Thursday, July 11, 2013

UNBUCKLE YOUR HEART

UNBUCKLE YOUR HEART

Unbuckle your heart, undo the luggage strap.
Wash the smell of old lovers out of your laundry.
Sow the dreams you’ve carved from your skull
like dice in sacred ground
and let’s see what springs up.
There’s the bathtub you can renew
your virginity in, and there’s a corner
you can stand your bass guitar in
like an Irishman at his wake in a coffin.
And there’s the garden for that persona
you took on the road like a scarecrow
for a travelling companion with a limp.
All the flowers taste of hummingbirds.
And it’s ok the raccoons come for the corn
like second storey cat burglars in the night.
They never take more than they need
and in a world of greed, that’s integrity.
I always leave a smile ajar to let them in.

But with you, my heart’s an open doorway
the moon’s standing in, and my blood’s
a transfusion of black roses into the occult.
My eyes, a rare conjunction of fireflies
that won’t happen again for another hundred years.
Doom can spend all the time it wants
messing with its calendars to co-ordinate
the apocalypse in all zodiacs at once
so the year of the rat and the year of the swan
don’t synchronize their prophets to the dawn
like waterclocks who think things are
just going to go on and on as they always have
like imperially inclined aqueducts without a rupture.

Eclipse, millennial poseur, you’re a lyric of carbon
that makes the diamonds flow like tears
to realize there’s galaxies of white sweet clover
more to you than appears under the cloud cover
of a hundred billion stars burning into the silver nitrates
of the photographic plates I take of you
in the humbled mountains of my all night observatories.
And even at this distance, alone in the cold company
of these one-eyed telescopes, I’m tempted
to cross your event horizons into your black holes
and see what worlds might come of us
on the other side. Throw caution to the wind
like a rodeo clown and take the ride
as if you were not too wise or wild for tenderness.

Even when you hurt I’ve seen how you wear
the corona of the sun so lightly in full eclipse
all the haloes shining by a reflected glory
seem mere brassy moon dogs by comparison.
Out of fury you insist upon your originality
like a gamma ray burst in the path of the earth
as you weave your interlocutory wavelengths
into the flying carpets and labyrinths
of an alien cartographer mapping out the stars
with your third eye open to the loneliness of beauty
and how everyone’s threatened by an intelligent orchid.

I imagine sometimes you’re almost as unloveable as I am
when I’m at my best, when I’ve been accurately blessed,
not too much, more or less, beyond my aspirations
and I see at the speed of light how time stops,
and my mass and volume become as infinite
as my body and mind, and everything
is perfectly inconceivable in a fallible eternity
that’s adapted to us like the medium of a mystery
in a graveyard of dead metaphors we keep giving
new meaning to as if we were all randomly immortal.

Are you the supple bubble of effervescence
in a tsunami of sorrow that could keep my spirits up,
or a methane moon waiting for an airlift of oxygen
to light you up. You’re too incandescent
to shine like a brown star, too imaginatively immense
to be a black dwarf. Are you the omnipresence of a particle
or the oracular wavelength of an apostate saint
when no one’s looking but me and you
through your holy books to see if what we said
came true or not? If we kept our word
to the innovative absurdity of it all in peace and war
or threw the moon through the window
like an alarm clock that didn’t go off in time
to save the earth? I know you’re not
the existential bricklayer of the paradoxically sublime
outside the gates of Babylon, nor the whore within.
I’ve seen you wing your way from one planet to the next
trying to thread your lifelines into a nest
that wasn’t a begging bowl in the hands of tree
that came on like a slumlord in a ghetto of birds.
There are no aviaries for the hopelessly free.
But could you live with me in this homelessness
like a tent in the wind that scours Mars for survivors
of the last expedition of seeds that tried to bloom here?
I’d build you a palace of black water that eclipsed
the beauty of the Taj Mahal and plant stars
all around it that would fountain into waterlilies
and we’d be so full of moonlight and solitude
in the silence of each other’s eyes, the darkness
couldn’t help but envy us the danger of the enterprise.


PATRICK WHITE

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

MY DEATH WAS A QUIET EVENT

MY DEATH WAS A QUIET EVENT

My death was a quiet event.
I entered the abyss with all
the constituents of the first sign of life
to give voice to the silence
that’s been ripening within me for years.

