Showing posts with label wood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wood. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 17, 2019

The page of gathering places



Chin jutted level with the horizon line,
arms clasped around thin elbows which palms
cradle against the abdomen, the body becomes
a sensual veil, loosens its threads, the carpet of moss
appreciates the spaces across smooth rocks such as
She-

And I hear her voluptuous sigh
giving weight to attraction,
attention and focus upon
the tiniest moon
as though the stars were an entourage
of criticism-

She begins again, stainless in the mud,
I inquire as to what is bothering her,
what matters more than
rocks and trees-

She beheld a single sheet of white paper
which explained her glow,
scratch that she noted and tore
it into thin strips
but would not say another word edgewise.

I knew I would piece it all back together
when she smiled, opened her shoulders,
spread her wings and sang
like a mocking-bird.

There were too many notes, index cards
and pages coming back, 
returned to sender and un-
deliverable-

Yet we agreed
on something so stark
standing on different patches
of land and future, undoubtedly
paper was better than plastic.


Painting by Poul Friis Nybo (1869-1929), 'Reading Woman' c. 1929 in Public Domain. 

Sunday, August 28, 2016

Dendrite doors


We learned they would come after midnight.
At least, I learned this on my own.
The neighbors all knew where those footsteps led. 
The lights had been killed before...and it was a signal still.
The horror was trapped in the suspense.
They never knocked. That was the true terror.


I never lived this way. I learned how.
Why have doors, they would all conclude,
since all else had been stripped away?
When we strip wood, it's raw hide-

stripped skin shows through.
We all know the smell.
And screens are illusions like musty hospital curtains.
Did you know that there is no word for Privacy in Russia-
just keep this to yourself.


I knew an American woman 

that imported 14-foot tall exotic hardwood doors from Indonesia.
She had them installed or erected
in a financed rehab mansion in Southern California;
they divided the living from the sitting room 
and the doors were always open.
It took two to move them.
When she was evicted from the retreat she tried to steal them. 
She went to prison. Not just for the doors.

She'd tried to escape to Mexico.

And although before my time,

I liked Jim Morrison's poetry 
back when I was just little and more morose.
Now his poetry seems hollow, soft in spots.


I was petrified to eventually find 
purple heart in deep prose,
and blocks of solid Bolivian Rose by Burmese blackwood 
so fresh it bleeds,
still...life with leaves and family trees fall
and knots make it all stronger.

We learned about the grind and carpentry,

sand smoothes stone and wood. 
Don't cut against the grains. Leave room to breathe.
I tend leave my doors ajar, 
and query why we each have so many 
inside.
I like my peephole. 
That was a solid design.
Unlike suspension bridges which transfer tension

and tend to be fire retardant. 

Now how can we move on,
without looking back. Locks break.
We cannot ignore these partitions anymore.
Divide and Conquer, knock on wood, 
for your own good and I should warn you-
I am not decent but have found a match. 



Photograph (by 'not given') of the massive old wooden doors of Mission San Gabriel which withstood the attacks of the Indians, ca.1908. [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons. 

And then...

  Change is like that strong smell of cut grass or chopped wood that stops you still. Patterns, a symbol can be an illegible sign,  at first...