
i had the opportunity to meet tess gallagher a few years ago, and hear her read her poem, 'my unopened life' (which i always remember as, 'the spoon poem'). here is another of hers... touching on the beauty and fragility and sadness of life's inevitable end.
That linkage of warnings sent a tremor through Juneas if to prepare October in the hardest apples.One week in late July we held handsthrough the bars of his hospital bed. Our sleepmade a canopy over us and it seemed I heardits durable roaring in the companion sleepof what must have been our Bedouin god, and nowwhen the poppy lets go I know it is to lay barehis thickly seeded black coachat the pinnacle of dying.
My shaggy ponies heard the shallow snapping of silkbut grazed on down the hillside, their prayer flagstearing at the void-what westared into, its cool fluxof blue and white. How just shaking at fliesthey sprinkled the air with the soft unconscious praiseof bells braided into their manes. My life
simplified to "for him" and his thinned like an injectionwearing off so the real gave way tothe more-than-real, each moment's carmineabundance, furl of reddest petalslifted from the stalk and no hint of the blackhussar's hat at the center. By then his breathing stoppedso gradually I had to brush lips to knowan ending. Tasting then that plush of scarletwhich is the last of warmth, kissless kisshe would have given. Mine to extend a lover's right past its radius,to give and also most needfully, my gallant hussar,to bend and take.
love,j
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