Showing posts with label Death. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Death. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 31, 2017

Winter Morning, -13°

Waking up in longjohns and socks
under so many quilts your body hurts,
windows rattling in the winds
and puffs of snow sprinkling
the sill and the floor beneath—

you fire up the stove with dry cobs and oak,
lean into it and rub your hands,

your mind unsettled by the linoleum rug
which won’t lie still. When a squall hits broadside,
the rug rises, billows. You press a foot and pump it slowly,

feel it push back against your toes
too soft for something that cold,
spongy as moss beside a spring.

Pants and shirt now, then ham and red-eye gravy,
eggs, yesterday’s biscuits, 
coffee as hot as you can take it
while three feet away snow won’t melt.

Last fall’s venison in the freezer is warmer than this,
but you’re not that dead, not yet. There are chores out there,

and at the mill logs whose frozen hearts
will make a four-foot blade cut a crooked track.

Into as many layers as will fit.
Wrap a towel around your head,
another around your neck,
walk to the door. Beneath your feet
you feel the rug rippling
and you think of summer

and a field of clover
rising and falling, rising and falling,
and how every green and growing thing will die.


              © David Black, 2017

White clover in the meadow
Photo by Steve Daniels, UK
from Wikimedia Commons

Tuesday, November 8, 2016

Still Life

Verra la morte e avra i tuoi occhi.
( Death will come and it will look with your eyes. )
Cesare Pavese


1

Things and humans
surround us.  Both
torture the eye.
Better to live in darkness.

I am on a bench
in the park, following with my eyes
a family passing by.
I am fed up with light.

It is January – winter,
according to the calendar.
When I am fed up with darkness,
then I shall speak.

2

It is time now.  I am ready to begin.
No matter with what.  To open
my mouth.  I can be silent.
But it’s better that I speak.

What about?  Of days and nights.
Or rather of nothing.
Or about things.
About things – 

not about people.  They will die.
All of them.  I will die too.
This is futile,
like pissing against the wind.

3

My blood is cold.
Its coldness is colder
than a river frozen in its bed.
I do not like people.

I do not like their looks.
Their faces impart 
some unforsakable
look.

Something in their faces
is disgusting to the mind.
Is flattering
who knows whom.

4

Things are more pleasant. They
mean neither good nor harm,
on the face of it. But if you probe
into them – into their innards – 

objects are dust inside.
Ashes.  A woodboring beetle.
Walls.  A dried bloodworm.
Unpleasant for your hands.

Dust.  Turn on the light  
and it will shine on only dust.
Even if the object 
is sealed tight.

5

An old cupboard looks
the same inside and out,
reminding me
of Notre-Dame de Paris.

The cupboard’s entrails are dark.
A mop, a rag
will not wipe off dust.
A thing itself is generally dust

that does not strive to overcome,
that does not raise the brow.
Because dust is the flesh
of time; it is flesh and blood.

6

Lately I’ve begun
to sleep in the daytime.
It seems my death
puts me to the test,

holding a mirror to my mouth
even if I breathe,
to see how I withstand
non-existence in the daylight.

I am immobile.  My two
thighs are as cold as ice.
Their venous blue flesh
looks like marble.

7

Surprising us
with the sum of its angles,
the thing stands out
from the common ways of words.

The thing is not at a standstill.  And
it does not move.  It is a delusion.
A thing is a space, outside of which
there isn’t a thing.

A thing can be banged down, burned,
eviscerated, broken.
Dropped. The thing
will not exclaim: ”What the fuck?!”

8

A tree.  Shade.  Dirt
under the tree for the roots.
Knotty monograms.
Clay.  A pile of rocks.

Roots.  Their entanglement.
A rock whose personal weight
liberates it from
the nexus of knots.

It is immobile.  It cannot be
moved or taken away.
Its shadow.  A man in its shade
is like a fish in the net.

9

A thing. The brown color
of the thing. Whose outlines are blurred.
Dusk.  No more
anything.  A still life.

Death will come and find
a body whose smoothness
will reflect death’s visit like
the coming of a woman.

It is absurd, a lie:
a skull, a skeleton, a scythe.
‘Death will come, and it
will look with your eyes.’

10

Says the mother to Christ:
Are you my son or my 
God?  You are nailed to the cross.
How can I go home?

How can I step over the sill
if I can’t understand or decide
whether you are my son or God?
That is, are you dead or alive?

He says in response:
“Dead or alive -
it doesn’t matter, woman.
Whether I am your son or God, I am yours.”

by Joseph Brodsky
Translated from the Russian by Leonid Gornik



The Vorona River frozen in its bed
Winter in Borisoglebsk
Oil painting by Alexey Bogolyubov
from Wikimedia Commons





Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Last Train of My Childhood Dream


In this tunnel
where fear is an animal
smothering me
with unbearable fur,
I feel earth tremble
as if an ocean,
trapped beneath trees and rocks,
is pounding hard
against roots,
the way my heart hammers
against its own roots of dread.
I have heard the same roar--
tornados thundering toward me
like stampeding buffalo
until terror slams me awake.

Now this darkness
opens its one bright eye.
Light that does not mean hope
drives the future 
at me fast,
your death a black train
filling the space
between me and escape.

© Jean Sampson, 2012

Locomotive 45212
Photo from Wikimedia Commons

Monday, May 21, 2012

Picnic Table


The neighbors who were moving brought it over,
a picnic table, almost new,
and asked if we wanted it for the back yard.
“You’re the ones with children- 
and everything,” they added 
with a look of longing, 
some relief. 
It has sat in the same place all these years,
rough from the wear of seasons, 
its cedar planks once braced flat and perfect,
now like buck teeth.
My children are grown now 
but the table remains, top of the slope 
in the back yard.  
It is a place for me to sit in silence, 
away from the loneliness 
of an unwritten poem.
From here I have watched ground hogs
climb the creek bank, cross the yard,
one trailing the other.  
They never saw me as they nudged
June apples 
littering the ground green.   
I have watched leaves wander in fall wind,
brown and scampering through the garden 
like new puppies.
And this winter I noticed how cold rain had dropped 
into stalactites suspended from bare branches 
in the cherry tree nearby.
It’s funny.  Such a random gift and its impact.  
We never heard from those neighbors again. 
They probably don’t remember us
or the table they gave away.
But it is here that I come to consider 
all manners of things.
Yesterday it was how the Peace Lily had bloomed 
on the day he died
and how I had found such comfort
in this small thing.
Today I find myself out here again.
A trio of robins has lined up and shaken 
late snow off the red bud
onto my solitary post.  
I know now it won’t last long enough,
either the last breath of winter
or this first gasp of spring.
© Susan Muse, 2012

Groundhog: photo from Wikimedia Commons

Monday, January 9, 2012

EVE

Thru' its heaven this planet spins.
Night awakes to nurse her twins.
She suckles both upon her breasts;
One is evil, the other then rests.
She further feeds a famous fable--
She knows that Cain will murder Abel.
The stars come out to steal my breath;
Night has nursed her infants--Sleep & Death.
© F. Carroll Harrison, 2012

The Serpens star-forming region; photo by NASA