No more than ten he was, a Roman face,
dark curls in arpeggios descending his neck,
feet bare, trousers torn. Where he learned
to play that tango — love crashing into grief,
sweat into hunger — was anyone’s guess. A traffic
light changed colour; the people darted across
like startled birds. And there in Avenida, Florida,
a couple began to dance. Down the block,
a woman dressed in white — white face, white gloves,
a human statue, turned her stone eyes toward
the boy. First her hands slumped, then her arms;
in her, some knowing opened like a rose.
And weeds bursting the tiles at their feet
grew beautiful in the Argentina heat.
All my nights have been one night,
all my moons, one moon.
The wind sings its one
eternal song
over all the world’s days and nights.
I pack this suitcase with words,
phrases folded, neatly pressed,
send them into the light
and darkness of the world
that they may live their own lives.
In them, my prayer is answered,
that my father live forever,
and it is the owl instead
who calls to the night,
it is the gull who crosses the sea;
it is the blossom whose petals turn frail
as an ancient letter
in the slow breath of sleep.
Here I place his palms to mine;
I lift the page to his ear
so that the moon
will sing of its cold love,
and all days are but the blue
arc of a single day,
and no one is lonely, and no one
is a rain-darkened road
leading out of sight.
Why is my father standing
in the apple tree,
feet splayed from branch to branch?
Why this temptation
of my father to carry his seventy-one years
into the branches of this tree
and point his clippers at the sky
as if he could snip a piece
of that blue cloth,
carry it into the house
and spread it over his bed?
Would it turn to darkness and stars
as he slept?
I stand below, watching him,
arms over his head,
shrouded in apple blossoms
cheery and wingy as angels,
and see him look skyward, past
the spring shoots racing
heavenward,
and I want to
be
gravity, pull my father
back to earth,
look him in the eyes with my grave face,
a little god taking him to task.
I want his feet on damp ground,
my arms holding him tighter
than this tree which cannot fathom
the word
daughter
.
It makes me afraid,
on this day of blooming possibilities
to see him stretching,
seeming so intent
upon heaven.
I want to take away my father's grief.
I want to unravel the thread of it
from his shirts. I want to scrub
the dirt-black seams of it
from his fingernails.
I want to sweep it
from the doorways of his house,
wash it from the walls and hinges
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and window wells.
I want to capture the moth of his guilt
that has crawled inside his ear
and whispers its dusty word,
the shudder of its wings
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sibilant as shame.
I want to reach in and take it in my fist.
I want to quiet the river of sorrow
that gurgles its weary dirge
beneath his bed, his kitchen table.
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I will ask the willow
to quit her weeping.
I will point toward the sky, say,
See the moon ripening
 âÂ
there
 â
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in your branches.
Be now content
.
I will call the little birds
to bring the lilt of their gossip
into the yard.
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I will call the crows
to carry the bonehouse of his sadness
in their beaks, open their wild
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blue-black wings
and drop it into the sea.
I will place the stones of the dead
beside the back fence
and I will sing them to sleep.
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It is enough now
,
I will sing.
Enough
.
Go to sleep, you dead.
Leave my father to his life.
I will plant a tree whose blossoms
will burst and scatter
over the wet
Â
black earth,
and I will call each petal in turn
joy, light, peace
,
until I have named them all,
until my father's grief is consumed
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as though by fire,
and I will strew the ash of it
over the sea.
My shoes, blind boats,
this Braille road vanishing.
Out in the storm, pink petals,
sudden birds.
That horse in high grass
a whale in a green sea.
Hummingbird at the feeder,
its quick tongue vanishing.
I light one candle,
another in the window glass.
My prayer multiplying.
I am filling with light.
You had your watching face on,
my shyness vanishing.
I take your radio,
the one you found as a boy —
dials intact,
no sound —
set it on an apple crate
in a corner of my mind.
Turning the volume full,
I hear the minute hammering
of a spider
framing her web,
a mole shifting its whiskers
in the blind reaches
of its den.
A field mouse slips out
from beneath the cat’s claws:
I catch the rustle
of its escape,
the startled
wing dust of moths,
and higher,
an owl’s shifting eyes —
two black moons.
Horse Head Nebula
paws the deep
ground of space
that hums its far,
unfathomable music.
Beyond your window downy birds
huddle on branches
complex as the lines in your face
as you sleep,
the boy in you sleeping too,
who listened at night,
dials turned high,
worlds and seas pooling
in the shell of his ear,
riding the tide of dream.
I watched him swing the axe in the sun,
split wood into fine and finer pieces,
the leaves like gold coins scattered at his feet,
his hair silvered, shining, a bright thing
that would catch a crow’s eye, or a daughter’s,
who had searched all her life for him. Raising
his arms over his head, swift he brought them
down, and the wood crackled and startled into air
like birds in sudden flight. Watching,
I learned the strength of him;
it frightened me, too, the power of him
who could make the quiet wood fly,
who could gather the flown and fallen wings
and turn them into flame.
Now light pulls away from both edges
of the day, from windows, from open doors.
Soon, my father at the edge of his years
will feed the birds from his open hand,
his greying hair the colour of juncos,
and they will come — with their stripes and crests,
their wing bands, their bright breasts,
to alight on his shoulder, his finger,
quicken the midnights of their eyes and learn
the starry stillness of his song. As light
grows old, leaves flare and die, he grows young.
Could I become a titmouse, timid wren,
he’d purse his lips in a kiss for me,
magician to the small, the wingèd ones.
Luck is this road trip I take with my father,
the wheels of his car
rumbling
hallelujah
over the pock-marked asphalt.
Luck is rain pitting the windshield,
holy water of our pilgrimage.
I curl the fingers of one hand
around the smooth stone of joy.
The dashboard clock doesn’t work.
Time has stopped,
but joy lies content and warm
in my palm,
while my father’s brother, father, mother
fall from heaven
to crowd the back seat
and point to everything that’s new
since they left the earth.
I send us south: left here, right, left,
and we arrive at my old house,
get out of the car, peer through the window
to a child’s room — mine —
but the child I was isn’t there;
she’s looking down on us
from the broad branches of the mimosa,
dropping threads of mimosa blossom
on our heads.
“Here he is,” I say, “
him
—
the one you’re looking for up there.”
My father’s parents lean on the car,
wave their hands at the heat,
his brother
off having a smoke,
and when he crushes the butt
under his heel,
we clamber in and drive on.
I ask questions that have no human answers:
What is the map of grace?
Who is grief’s daughter?
Is hope a bird with blue flame for wings?
Is the sky its mother?
We drive north to my father’s house.
I want to see the boy he was
slip out the window and down the drain pipe,
the aroma in that bakery window just too much
for brothers already etching their bodies
with hieroglyphs of regret.
At the church, we check in on the musty pews,
the astringent sun pouring
through Jesus’ startled hands.
The bent-backed, hound-jowled preacher
opens a book, announces,
Blessed are the travellers,
for theirs is the crumbling road,
the blooming weeds,
the starry shards of glass,
theirs the dust of the past
and the mud of the present
clinging to their shoes.
We drive on into the night,
all of us pointing at stars,
when his father, mother, his brother rise
each to a constellation
of shattered light.
For an instant I see my father
in a time to come, rise too,
but his hands still hold to the compass
of the steering wheel
where he turns the four directions
of loneliness and desire, hunger and grief,
that tie us to this heaven,
hold us to the earth.