Green bough. Dead branch. Same song.
The apple falls. The moon blossoms.
Everytime we open them, the worlds
sprout from our eyes like seeds.
Close them and it’s an excuse to dream
of sleepwalking on stars like the firmament
of our own breath expiring
like a vapour of light on the autumn air,
a tale of smoke, a road of ghosts,
the purple passage of a fragrance
from the fires of life that bloom
out of the void like stars and wildflowers
deep within where we cast the shadows of the mirages
we are. Poppies in a wheatfield. Fires

in the desert like red-shifting stars burning
with the life of meaning as if shining itself
were meaning enough to engender us
like the myths of our own imaginations.
Life’s not solid, it’s as real as any nightmare
that never came true, any dream that ever kept
its vow to you. Grow vast. Teach space
not to be confined by itself. Grow deep.
Encourage time to root in your starmud
like a river system of lightning flowing
into the great night seachange of your awareness

as wise as the salmon are, we’re not fish
swimming upstream in a waterclock to be
born again to copulate and die. We’re
the sacred syllables of sparrows in a fountain
washing the dust of the worlds off our wings
after many flights, joy-riding the wind,
after many ice-ages in the hourglass of winter,
like the crumbs of a dream from our eyes
when we wake up to the fruits of life
we keep sowing in our graves like the silver bows
of these lifeboats that keep on ploughing
the seas of the moon as the siloes of our afterlives
are filled behind us with the windfall of our flowering.


PATRICK WHITE

SOLITUDE, MY FRIEND, LET'S GET OUT OF HERE

SOLITUDE, MY FRIEND, LET’S GET OUT OF HERE

Solitude, my friend, let’s get out of here.
Sick of looking at the same old deathmask
in the mirror like this afterlife I’ve carved
out of my heartwood like a straw dog
I cling to with too much affection. I forget
who said the mind is an artist, able
to paint the worlds, but it’s true. What
you see in the world is always a self-portrait
of what you look like from the inside.

Some colour within the lines like a choir of crayons
and others mix up a palette of homeless hormones
as if they were putting icing on a wedding cake
they were trying to keep the flies out of
like a seven-tiered ziggurat keeping an eye on the stars,
or a painting knife that slashed at the canvas
like an image of grace that wanted to paint its face
in scars of thick, dry pigment irresistible
as wet cement to a kid before everything goes solid
as ancient starmud on an effluvial flood plain on Mars.

Solitude, you’re the mast I bind myself to
whenever I hear a woman singing through an open window
as if the only way for a heart like mine
to have a long-lasting love affair with life
is to shapeshift my way like rites of passage
through all the stations of being water goes through.
Ice, fog, rain, clouds, seas, glaciers, rivers, mud-puddles,
water droplets, dew, lakes, tears, locked
in the comas of comets, frozen watersheds on the moon,
in these bodies we’re always leaking out of as if we had
more exits than entrances, and never last
and never least, this mindstream I like to sit
with you by like wildflowers in the sunset,
and drown my thoughts as if I were restocking
ten thousand lakes with the stem cells
of small-mouthed bass and northern pike
just to keep the game I’m playing with myself
dangerous and honest. Whether you exhibit or not

all visual art was born with the eyes of predators
painting their hunting magic on the walls
of their caves as if they’d found a way inside
their skulls to petition the great mother
with the mystic signage of their sacred gratitude.
Add a bird bone flute or two and it’s the picture music
that still echoes like a subterranean dream grammar
quoting the chapter and verse of mandalic metaphors
like the farewell of a waterbird to a fledgling arrow
of an albatross arcing through the sky like a paintbrush
with the taste of blood in its mouth, and its wingspan
unfolding like a book of sorrows too deep to curse.

Solitude, my friend, let’s get out of here.
I’m tired of counting the dead on the abacus
of my tears, black as new moons on my spinal cord.
Anywhere you want to go just say the word
and I’m there. Let the dark evaporate like a black hole
if Stephen Hawking is right, and if he’s not
we’ll work out some kind of cosmology along the way
of smoke and mirrors like a working telescope.
Make something up out of the ashes
of our former insights like a habitable planet
that doesn’t rely on the reflected light
of a middle-aged star for an exterior light source.

