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But
she breaks just like a little girl. --
Bob
Dylan
Twice
you've asked me to leave.
This third time, uttered groggy
and forgetful from a hospital bed,
incensed that you're still alive, almost succeeds.
How
glad I am you chose the wrong pills!
How glad I am they found you in the forest!
Yet you are more bitter than the taste of morphine
at how you failed at this, your final failure.
Now
I see how you squeezed your eyes
harder than God shut your ears. This is not
a judgment but an observation-- I keep repeating this--
I thought the deaf saw more.
Your
sainted dad's an alcoholic
and your noble husband beat you--
you never mentioned it. In AA there's a saying,
"Your secrets will kill you." Yours almost did
but
you are now exposed, your pale moon
near full behind the flapping borders
of your hospital gown, blue print-on-white,
(thank God!) not rose-tinted black.
Copyright
© 2000
C.E. Chaffin
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Blessed
are the deaf asleep.
Sleeping, they hear; hearing, they know.
Knowing,
they cannot explain
why their music is always in color.
Do
not disturb their snoring,
it is their passionate breath.
Do
not wake them to this
strange world of silence
But
touch their honeyed skin;
hear the descending submarines.
Copyright
© 2000
C.E. Chaffin
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This
is your dumpster, beaten by usage,
misshapenly blue, blotched with rust
though resilient as steel, still serviceable enough
to mount on a truck.
Throw
in what you can bear,
the broken torso of his vision of you
in clay and wire, the discarded water heater
and the towing chains.
Humankind
cannot bear very much reality.
Throw
in your father
who departed for the eternal suburbs
in a fit of gradual senescence;
throw in your golden retriever,
arthritic and blind, who needs a boost
to stand, christened "Sunny"
for his excellent temperament.
Throw
in the plastic tarpaulins
that shield what feeds on darkness,
spore and fungi, throw in
the bitter pomegranate,
the purifying hyssop,
the man-shaped mandrake,
the hemlock and the yew,
all wilted keels of earth's
imaginary boat propelled by tears.
Throw
in your confidence, your job,
your mother bearing bad news of your birth,
the striving to acquit yourself
persistently more equal than
those spared your handicap.
Throw
in the cigarettes that killed your husband
(though you still smoke two packs a day),
throw in the blackened chest
that housed his far-seeing eye.
Throw
in your only child,
the empty fuel can begging fire.
Pile it on a camel (one hump for each Testament),
send it into the desert
to empty you of that emptiness
beyond hope and reason.
Epilogue
Imagine you own nothing--
your body is rented, for instance,
your mind borrowed.
Though
all your suffering is real,
you are not your suffering;
your losses cannot destroy you
nor your gains restore you.
Gather
love's souvenirs
into a necklace of pain;
when you bless the seasnakes unawares
you will know the weight of it--
Let
go!
Copyright
© 2000 C.E. Chaffin
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