Myth
It is not the same as being limited
by loneliness, these feelings of broken  fidelity,
abandonment. It is not enough to germinate  
in this grief, pleading for a picture 
of better times, appealing to
memory, sentiment, knowing
I could be wrong. 
Those days, married
to your insatiable outpourings, ecstasy
just to listen, to share our minds -  walking
on streetcar tracks at 4 a.m. and never  sleeping.
I carried you like a book, wilting always in life, but  never
when mingled with your stature. Between us,  
nothing was spoiled, not soft either. 
I was delivered by your high forehead and  
by your crazed emotions. I was  celebrating.
If it was only
paper flowers, a painted-on sunrise or
imagined completeness, in that time, I  was
devoured by my own individuality, stripped  
of my conditioning, a person to reckon with, lean on -  
whole. I was so much better than I am here, as I  am
salvaging a heartbeat from habit, marked by a used-up  destiny, 
just me with these crippled hands, bare feet, no mentor  
to merge with, nothing
to follow.
Sanguine
     One small awakening to accept
acceptance - a lethargic arm on my  shoulder
weighing down. Air that is security has never been my  ocean. 
I have never been able to trigger kinships in a field of  sunlight. No light
has more volume. 
I am content in places where my imagination can reign,  
where definition is arbitrary, redundant, and not very  useful.
     I tried to love you, dive into your trachea, show
you the substance that enriches my cells. But we have  
different vocations: I make windows. And you stand  outside
with your scales of distraction, participating, socially  at ease. 
     You have grown tall, wedded as you are 
to the world’s expectations.
What once was lean, marvelously eccentric,  
has become typical, robust 
as an animated ideal. 
     You gave up your awkward insecurities, replaced them 
with suave affection and loveless sex. You are not warm,  
though you feign warmth. You know how to act -  
teeth set in alignment, and your apparel - clean of cat  hairs, 
with the appropriate amount of ingenuity,  
just enough to generate interest but not alarm.             
     Old people are getting older and dying, 
they can hardly believe
it has come down to this. They lose their lovers,  
have appendages aching with weakness - fingers  
that cannot move on cue to stroke a cheek,  
fingers that want to flesh out, plump up,  
become tantalizing again. 
     I have taken you with my fingers, 
awakening the soft space between 
your naval and groin. I have laid across,  
massaged every ounce of need
into the vulnerable region separating your hipbones.  
And I would go further. 
But you have no natural shade, 
and it is too exhausting to keep toting around your  wares. 
     You supplied me with inspiration. The postage is paid. 
I must move closer to the edge of the road for you.  
I must make room, 
walk past, surpass, enter 
my Rosewood red front door, without.
You Would Not Have Me
I would have taken the whole of you
in one hand, guiding you
through the pressured caverns of
a multi-layered release, and not let go  
until your anguish was exposed and then  relieved.
But you would not have me,
immune to my inferno and my skin
electrified with desire
for you to hold me, tuning out a rhythm  on
my clustered nerves. You would not have  me,
not slice such intensity with your tongue, not offer  ease,
just a little ease, to my rising frenzy. And  you,
stoically contained, flirting with a superficial  smile
and with those blind to your tall form. I could  have
freed you into the depths
where ugly things wake to a surprising  beauty,
glowing with rapture, like a last breath  
before surrender. You could have 
been mine.
Allison Grayhurst is a full member of the League of Canadian Poets. She  has over 370 poems published in more than 190 international journals and  anthologies. Her book Somewhere Falling was published by Beach Holme  Publishers in 1995. Since then she has published ten other books of poetry and  four collections with Edge Unlimited Publishing. Prior to the publication of Somewhere Falling she had a poetry  book published, Common Dream, and  four chapbooks published by The Plowman. Her poetry chapbook The River is  Blind was published by Ottawa publisher above/ground press December 2012. She  lives in Toronto with her family. She also sculpts, working with clay;  www.allisongrayhurst.com
 
No comments:
Post a Comment