Let’s wander down that road no one’s ever
given a name to, forever further than we can go
like a new universe breaching the waters of life
with a birthpang of light that doesn’t wash
the baby out with the bathwater in the normal course
of love and life like a cradle or an ark
in a Red Sea of bloodlust that keeps saying to itself
apres moi le deluge. Let’s keep things in perspective
and make it huge enough to let parallel lives
meet like rivers mingling their way into each other
like the slim threads of one big tapestry
of marine life in a membranous multiverse.

Let’s go write crop circles in the abandoned fields
that read like the journals of the farm wives
that once lived around here as if there were
more intimacy in their solitude than there was
in the estranged company of their communion with town.

Let’s make a starmap out of the broken windows
that we’ve looked through as if someone
smashed their crystal skull like tears on a rock
scarred by glacial striations of the last ice age
that taught us to dance around a fire at night
to keep warm under the palatial chandeliers of the Pleiades
as if we had something to aspire to in life
that was higher than us. And it might sound weird
to someone who’s never haunted a house of life
they haven’t lived in, like a shrine to their own solitude
founded on a tradition of chaos that kept
the whole thing afloat like an empty lifeboat
anyone was welcome to crawl into anytime
they needed to without a passport to the moon.

Out of nothing, my solitude, we have both been made,
and that makes us wholly compatible
with the best and most abysmal in life,
this vapour of patchouli incense in the nostrils of God,
the smell of burning tires like black haloes
around the necks of humans nailed like crosses
to their bodies and minds like an excruciating witness
to their life and times. O who’s to say awareness
isn’t a miracle because they live like a lab rat
under a periodic table? If only with you, my solitude,
just to be here, however long it goes on
explaining itself with every thought and emotion
you’ve ever had it’s that close. A breath of stars
on the air at night, as if someone were breathing
inside you, every moment, the inconceivable absence
that fits you like the skin of an iridescent,
supersensible spherical mirror of a soap bubble
of intelligence, or a contact lens at one end
of the Hubble wearing glasses among the celestial spheres
to focus the multiverse and all of hyperspace
into the endless immensities of one single life

in any form, whether it’s candled out like a black dwarf
or blazing like the Pleiades, because one
flash of life across the nightsky of your deepest intuition
and you’re the stem cell that envisions
all the others like people and trees, fish, birds and animals
that all speak the same dream grammar as if we all see
through the same eyes, we’re the arcane wisdom
of an abyss singing to itself in the dark
as if it were well understood by virtue of our solitude
it spoke the same language as us, whether
we’re here to hear it or not. I’ve got you, my solitude,
like the cup-bearer of the muses, topping me off
as I watch the full moon tangled like a nocturnal waterlily
in the waterfall of the willows rinsing the stars
out of their hair into the river like bubbles of light
pierced by a thorn of joy in the cool abyss of the night.


PATRICK WHITE

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

BROODING SUNSET BEFORE THE STORM

BROODING SUNSET BEFORE THE STORM

Brooding sunset before the storm. Over ripe apricot
left out in the sun too long. Heat brain
boiling its thoughts in their own womb.
The clouds lumber like thundering Diplodoci
Slowly and in herds. Continental rifts in Pangaea.
Black outs and the lightning roots
of unknown blossoms sticking out their tongues
like petals to taste the first drops of rain.
The air menacing, thick, humid as lipstick
foreshadowing climactic things to come.

Sky bound i.e.d.s, and the pigeons scattering
for cover under the eves from overhead drones
that have been circling all afternoon
with the turkey vultures looking for road kill.
The windows set up like easels for the show.
Action paintings of still life with blitzkrieg.
The crackling of glass that layered black over white.
Oleaceous vapours of asphalt on roofs and roads.
I can smell the late Jurassic in rut from here
as black pearls roll off my skin like new moons
sweating tar. And now it’s as dark as a crucifixion
on daylight savings time, as the opalescent grays
homogenize into Bosch armies on the Western Front
just before a rolling barrage in No Man’s Land.
The hemorrhaging, the deluge, the venting, the rage,
a welcome relief to holding it all in though
everybody’s not going to like what they hear
and the fire hydrants are jealous of the rain
and the end of the world is more American than Mayan
bring it on like the hillbilly hippies drunk at the Imperial.

