To draw a halo use
a pair of compasses.
When we lean
together our burning profiles shatter
the black funerary
urn between us.
Oh, nobody can
work the negative spaces
like you, kiddo.
Embossing tools
etch patterns onto gilt.
Then there is all
that chewing to get through.
Tea? you ask
suddenly, offering the teapot.
Sunlight cuts to
the bone, the toast roars
flee not tea. Blight, thunder, famine,
blood.
Angels spin like
toys inside their whirling hours.
Your slow cistern
rage drains, drains, and fills up again,
as it does every
winter morning.
And in the eastern
sky an advertisement,
for the
Constellation Mercy, clicks off.
Breakfast is the
worst time for stigmata, the linens
a bloodbath.
Thanks be Sister Hen for the bounty
of your eggs,
Brother Frying Pan for your Teflon surface.
Kiddo, even the
forks in their narrow kitchen drawers
dun themselves on
your scribble scribble flesh.
Tap lightly with
hammer to preserve gold leaf.
Your bait hands
loaded on the tablecloth. Fill.
And your
spit-polished shoes, and the spaces between
is drip, empty,
overflow, repeat.
Double the radius
of grudging agreement
to measure
fidelity, kiddo, grievance, or the radiant ascent.
But I, I am lifted
into that rigging of violence and air,
where history and
the stars come out, begin to shine.
And your head
nimbus buzzes like a cheap neon sign.
Méira Cook’s most recent book of poetry was A Walker in the City (Brick). Her novel, The House on Sugarbush Road (Enfield & Wizenty), won the McNally-Robinson Manitoba Book of the Year Award. She is currently working as the Writer-in-Residence at the Winnipeg Public Library.
the Tuesday poem is curated by rob mclennan
1 comment:
This is terrific.
DC Reid
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