You return
uninvited. The rain won’t stop knocking
oak limbs can’t let the wind go. Without
reason
I open the
door. You step through the cold standing
between us, sit across at my table, glare rubbed
Raw by our
elbows, shallows catching your face
its decoration monks might have hung in the
dark
Of their cells,
lit candles before, perhaps flamed
incense, a sharpness scribed in your
cheekbones
Smudged with
beard, the shaved tones mixed
from what was kept to hand, red lead, white
Chalk, your eyes
remote orbs of lapis quarried
in Afghanistan, glancing up from the spread
Leaves of any
folio I could have browsed
in facsimile at some Dublin bookshop an
ocean
From where weeks
ago we would laze more
nakedly, our unhallowed silences a new world
Love cleared
away. Until then we lived in
our own time, were social constructs, self
Made men. Even
now we contrive to talk
using brand names, market dips, semiotics
To close in on
shores our outlooks had overrun
what we left behind unsettled, lovers hungry
And
dispossessed, steadfastness humbled
all we have felt for each other more aligned
With faith than
contingency, us both claiming
to embody what early on we failed to
Avow, your calm
face since met everywhere
arrested in the repose of living and dead
Illuminating the
stained glass of nearby
churches, descendants incarnated above
Pints of local
bitter, downcast behind
ersatz maquillage of the house drag queen.
Too long must
devotion inhabit me.
I should have never let you in.
John
Barton has published
eleven books and six chapbooks of poetry, including West of Darkness: Emily Carr, a Self-Portrait (third bilingual edition, BushcekBooks,
2006), Hypothesis (Anansi,
2001), Hymn (Brick, 2009), For the Boy with the Eyes of the Virgin: Selected Poems (Nightwood, 2012), Balletomane: The Program Notes of Lincoln Kirstein (JackPine, 2012), Polari (Goose
Lane, 2014), and Reframing Paul Cadmus
(above/ground, 2016). Co-editor of Seminal:The Anthology of Canada’s Gay-Male Poets (Arsenal Pulp, 2007), he is editing The Essential Douglas LePan for Porcupine’s Quill. Born in Edmonton
and raised in Calgary, he lives in Victoria, where he edits The Malahat Review.
the Tuesday
poem is curated by rob mclennan
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