Anticipation. Latent exhilaration. Acoustic guitars
meditating in the corner, chanting aum to resonate
with the positive ions of a punk rock band on the rampage.
The cows plop down in the fields, and the seagulls
for the duration of the saturation bombing run
are grounded like kites on a reconnaissance mission.
Hilarity of chaos outflanking the usual order of things.
Mosquitoes and blackflies biding their time
under the monstrous leaves of the soft basswood trees.
Wrens and swallows in their medicine bags and begging bowls,
bees in their hives, prophets in the belly of the whale,
here comes a delegation of lightning rods to reason
with the open-handed extravagance of the revelation
that we’re as vulnerable as we ever were
in a time of stagnation to cooking the books
when the gods come to get even with us ethically
and the imagination asserts its ancient privileges
over the prophylactic rituals of our own worst case scenarios.
Some to dance naked in the rain. Some to stand
under lone trees in open fields trying not to get bit
by a snake pit of oracular lucidities with the aloofness of a lottery.



PATRICK WHITE

BASKING IN THE SILENCE OF THE COOLING DAY

BASKING IN THE SILENCE OF THE COOLING DAY

Basking in the silence of the cooling day,
sunset in the blood of a snake on a rock,
coiled into its own thermal like the hawk
in the twilight eye of a peacock past its prime,
I go out of my way, by the railroad tracks,
where the adolescents lay their lives on the line,
to accord it the dignity we all hope for in time.

The acrobatic swallows have finished
their aerial attack on the cults of the gnats
and now the nightshift relinquishes the sky
to the dog fighting gypsy moths
and the stealthy dive-bombing bats.
Every evening, the same, their finest hour,
shooting each other down in flames,
and the stars and heritage lamp posts looking on
as if they couldn’t be any less concerned.

Crackheads in khaki shorts pass me,
caps askew, and smile nervously at my earring,
though they’re baffled by the cowboy boots,
but it’s got nothing to do with me
whether they can read the memes right or not.
I just want to mesmerize the ocean
of lunar commotion in my brain
by the rhythm of walking as if my body
held sway over the tides for awhile.

Rage, sorrow, love, my judicious attention
to being fastidiously kind especially
if I suspect I don’t really like the person,
just to keep the record clean with myself
and outwit my pettiness just because I can.
Goes with being a poet trying to live generously
among thieves who’ve never heard
of magnanimous humans weakening themselves
like the chiefs of the Potlatch as a sign
of power leap frogging itself to the top of the totem
by giving it all away with an expansive hand.

Not really sure I understand it myself,
but I live a life of isolation in between
trying to make things mean way more
than they deserve to or not just to hear
the scarecrows mocking my absurdity
like straw dogs on the pyres of existentialism.
Voices like scalpels in my head,
chainsaws in my heart, razor blades
nicking my starmud like cuneiform
into a library of Assyrian incisions
made by Ashurbanipal to cook the books.

Living in the twenty-first century
has taught me to mistrust all the others.
Double back to the health food store,
up the road to Sunset Boulevard
that taught me how to paint moonrises,
five miles to Glen Tay and back again.
And if I’m lucky there shouldn’t be anything
left of my brain by then but a reflexive flunky.

Someone’s addiction is following me
like a rat in the shadows of my ancestors.
My rotten father maybe, his rubber cheques,
that deaths head of brutal alcoholics
with the insolvent grin on its face
that said I have nothing to give you
but violence and heart benching wretchedness?
Or my saintly mother the day she turned on me
for nailing Michael Jones square in the third eye
with a stone David would have been proud
to have thrown with such authority and finesse?
And I still am for the way he transgressed my fort
by throwing dirt at it like the Taj Mahal.

My legs are growing heavy and numb
and I’m running a gauntlet of road kill
through an ordeal of toads and turkey-vultures
unravelling the complexities of the dead
thread by thread until the loom is dismantled
that wove the big picture of the details
into a prayer rug of sectarian wavelengths.
Man of my age, or son of an old adage,
someone once said I was born a hundred years
too late, though late for what is lost upon me,
if I’m already a century ahead of my time.
The lucky day is when you discover it’s all one day.
This specious thought moment of the mind.

