
Cartographer
This is the problem;
we remember the uncharted territories of bodies
we washed, powdered, pressed in secret
and then covered or harassed.
Our eyeballs never meet and yet
our hips are always mingling
lingering in some forbidden punge.
With our bodies creasing your sheets,
we unwrinkle ourselves
and smear the curled pinion of our pose
in several breathy falls
we climb into each other's mouths
and in not finding it there, retreat
to the cells of the inch of the corner
of the skin on my back laid out like a floorboard.
And still you did not find it.
November's Lyric
Fifty-one weeks a year,
tombstones are sighs,
pushed up out of crusty lungs.
We dare to run, pallid, to their sides
holding our forgotten sense where epitaphs hover.
Dear Lucifer,
Everyday we end.
Everyday we are ice.
God poses wordlessly now,
so I am wringing out philosophy,
harvesting my little theology garden.
I believed such things.
We were pieces and verses,
muses and hollow ponds,
actors and playwrights,
unabashed, bare-mattressed lovers.
We were honeysuckled to the night,
as poets and opinions,
opinions and Purcells.
We were such reflections.
8/29/05 tanka
Bleary morning fog
stirred creamer in my coffee.
I can't help but feel
like the bowl of the valley;
picking at leftover dreams.