In my dream, a small, clear, glass bottle filled with
something like bird shot - metallic beads -
or maybe sugar sprinkles. But colored like Kaw river water.
Then one and then another began to sparkle like ripples on a wind driven river,
catching sunlight and it seemed to me like the flashing lights were trying to
tell me something.
Sleep, I am told, is when your mind clears out clutter, but
jangles and clatter dangle like an
unbarbed hook into waters that first fall from the sky in
drips and drabs, dribbling finally in droplets from my dreams.
I awoke more embellished than ever. The cat purred loudly in
distraction and my pen seemed to make no more sense than a kite, higher the
river flows after the rain falls, brighter the night glows under clouds
flooding so low.
Yesterday, I ground cumin seeds and filled two small, clear,
glass bottles. I labeled them both but you could smell strongly the spice with
the lids off. Cumin grinds the color of cumin.
If there is a point to my dreaming, was it lost in the
waking, or did the hunching up of empty phrases leave residues of sense where I
hadn’t planned to hide any?
In the water of one moment on a day long ago I made one
woman look up the meaning of word because of a poem I made out of simple light
splashings. A glance or clear, glass chance, perchance?
It is not truth or even beauty I pursue by abandoning the
closing and opening of eyes, or rather peering wildly or blindly.
It is someone to see what I saw and better for you to wonder
about what I never saw and for us to see
something I mislabeled. And over dinner or distance, we will hold up a glass
and then recount the miracle that neither of us knows.
When you look in my eyes are you ever surprised by who you
see and when you look at a bottle the color of wine glass, do you see the
dapples of starlight?
A candle will do in the evening, crystal or glass will
suffice. Look in my eyes and smell the water, mud is turning to light.
2 comments:
I really like this. I like "wind driven river" and laughed at "Cumin grinds the color of cumin."
And I like the photo.
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