Friday, December 25, 2015

Unknowing of Stars

As she attempted to plot a logical course from the countless, intersecting lines
On the roadmap imprinted on the vellum surfaces of their faces,
She realized that theirs had been a circuitous journey through not only
Vast and immeasurable swaths of distance and emotions and experiences and time, 
But a trek that had never been planned at all, never plotted with sextant against a star,
Never logged in a written recollection to determine how far they had come,
Where they had been,
Nor the point where they had taken their first step.

Yet she imagined, from the dizzying spaghetti of those lines, the unreadable maps that were their weary faces, 
That their journey had indeed begun by setting a tender foot on a smooth surface,
An endless expanse of golden sand and so many miles of bubbling turquoise waters that
The horizon seemed to be forever beyond their reach.
Their journey, they had likely believed at the beginning, 
Would simply be a tranquil sail under the soft mother's kiss of a warm sun,
Gentle nudged along the route by a steady, calming breeze 
Against their unsalted, fully furled, pristinely white sails.

She imagined that the breeze was not reliably calm, nor steady, nor dependably able. 
Instead, one day it turned
Truculent, capricious, even spiteful, at once violently argumentative and then, without warning, 
Truant, vacating its work and leaving them stranded on sea waters 
Turned briny, gray and cold. They floated aimlessly, helplessly, or spun and tossed, so that they lost track of the course they had set, and an inscrutable horizon 
Offered them no discernible marks by which to guide their way.
That vessel that had once sparkled with purpose and promise became confining, and its
Hard points and jutting nails bruised their tender muscles and soft, fleshy places which
Toughened and sinewed due to the harsh course they found themselves taking.

Under unyielding sunlight, their soft, pink faces and hands and arms grew lined, spotted, cracked.
Lost on the vast stretch of ocean, unable to harness the wind or read the starlight maps,
They had despaired of ever finding whatever it was that they had been looking for,
And realized that they had forgotten the location of their destination, 
Even its name or how to describe it, other than with vague terms like happiness or comfort or safety or companionship or contentment or
Love.
They grew so thirsty, not just to moisten their parched tongues and cracking lips, 
But to fill their empty spaces inside, caverns so deep and formless, that they
Dipped their aching hands into the seawater, and drank. 
As she knew, and as they had forgotten somehow, she realized, 
From their glintless eyes and gleamless hair and gaunt torsos,
That seawater is full of salt and offers no nourishment, no replenishing relief.
It is a drink that only makes you ever more thirsty, and leaches your soul.

So she realized, as she looked at their faces, how they had come to this place.
They had sailed without a sextant, unknowing of stars, 
Without fresh water, lacking the equipment or expertise to catch fish,
And had trusted the fickle wind to keep them on course and moving forward.
They had been merely gullible, and fell for a sucker's bargain offered as a tempting lure
By a wicked world, and, finding themselves without hope midway,
Drank seawater to stay alive.

They were alive, but not living. 
Although the maps were printed on their faces, they could not read them.
Moored on a distant outcropping of earth, they could move forward no more,
And at least here was an endless supply of the briny drink.

She reminded herself that before she continued her own journey, she must be
Knowing of stars, and how to read them to guide her way forward,
Or else she might become desperate too, so needing of nourishment that
She might begin to sip saltwater, thinking it was wine,
Holding its cold kiss to her lips and wishing it were the 
Warm touches of someone on that distant and seemingly unreachable shore.

Friday, February 13, 2015

Animals

She'd once heard that there was more than one way to skin a cat
And she was utterly determined to skin this one.
It was a man, not a cat, but he moved like one,
A sleek creature winding through thick reeds
Of a lazy jungle river, hot breath mixed with
Steam rising off the slow-moving water.

He moved like that, deliberately feline, with low
Haunches, and eyes that saw everything
But revealed nothing, and she wanted to know more.
Because she was not like a cat at all, but all bitch,
Forceful, perceptive, controlling and sensual,
And she'd caught the scent of something wild.

She made all the moves, or so she thought,
Like a dog thinks with its yips and snarls,
While that cat of a man lay in wait,
Poised on an invisible fulcrum,
Still as lifelessness, but ready to spring
Should he desire, and watching his enemy.

They danced together there, in a senseless
Swirl that has endured for centuries,
One jumping and howling, the other
Hissing and stalking, but somehow,
With passion, drink, thrust and parry,
They'd come together to make fire.

How could it last? A dog and a cat.
Agendas opposed, styles in constant clash.
Does time matter? Do rules exist?
There is no rational explanation for
Irrational feelings and behaviors.
But they burn brightly in the moment.





Flowing Clear and Swift

She hadn't sat astride a horse in twenty years.
But its wide, curvaceous back, silk-spun,
Gently rising and falling with each breath,
Seemed warmly familiar.
She felt as a centaur, and it was
Both comforting and empowering.

Clambering slowly down the narrow,
They hugged the banks of the creek,
The same one she'd explored as a child,
But both had altered dramatically.
Years, cares, debris had left their mark.
Indelible? Inalterable? Inevitable?

How to loosen the clogs,
To restore freshness and flow,
Remove impurities, restore
Agility and progress?
Peel away the weeds and fog
To reveal beauty concealed?

As one, she, the horse, the water,
Stood together for a moment or
Hours, it seemed, and joined
To pray for this to happen,
To make it happen, to be once
Again what they once were.

A clean, fresh, swift flow that
Reflected the sunlight as jewels.

A muscular, mighty beast that
Governed soil and shrub and trail.

A radiant woman, glowing, who
Always galloped to the next horizon.