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Saint Ignatius

Taut as a drum,

let the sea slip round us

as it slips to circle

continents, as it slips,

obliquely, into a poem,

as it slips on like a dress,

and off like one too

when it

is done

with you.



10 AM, Antipodes

The grey sky hung like a flannelette sheet.

Frayed a bit with yellow light, the centre traps

the muggy air. The sea will wet the hems of it.

I think my Nan has tucked it there.

Anxious in December that we might catch chill,

she snuck in with the moon as we slept.



Borzoi

Loping like a ghost along the moon-slick pavement,

the white dog is trotting on beside the gutter full

of moon-beams and blossom and delicate

orbs that are the images of skulls of mannequin

all leering like corpses from the sex-shop-front.



Evening Rain

The border of the sky is torn

to lilac-gold. Between the sun

and streetlight dips a sudden gust

of melancholy, fogging rain.

Inviting like a lockless door

the night to bring her shadow in.



Halloween

You always-walking waves of men

whose footsteps sound our stony deep,

step lightly now above our heads

or else you may disturb our sleep.



Tree

Doubloons, fat pennants loll

and lay about on greeny fog,

and each twig tilts their shield-shades,

each rough-cut leaf, to interrupt

the broad blue back above.



Orchard

Rain spoiled the fruit, they clot the nets –

these oblivious, night-black plums – dropped off

to bloom white mould, and shrink, and curdle

like so much pelagic mass hauled up

to dry in the drag-net off Nantucket or

Here, between the trunks in cemetery rows –

where glass-eyed flies once clung to fruit,

and burst like dandelion heads as we passed

above the matted undulations of the grass

shot through with rusty pickets – jutting up

Like galleon bones, half sunk in silt

and scoured pips – mis-sown by time to bare

the porous ridges where their flesh hooked on

much as it does in us, still straining dark

and silent as a dragline in the empty sea,

Or the grass that snarling wrecks the wall

where a fig switch sits – snapped at the brittle joint,

and a trough inclines the rain, whose skin of light

crosscut by fine black furrows of shade

is like the scale-wrapped flank of a fish.

I realise I am sweeping your grave, when –

somewhere, a magpie sings, and I look up

through the naked lattice of the plum

and I see the sky is white, with one red edge,

like a segment from a peach.



Autumn

The cattail bending,

hidden in the autumn wind.

A silent blackbird

The sky turns with crumpled leaves,

a flock of sparrows - tumbling.



Standing in a Leaky Shower

The tap tap tap tap

of drips on my head. Is God

delayed? Impatient?



Landlocked Frog

This frog in my hand

is round as a pond. It jumps

onto dirt. A thud.



Starling, Late Evening

Ink drips into ink.

Starling skating black and green

across the river.