It’s all emanating out of the same radiant
simultaneously. Nothing gets left behind.
Haven’t you seen how the mountains
synchronize their spontaneity to the birth
of butterflies like waterclocks of being-time?
There’s no hour of doom for every era of redemption.
My ends aren’t shorter than the beginnings were long.
Eternity’s the rule of thumb and time’s the exemption.
Ten miles just shy of two hours whether you
measure it in tame avalanches or rogue asteroids.
Coming back the way I went as if I’d gone nowhere at all,
blueweed in the ditches, and loosestrife
in the moonrise of the river through the drowned trees.


PATRICK WHITE

Sunday, July 7, 2013

SOMEONE LINGERS IN YOUR ABSENCE LIKE AN ICON

SOMEONE LINGERS IN YOUR ABSENCE LIKE AN ICON

Someone lingers in your absence like an icon, a gate
to an open field where the white horse
that stood in the tall grass, grazing on its solitude
like a phase of the moon come to earth
is gone. A bird, a purple martin with so much
distance and disappearance in it wings
and the open vastness of the skies it was absorbed by
I can barely hear you singing from here
over the raving of an unkempt wind on a crazy night
when the ghosts are rioting in their graves
like old leaves without attachments at the feet of the new
and gravity receives the grave goods of the tree
as do I these strange epiphanies of you
that haunt me retroactively like apple-bloom.

And the depth of the emptiness that informs
the substance of my imaginings, devastates me
like an eclipse slowly swallowing my heart
like a black cataract of snake skin I keep
trying to shake like a cosmic egg without much luck.
As if I were bleeding out like a rose after
the green thorns have hardened into fangs
that are killing and curing me at the same time.
Some nights I just want to join my emptiness to yours
and be done with it, no more of this, no more.

No more of watching the beauty of the world
burn out into a dark radiance that makes me
want to gouge my eyes out so I can see it without wincing.
Without feeling so wounded by the abundance of the rose
that blooms and disappears like the auroral apparitions
of a widow in veils of spider webs and black lightning,
thinking it might be you under there somewhere I can’t go
without losing you again. Check-mate. Pain.
And it isn’t anything either of us can do anything about.

It just goes down that way. The absence of your shining,
small nonrenewable gestures of your heart and hands
vividly recalled like modest butterfly volumes of poetry
blowing down an abandoned street at night in the rain, you
sewing a patch on my heart with the delicacy of a needle
mending a flying carpet grounded like a wavelength of light.

As I am now that you’ve become that rip in my heart
all the stars are pouring out of like a puncture wound
I let go right through me like needles and gamma rays
piercing the heart of a voodoo doll of dark matter
that makes me feel like wooden puppet of light
carved out of one of these black walnut trees.

Endure. Participate. See. Wonder.
Praise. Celebrate. Mourn. Do the next best thing.
And when you’re hurting your worst, sing.
And even when I’m soldiering my way through stone
like a flying fish in the wrong medium,
or walking alone with the Alone through the woods,
just to meet you where you ask me to when you call
and I come like a burning bridge down to the river,
wondering if I might have lived here once in another lifetime,
I do say these things to myself like medicinal chants
and preventative medicine, healing totems with benign effect
hung in the medicine bag slung around my neck.
Sweet grass and a pinch of sacred earth, just in case
I forget how to dance on my own grave
with grace and flare and style and an enigmatic smile
that really means it if it really means anything at all.

Or not succumb to this ice-age of a bell
my tongue is stuck to like a child’s to a wire fence,
or this black diamond nightbird
that cuts my darkness to the quick
because it’s got nothing to sing about
that can answer the call of the living for someone
on a foggy hill to come to the rescue of the empty lifeboat
drifting like the corpse of a dead swan downriver,
except the dead air of this strange place
where space is indelibly bruised by the passing
of the beauty it once contained like stars in a Mason jar.
Like a candle in the lantern of a skull
I’ve carried before me like a nightwatchman
on the edge of a dangerous precipice for lightyears
until I lost my footing and fell in one night,
as I once did into love, and learned to see in the dark
I was growing wings where I had none before
and looking up from the bottom of an empty wishing well
noticed the dead still blooming like stars
in the white shadows of the sun at midnight.

