Thursday, January 10, 2008

UNKNOWABLE LIVES AND LINES



I see everything by the twilight's last glimpsing of songs
and moons and dusks and long abated blissful nights,
ones that were once heavenly
but are now faded into unknowable oblivion -

and I wait for more,
more as in fulfilling visions
of darkly humming bridges and rivers
at regualr sundowns and sunrises.

Everything is soft and pliant here
as in a memory-charm
created to bamboozle urgently beating fists
upon doors that do not open, never open at all,
except on specifically shrouded blue-moon nights.

Many generations have passed into known history.
Many hours and cruxes-in-time so simplified
have watched us grow together, my loved land.

Nearly a hundred years in wakefulness have I floundered
in wide open dualised arms,
but still I do not know your names,
your eyes and your lives.

I, living engendered, vastly dismembered, mostly endangered.

Many knowing moments of iron-clad worshipat evenings
during the time-goddess's mad dance across courtyards
I remember even now as sad and great
and as vibrant in untimely time
as a single Bloody Mary.

And songs sung from doors to windows
fluttering as sexist statements from pillars
to posts and empty roads in a curfewed dusk
with that lonely bag of rice standing all alone by itself,
awaiting a liberator, a saviour and his hands
that are the hands of a healer.

What do I gather here - nothing
except only knowledge of things to come
and things that have been
and may be those that will rain down again,
swift and soft and hardening then as rocks
that are borne so caringly, sparingly
by the fertile womb of confusion.

My land in dreams and in knowing discombobulation,
nice words long ones and extremely religious ones these are,
the ones that I curse onto your newest life, your ancient names
and your twisted, ever turning, always meticulously burning
surprisingly maturing visages that you hide.

Many leaves have faded as mortal butterflies
once out of the cocoon, ever fated to fly, ever hated
by everything that loves and longs indubitably
for timelessly sweet, saddening eyes.

Many songs have been sung, many copper bells
in significant hour-endings have been rung.
Many a nephilus has flown to heaven and back.

So many moments, immoment, graceful, have passed,
and nearly a hundred years as well,
but still I do not know your names,
nor you and your lives.