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Tuesday, July 28, 2015

Shattering Birds of Light

Blue Flower
—Poems and Photos by Joyce Odam, Sacramento
 


BREAKING GLASS

Teeth of light bite into me like regret;
we are caught in light like prisms.

How can I not tell this to you—
you who break apart like glitters of death.

I am stabbed by your beauty; your screams
are silent to my ears. Or are you laughing?

You are no longer real. Shattering birds
of light fly into their own illusions—

windows everywhere opening to receive them
—sky cages closing behind them.

________________________

THE BIRD OF LIFE
       
Somewhere in time a gold bird explodes.
It is all covered with fire.
It is falling into our burning eyes.
We can hear its bright wings screaming.
We respond with our mouths open and answering.
We can see its white eyes bore through crimson skies.
The clouds catch fire
and the cindered stars are reeling.
We stand in the color of this sight.
We have come together to celebrate this mourning.
Our hands are at our throats.
We can feel our pulses pounding in our fingertips.
We can see the great self
of the bird burn away, and we can see
what life is made of in its mysterious center.
The sky has caught fire.
We ignite in the infinite color.
The bird has been falling forever.
Every glinting fragment of it falls
into our rapidly beating hearts.

                                                      
(first pub. in Galley Sail Review, 1967)






 BUTTON MAN

Button man
has them
all over himself.

I keep punching
them
touching
him
here and there.

I keep
accidentally
injuring
all his
sensitive buttons
again
they are so
raw and
exposed.

How he
reacts and
covers himself
with explosive pain,

but I don’t know
where
else to touch him.

_____________________

THIS ABSTRACT PAINTING

various tones of beige
rich browns
a field of near-white
in suspended swirl

a frozen leap of line
in vague direction
balanced right side up
and holding
like an important act
of intention

the eye understands
what the mind
tries to know

art is art
framed for itself
to adorn some wall
deciphering nothing
but the happenstance of
accidental design
and deliberate choice of color

abstract proof
of anything asked
that requires no answer



 Brown Tree



THE KEPT MIRROR

This is the mirror my husband shot
when he was careless, or angry, or thought
perhaps I had betrayed him and caught
my image in his sights and wrought
symbolic vengeance there.  I don’t know what
to say of it—why we keep it—surely not
my obsession with this torn glass. It’s got
so I love to look in it; I ought
to pull my face away. We never fought
after that—just bore the silent, hot
look of his stare, and my stare back—an old plot:
what he delivered—what I never bought.
He likes to stand behind me. There’s a lot
more to this than this small, round dot
in the center of this mirror that my husband shot.



 Window Shards
 


MAKING THE BED
   
     A woman is making the bed in the sunny room.
She is picking up the slivers of glass from the broken
window. They dazzle her fingertips till they bleed.
She holds a wad of Kleenex in her hand. She is
weeping. Her tears are cutting her cheeks. The
sheets are white with red rosebuds on them. The
diamond of her ring makes angry slashing motions
in the light.

    She is fascinated by this ritual. She feels as if she
is in the center of all the world’s mirrors, performing
for them. She is going to stay here until the bed is
smooth and safe again, even if nighttime comes, even
if time tears itself into little pieces. This is a thing she
must do.

     Every time she thinks she has it all, another piece
of glass flicks her attention to it. They are getting
smaller now. She licks her finger and touches it to the
glass. The sunlight is warm in the room. She doesn’t
know why she cannot stop weeping. It all happened
too long ago to keep remembering it now. Why does
it take so long to do? Is the window through breaking?



 Self Portrait



MY LIFE IN THE MIRROR

Available in stone,
this warp,
this pure intention,

my life in the mirror,
changing as I change,
this daydream made of mind-want,

this day that is about gone:
the sunset—
the long line of sleep—

the complication of dream-tangles.
Oh, that I want it—
want all its anger and danger—

its little pools of hope
that I stare into.
How else do I get through

one after another tyranny
of mind-maps?—
how else shall I regard you

with my glass heart and sharp eyes?—
you are my own, as I am yours
in our singular existence.

___________________

I HAVE WALKED IN RED DRESSES

I have walked in red dresses through colorless times.
I have risen from sleep into the cold path of moonbeams.
I celebrate my own feeling against cloth.

Even though my body is not young and fair, I wear nothing
under my dresses. Times I go barefoot are few. I wear
sandals. I do not paint my toenails, though I mean to.

I have given up cosmetics, but not incense.
I still wear my rings. I always close curtains—
I cannot stand bright air. I have walked in red dresses

in mute and colorless times of eloquent deep stare—I am
too loud for the mirrors. Even though I have covered my scars
with mending eyes—Love, oh staring Love, they are all yours.



 Mistletoe and Roses in Reflection
 


Today’s (Longer)Nip:

ON ASTERISKS FOR A TITLE

A boat ride through
the long rock walls of the jetty.
Crash.         Silence.

Water lapping.
Flashlights. Who is it?
Flashings of thought.

Time explosions.
Here and then.
When?

Stubbornness of time.
Mirrors. Unbroken.
Full of faces, mine among them.

Yes.       Wrong direction.
Seaweed.
Glossy wet gleam.

Seagulls, white and graceful,
bringing themselves back
to here.

Sun going down.
City after city ago.
Weariness of time.

The drunkenness.
The sobriety.
Regrets and absolutions.

This morning I heard birds.
Windows open in October.
Humid.


_______________________

—Medusa, with thanks to Joyce Odam for today's hearty breakfast, and a note that our new Seed of the Week is Mementoes—send your poems, photos or artwork about this (or any other subject!) to kathykieth@hotmail.com. No deadline on SOWs. Note also that we have a new photo album on Medusa's Facebook page: The Dolly Llama and Her Pals by Katy Brown. Check it out!