name them and give
them myths of origin 
derived like starmaps from the legends
of your own shining.
Eventually the jesters of crazy wisdom
will come to us all
and wipe the tears from our eyes and
paint stars in their stead 
we can point out to the cloaked ones
under the covers of their death beds
as if the deeper and darker the night
the better to see
trillions of fireflies flung off the
wheeling
of the celestial spheres like
compassionate insights 
into what we suffer for, what we lose
whenever 
we try to possess forever by trying to
pour 
the universe out of the universe like a
waterclock in Aquarius 
when we’re already swimming through
eternity 
like Pisces and there’s never a
moment that passes in life 
that isn’t a vernal equinox in a
locket we hold close to our hearts
that doesn’t bloom in the fires of
enlightenment 
like star seeds hidden under the
eyelids 
of last year’s dolorous windfall of
pine cones
because however the wind screams 
through the broken wishbones and harps 
of our shattered limbs, our torn
dreams, 
the eighth time we get up from our
seventh time down 
we get up and stand our ground like
evergreens in the starfields.
PATRICK WHITE
 
 
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