The Kiss

The mossy transom light, odors of cabbage   
and ancient papers, while Father Feeney   
polishes an apple on his tunic.
I tell him I want the life priests have,   
not how the night sky’s millions
of departing stars, erased by city lights,   
terrify me toward God. That some nights   
I sleepwalk, curl inside the tub,
and bang awake from a dream of walking through   
a night where candle beams crisscross   
the sky, a movie premiere somewhere.   
Where am I, Father, when I visit a life   
inside or outside the one I’m in?
In our wronged world I see things   
accidentally good: fishy shadows thrown   
by walnut leaves, summer hammerheads   
whomping fireplugs, fall air that tastes   
like spring water, oranges, and iron.

“What are you running from, my dear,   
at morning mass five times a week?”
He comes around the desk, its failing flowers   
and Iwo Jima inkwell, holding his breviary,   
its Latin mysteries a patterned noise   
like blades on ice, a small-voiced poetry   
or sorcery. Beautiful dreamer,
how I love you. When he leans down,
his hands rough with chalk dust
rasp my ears. “You don't have the call,”   
kissing my cheek. “Find something else.”

On the subway home I found
a Golgotha air of piss and smoke,
sleepy workers, Cuban missiles drooping   
in their evening papers, with black people   
hosed down by cops or stretched by dogs.   
What was I running from? Deity flashed   
on the razor a boy beside me wagged,
it stroked the hair of the nurse who waked   
to kiss her rosary. I believed the wall’s   
filthy cracks, coming into focus
when we stopped, held stories I'd find   
and tell. What are you running from,   
child of what I’ve become?
Tell what you know now
of dreadful freshness and want,
our stunned world peopled
by shadows solidly flesh,
a silted fountain of prayer
rising in our throat.
 

Copyright Credit: W. S. Di Piero, “The Kiss” from Brother Fire. Copyright © 2004 by W. S. Di Piero. Used by permission of Alfred A. Knopf, an imprint of the Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House LLC. All rights reserved.
Source: Brother Fire: Poems (Alfred A. Knopf, 2004)