29 July 2012

Grail




Heaven rejected me
to sing with Mary.

I was under Him,
the lawn
morning yawn and roar,
mountain mane
heavy in last night
sweat
            dread
                        lock—

stare at Him
while He’s asleep,
            eyes of Holy water.

He’s a wide-open meadow,
a duck and a sparrow
white weather marrow
a feather
a hawk
            circle skyward.

His words have a hold on me
            keep me down here
            watching Him
            shine on me
bold streams between
            the shadows of clouds
on the mountain.

Smile, dear, love me,
            hold me always
and I’ll remember
to change the headlight,
move the valley
and keep singing—
            it’s not for me.

Heaven forsakes me—
            forget-me-not
                        cluster of pure
                        umbrella
the soft petals of my ovary,
southpaw beating
heart between my knees—
            my head is eating me.

I am blue grass,
a boot heel
stomping a wooden floor,
the sawdust, the radishes,
dirt in my nails
compost, eggshell
coffee, manure—
                        makes me think of home,
                        the smell—

O Harford haystack,
carry me tractor pull
mosquito melt the purple lights.

Sometimes, I fear love.

Heaven forgets to hold me,
sings with other women
and swans.

Leda and Mary hold hands
in the dark,
whisper sister secrets
about His flaws,
            how they are perfect
and bloody.

He’s not registered.
He’s an anarchist.
I will praise Him
like I should.

Marry me, Jesus—
            a name preceding
            all sexuality.
He is so deep in me
that man must seek Him
to find me,
            lost
            stumbling through Eden
like a wet mountain lion—

I am more powerful than I know,
more Holy each day
I grow corn,
shuck and boil
my skin.

Heaven gnaws me,
leaves my bones to rot
on the rusty banks
of Lake Meredith—
            erode to sacred dust.

I drift in the hazy place
between atmosphere
and outer space.

I fall over Pacific,
land in Atlantic
            grit
                        ash
                                    and sand
entwined in my hair
tumbling, a child in the waves
under water
circular motion
            Heaven’s great washing
            machine on cycle.

Dry me on the beach
on a clothes line
            the linen
            bleached in the sunlight.

Speak, Heaven,
            teach me how to know You,
Your grace slipping down
between my cries—
            copper deposits
            hide in the crust—

He’s into me.

O Eden, You elude me,
Heaven’s musk
                        harmonium
                        baritone—
hold on, kiss me,
            Heaven.

1 comment:

  1. Delectable imagery and sensuosity – “and I’ll remember to change the headlight,” “O Harford haystack, carry me tractor pull…,” but most especially, “a child in the waves under water circular motion Heaven’s great washing machine on cycle.”

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