How can the kite pull me and the line still
bulge? It hangs like smooth curve under a maternity dress. There's
not a cloud pulling me that wouldn't have birthed me. I know to
run to listen to my son laugh to shout let go now to run and to
make a runway of green grass. But what of ears like conchs only
for the blowing and shouts, always shouts, some muffled and some
whispered airily as the wind the postmaster of a wind sorts shouts
among us like we're P.O. boxes. What's left to know to own to be.
Let the wind sort it out. I know to run to listen to
My whistle of rigging sings of larger anthems
that ply the blue, that cut the sky into pieces of blue silver gray
parchment curling with mist or age, that trim an older gentleman's
fine foretop tousled with his father's hand loving him somewhere
between life and death. Our kite a skysail to own anything that
blows high up there On deck there
Sail on the larboard bow and what if our lines
cross so what if all the kites tangle let the sky pull at us all
birth us all we're all connected, all, I mean you heard my son laugh
the wind gave it to you what's left to
When silence tucks even the wind when
even the whispers stop and we fall from the foretop skyward with
sudden slack and loss of song, and the clouds reel in our umbilical
until they stand above us, just below us, and the shouts inside
us my son's laugh inside us, the dearest, the dearest memory of
an afternoon we, we really shared, when
|
Posted May 2006 |