Pieces on the Ground
I gave up the pencil, the walk in woods, the fog
      at dawn, a keyhole I lost an eye to.
 And the habit of early, of acorn into oak—
       bent   tangled   choked because of ache or greed,
       or lousy light deemed it so.
 So what. Give up that so what.
 O fellow addicts of the arch and the tragic, give up
      the thousand-pound if and when too.
      Give up whatever made the bed or unmade it.
 Give up the know thing that shatters into other things
      and takes the remember fork in the road.
 The remember isn’t a road.
 At noon, the fog has no memory of fog, the trees I walked
       or wanted to. Like the pencil never recalls its least
       little mark, the dash loved, the comma which can’t,
 cannot dig down what its own brief nothing
       means on the page. I don’t understand death either.
 By afternoon, the brain is box, is breath let go, a kind of
     mood music agog, half emptied by the usual
     who am I, who are you, who’s anyone.
 Truth is, I listen all night for morning, all day
       for night in the trees draped like a sound I never quite
 get how it goes. There’s a phantom self, nerved-up
       as any arm or leg.
 Of  course I was. Of course I stared from the yard,
       my mother at the window
 rinsing knife and spoon and the middle of her life.
 In drawing class, all eyes fix on the figure gone
        imaginary, thinning to paper. Not the wind or a cry
        how the hand makes, our bent to it—
               pause and rush, rush and pause—
 small animals heard only at dark, spooked in the leaves.
Source: Poetry (February 2019)


