Month: December 2017
These Things Happen
In the middle of a night
in the middle of September
the dog awoke her with a
growl and when she followed
the animal out into the orchard
near the house she found
herself illuminated in a
phosphorescent
lake of moonlight,
and wide awake
in a silence in which owls
and even crickets were asleep.
From the shadows underneath
the apple trees she watched the
dog’s black shape as it sniffed
along the fence and
didn’t see until too late the
ground beneath her slippers open
up and didn’t hear until too late
the silence suddenly erupt in
shrieks of spiders, leaves and
stones that held her as she
pitched headfirst into an
ocean canyon filled with stars.
She thought that she was dreaming,
as she tumbled through a rain of
sparks and cinders high above the
burning palaces and parliaments
and watched a choir of ravens
carrying the coffins of some Savior
and his innumerable concubines
across wheat fields paved with
clocks that all curled backwards
towards a grove of birch trees
she remembered from a distant
summer when she had been a girl
alone, afraid and lost who
imagined the latticework of
branches as the labyrinth of her
heart and saw each leaf– each
one a human face– turn slowly
into the black shape of a dog
curled up in sleep in an iridescent
lake of snow, and a woman
standing in an orchard in her
slippers in the middle of a frigid
night in Winter, held by
moonlight, like a friend.
© 2012 J.M.Keating
The Way
When were you ever content to stay in just a single
room in your house? You used to poke and
wander into every corner– from the cellar, with
its solitary spiders in their cottony webs, the
rusting saws and hammers and families of mice,
up into the attic, with its treasure of enigmatic
boxes, empty suitcases and someone’s wedding
tux and wedding dress pressed together in a plastic
bag beneath a rain of dust that sifted down like flour
from the rafters.
But then one day you noticed that the walls began to
splinter and collapse. You pulled down the beams one
by one and let the roof cave in. You watched the shingles
burst into the air like a flight of crows. You let the
wind blow the rugs and chairs away, the refrigerator
too. You gave away the doors and windows to
someone in Berlin you thought you loved and the
back porch to the friend in Barcelona, the one whose
hands turned into water every stone that still remained
inside your heart.
When you had finally flattened all the walls and
the house was at last a house no more,
when your fists had finally opened,
then snow poured in and moonlight, and tiny
blackened stones from Dresden, and a storm of leaves
that has been falling for a thousand years.
then you found the path that is no Path, the road that never
was a road, only light that flickers on the sand—or was it water?
Only dancing, and the sound of someone singing.
Only a song.
© 2010 J.M. Keating