And out of the corners of my eyes
when what I can’t see what need to know about being alive
comes looking for me like the sacred syllable
on the lips of a pearl diver on the moon in total eclipse
like a kiss out of nowhere, comes like the singing bird
to the dead branch in my heart
that’s having trouble remembering how to blossom
after a long winter, as if you’d summoned me to the trees
like a purple passage in the Book of the Dead,
to teach me how to take the pain
and through the alchemy of the grief
that flows through my heartwood like light and rain
turn it into life again, as if every leaf
were a new loveletter from the dead
I’ve been saving for years like expurgated starmaps
illustrated by exiled constellations in Braille
to a spiritual lost and found at my fingertips
where they know who you are, and they’ve seen you
like a soft moonrise glowing through the willows
down by the river that weeps like a black mirror
for the stars and waterbirds in passing
that appear and disappear each in its time
and you wait for me like the longing of the dead
to make some kind of sign, however simple and austere,
the withered star of a wild rose without a flower,
that let’s me know you’re near, you’re here
rooted in me on earth where we’ve both come
to renew our shining from the bottom up to the blossom.


PATRICK WHITE

COUNTING THE BRICKS IN THE WALL ACROSS THE STREET

COUNTING THE BRICKS IN THE WALL ACROSS THE STREET

Counting the bricks in the wall across the street.
Full sunlight. Noon. Blue sky. Bikers
revving their throttles like angry sheets
snapping in the wind on a clothesline
as if they had their hands on the throats
of their ex-girlfriends. No gender bias intended.

I can’t hear the pigeons cooing under the eaves
over the snarl of old men on fourstrokes.
I’m just sitting here like the flagging waterlily
of a collapsed parachute that doesn’t want
to jump up anymore like a dandelion seed
at the least gust of wind. For the moment, at least,
no more descending toward paradise
like a counter-intuitive guess at which way is up.
I’m tied like a hooded hawk to the arm of a swamp.

Icarus is not all that unhappy with where
he crash-landed in a farmer’s field. Could
have been a kite in a powerline, a bat
velcroed to the burdock in a porchlight
that messed up its flyby. Here is there everywhere
if you’ve got enough imagination to lose yourself
in the extraordinary ordinariness of things
close to your heart. The eery patina of time
is always as young as once and once only
and like eternity, gone in the flash of an eye,
casting its shadow of now or never over everything
with the urgency of a fire hydrant
that thinks of itself as a heart transplant.

Lightyears left to go in my winged heels
without a flightplan to deliver the messenger,
but it isn’t the journey, today, it’s my shoes, my shoes
that are wearing me out where the rubber
hits the road like a poem late at night on
a hot asphalt highway reeking of dead frogs
like popcorn in the cinematic highbeams of a joy ride.
My feet sore as if I’d been firewalking on asteroids
down some long dirt road that would sweep
a biker right off his wheels if he cornered too sharply.

An intensely temperate day. The great sea
of awareness is not displeased with its own weather,
though I can hear the rootfires of dragons
growing underground like the cosmic eggs
of island galaxies about to hatch out
from the crude ore that’s being refined
like the psychodynamics of a sacred volcano
in my subconscious, I’m more curious than perturbed.

I’m going to stretch out here in the grass
at the side of this road. Let the ants worry
about how to get me back to the colony piecemeal.
Only the dog on a short foodchain wants to get away.
I’m going to dump this heavy load I’ve amassed
like a god-particle backpacking along the trail
like an alloy of a red wolf and a coyote weary
of keeping the shepherd moons around here on their toes
without meaning to in the struggle to survive.

I’m not even going to bother to lick my wounds
like a herbalist among the wild roses and the words
that sting like the antiseptics in my mouth
and the thorns I usually staple them up with
without leaving too much of a scar on the moon.
Physician heal thyself. Either way, let the roses bloom
or bleed out like red skies in the morning
that burn like iodine, or put lipstick on the clouds
at twilight to the delight of lovesick sailors.
Just want to lie here like the figure head of a fallen tree
or a shipwreck in port with a cargo of failures for awhile.

What I must be only a fool would try to do
anything about. The rain falls and the housewells
are full. I raise my crystal skull to the stars
like hidden secrets veiled by the light and I drink it
down to the lees of an emptiness that tastes
like the cast off afterbirth of wine on my tongue.


PATRICK WHITE