Visitation
or: The Ancestors Finally Reject Our Childish Pleas for Clemency
In the end, our failure to raise a visitation
became intolerable. Face down in the muddle,
we rummaged the shallows at the furthest lip
of what could still be called land.
Snaking through confused bottom weeds,
we twisted a root from the recalcitrant muck.
Then raised our heads to the mute blow
of a daylight that refused to diminish its sum
for our sake.
Fever-blind, we sped headlong
to haphazard shards of hope
whirling out our dazed, mute esophagus,
begging the waters to the stingy brine
of our misbegotten thirst, as if
the stony ecstasy of silent rock might leach
and bare its fugitive fossil,
which might dare speak
given that words might have bones,
sovereign locomotion, power of direction—
headlong into blank astringent fact,
the tincture we tasted by night—
where last we went together
mining ice for fossil memory,
and watched its rime burn away
beneath dawn-rise,
in whose heat we hid the weeping sun
revolving in our belly,
awaiting birth into a sky,
any sky—
any sky at all.
rabbitandrose.com, literary blog of Kim Shuck,
San Francisco Poet Laureate Emerita, issue 3, 2007
11/9: The Fall of American Democracy, 2017
Sections
Visitation
or: The Ancestors Finally Reject Our Childish Pleas for Clemency
In the end, our failure to raise a visitation
became intolerable. Face down in the muddle,
we rummaged the shallows at the furthest lip
of what could still be called land.
Snaking through confused bottom weeds,
we twisted a root from the recalcitrant muck.
Then raised our heads to the mute blow
of a daylight that refused to diminish its sum
for our sake.
Fever-blind, we sped headlong
to haphazard shards of hope
whirling out our dazed, mute esophagus,
begging the waters to the stingy brine
of our misbegotten thirst, as if
the stony ecstasy of silent rock might leach
and bare its fugitive fossil,
which might dare speak
given that words might have bones,
sovereign locomotion, power of direction—
headlong into blank astringent fact,
the tincture we tasted by night—
where last we went together
mining ice for fossil memory,
and watched its rime burn away
beneath dawn-rise,
in whose heat we hid the weeping sun
revolving in our belly,
awaiting birth into a sky,
any sky—
any sky at all.
rabbitandrose.com, literary blog of Kim Shuck,
San Francisco Poet Laureate Emerita, issue 3, 2007
11/9: The Fall of American Democracy, 2017
Sections