The Lives of the
Heart
Are ligneous,
muscular, chemical.
Wear birch-colored feathers,
green tunnels of
horse-tail reed.
Wear calcified spirals, Fibonaccian spheres.
Are
edible;are glassy;are clay;blue schist.
Can be burned as tallow, as
coal,
can be skinned for garnets, for shoes.
Cast shadows or
light;
shuffle;snort;cry out in passion.
Are salt, are bitter,
tear
sweet grass with their teeth.
Step silently into blue needle-fall at dawn.
Thrash in the net until hit. .
Rise up as cities, as serpentined magma,
as maples,
hiss lava-red into the sea.
Leave the strange kiss of their
bodies
in Burgess Shale. Can be found, can be lost,
can be carried,
broken, sung.
Lie dormant until they are opened by ice,
by drought. Go
blind in the service of lace.
Are starving, are sated, indifferent, curious,
mad.
Are stamped out in plastic, in tin.
Are stubborn, are
careful, are slipshod,
are strung on the blue backs of flies
on the black
backs of cows.
Wander the vacant whale-roads, the white thickets
heavy
with slaughter.
Wander the fragrant carpets of alpine flowers.,
Not one is
not held in the arms of the rest, to blossom.
Not one is not given to
ecstasy's lions.
Not one does not grieve.
Each of them opens and closes,
closes and opens
the heavy gate --violent, serene, consenting, suffering it
all.
~ Jane Hirschfield
~
(The Lives of the
Heart, 1997)
(left button to play,
right button to save)