Some Things Last
These windows, these panes, at the beginning of light
 looking where they look, eyeing the east and the rust
 and here they are, protected by shade and shadows:
 branches and birds strike them, fly into them and out.
 You can see nothing through them, you can only see what
 bounces off: back at the world and then you return,
 to the lemon, that is the self, squeezing drop after drop—
 there’s nothing left of you now, no juice! Can you go on
 lubricating the mind, musing on you as disaster,
 and the rest of you as the elements?
                                            Here, they go one by one
 into a flame set down, beneath all the steps, at the very
 bottom of it all ... and God! The eyes wish you didn’t!
 They look away from the blank space remaining—oh these
 birds in the mornings are funny and the little tricks they
 repeat and repeat, like these sounds they make, in order:
 they fly off together or one by one, puffing up their small
 bodies, extending a peak that opens up a view, that finds
 space in whatever looks shut and closed—a wall has
 some hole, a tree trunk can manage a crack, and under
 the ledge, a window knows something
                                            of the hidden world.
 Notes: 
Reprinted from Border Wisdom (Winter Editions, 2023).
Source: Poetry (January/February 2024)


