THERE’S A WOMAN IN THE DOORWAY 
There’s a woman in the doorway 
flaking like a rose of red paint
with eyes that have been weeping 
the shadows of dead saints, a full
eclipse 
of mascara, sloppy sorrows, and a
mickey
she quotes like a Bible, chapter and
verse, 
though the Bible’s mickey-mouse 
compared to how bad it can get
as I notice there’s a pink Glock in
her purse, 
the arthropod of an uncalibrated shrimp
that isn’t going to let her lover off
the hook.
I’m engraving poems on the frosty
windows
with a crow’s claw as they whisper to
me 
like the moon among the corals when I
dream, 
strange omens of incipience I always
mistake 
for a sign I’m about to cry though
it’s seldom 
revealed why. The earth is a sad, sad
place 
sometimes as you’re ushered to your
seat
by a starmap of waterlilies that can
see in the dark, 
a bouquet of wildflowers in a funereal
movie-house
at the first screening of a cosmic
prequel
featuring your life as you’ve never
seen it before. 
Reruns in the multiverse, I’m
standing 
on a million streetcorners all at once 
trying to hawk my theory of fiscal
surrealism 
to a bloodbank trying to hang on to the
Iron Age. 
I turn the page like an eyelid to
exorcise 
the ghost of the jinn in the lamp, and
the cupboards 
are as bare as the vow of a celibate
wishing well 
the watercolour lovers have lost
interest in 
now that the stars have evaporated from
it
like the spirit of yesterday’s
perfume in a purse. 
Where is the lost atmosphere of the
moon going 
like the shrinking ferns and bonsai
trees of my breath 
as if it were revising nirvanic haiku
until all that was left
were parings of nothing, lunar phases 
and fingernails of glass that could
scratch 
your eyes out like nature red in tooth
and claw 
as you rake wavelengths in the sand 
like a Zen garden in Kyoto waiting 
for enlightenment to germinate the
rocks, 
hard-scrabble farmers with almanacs of
crystal skulls. 
I’ve ploughed the moon monkishly long
enough 
with a silver tongue to know when 
to sow, tend, reap, the skeletal crops 
of the dragon’s teeth that police the
secret 
of a green thumb trying to hitch-hike
out of here 
on a long, dark, estranged, radiant
byway 
lacquered in black ice like the
gleaming mirrors
of a snake uncoiling like the full
eclipse of an oilslick
waiting for me to slip up like an
apostate 
of my mystical ineptness long after 
the last sacred clown sat down on the
ground 
and had a good laugh on the house 
at the expense of the unamused abyss, 
remarking how absurdly child-like all
this is. 
Medusa, armed to the teeth, tries to
tell me 
she’s tired of crossing swords with
her own fangs
over a point of honour someone has to
die for
like a crescent of the moon she’s
going to pull 
out of the mouth of her lyrical liar
with pliers, 
every one of her vocal cords tarred and
feathered 
like the black swan of a stone guitar 
reverberating in the Martian canyons of
her heart.
Ars longa. Vita brevis. Hatred and
angry grief 
so much easier to master than the
impossible art 
of keeping your evanescent fireflies of
insight 
undisciplined enough to ride the
lightning 
like a pale horse with the wingspan of
the universe 
without tampering with someone else’s
specious curse
or plotting a course by the stars on
your Spanish spurs. 
Not on the dance-card of her spite and
ego, 
I listen compassionately to what 
the white noise outside is trying to
teach me
like the universal hiss of the
afterbirth of road kill 
about the ontological misfortunes of
being born 
to long for nightbirds and hear the
rattling of crabs 
lugging their armaments to the front
lines of love 
like lunar castanets, or the horns of a
bull 
narrowing the gap between parentheses
like the clashing dooms of Scylla and
Charybdis, 
a whirlpool and a rock, gravity and
mass, 
the crone phase of the moon having it
out 
with the vernal equinox at a
calendrical toredo.
I see the first crescent and I want to
put it up 
to my head and pull the trigger to put
an end 
to the incommensurable agonies of
fractious decimals
repeating themselves like mantric
alibis
until nothing’s left of the original
cartel
except the amputated torso of the fire
hydrant
that tried to put the blaze out like a
voice coach 
who didn’t know all the words to the
hysterics 
of an anonymously amorous narco ballad
mythically inflating the legend of a
famous love affair 
out of the redoubtable details of a few
bad superstitions. 
Pity the fool who begrudges even the
grubbiest delusions
of the quixotic heart tilting at the
stars 
like the precessional axis of the
wobbling earth 
come round again to the eternal
recurrence
of the stratagems of spring in a Great
Platonic Year.
Love is as much of a companion to death
as murder is to sacrifice or genetics
to loaded dice. 
House wine or love potion number nine, 
pink guns with clips of rose-petaled
lipstick, 
everyone’s upholding the
incriminating honour 
of their uncontested heart defended by
their folly 
to the death as if the mystery were
about to be 
lost upon them for good as they rend
each other asunder
shooting out the stars like a
fashionable crime of passion.
As for me and my tent, the dancing
girls 
with coral lips and wishbone hips have
come and gone 
like serpentine wavelengths red
shifting into 
the shadows they left behind like signs
of intelligence
alloyed with carnal desire like a
nocturnal mirage
of the moon laying its broken sword
down on the water
like a vow we didn’t let come between
us 
as if we didn’t belong to ourselves 
which made the theft of fire we stole
from each other 
a greater blessing than the hurtful
consolations 
of obedience to the thorns at the
expense of the rose. 
What can you say about the nature of
crazy wisdom
when the heart is bemused enough to
cherish someone
barefoot beyond the bounds of common
sensical shoes that pinch? 
Some people would rather be loved than
right. 
Others more righteous than touched.
Majnun 
had his Laila. Love limps beside others
like a crutch.
And though he sipped from many goblets
encrusted with star sapphires from the
Pleiades, 
none of them tasted like the night
until he drank 
from the reflection of the beloved from
his own hands
and knew a darkness brighter than
enlightenment
and the music of rain in the eyes of a
desert 
more beautiful than water imagery on
the moon. 
The mad man knows a secret even the
deepest stars 
can’t understand without losing their
way to the well. 
PATRICK WHITE
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