Caryatid’s Offering

Suffering gratitude is a burden
she will carry from the well
to the fire in a vessel
upon her shoulders—
understanding spilling
like new wine speaking

in tongues to the warmed earth.
She endures the gift exchange
of her clan, a ruby-colored cloth
passed between women till one declares
it will be torn
into a deck of cards 

made of erotic fiber.
Small swatches for young men
to pick from, each choosing
randomly until one last piece
is left for the one who has waited
to learn love 

with the woman who witnesses
an exquisite act of destruction
in every gift there is.

No Equivalent

In English. The sea is a false promise
of return,
ebb and flow,
rhythmic come and go,
the Portuguese fisherman’s saudade,
the Korean cane cutter’s han,
the American salesman building a heartland,
longing for salt and brine
he has never known.

Unsung Of

I am the outlier
toward a route,
I am the proclivity
toward disbanding communes. 

I am the lock
picked and forgotten
on the storm door,
I am longing itself
plucked and mounted
on the den wall. 

I am
without heteronyms,
without Whitman,
Pessoa,
I am this plain,
unbannered song
of go-low yearning
caught inside the frame
of a habitat gone wrong.

I am fallen
winged fruit
through quilled foliage
surrounding the roots

of our tough elastic wood
into another millennium,
a clique fallen
loud and brash
without an echo.

Sycamore (Day 1,353)

In the throes
of my intention
disorder, I forget
your name, how to reach
the top of you, how to
let go of those limbs 

you wave over me.
In these fits, the stories
I tell are not mine
except when they are.
That I come from ash,
that my mother left me 

in the rain
without a skeleton
shelter, that I still
eat dirt (raw not baked)—
these are some of the ones
I intend to qualify 

when I no longer suffer
from disease over the way
jacks wish to cut you down.

Nature’s Bethel

That she could define the sacred place inside her architecture of breathing,
that she could steal her father’s Old Head cave—naturally programmed with thick
Irish grass to cushion vistas of the Irish Sea—
that she could claim even one piece of rock as her own
to build a chapel for her own non-conformity, 

would be her attention to structure,
would be her proposal to the world,
would be her physical presence
inside a hallowed ground where there are
no lines, no dimensions, only

the exquisite knowing of a spot
where she, like seamen before her,
would go. She would go
to rest her body, to forget it, to uncover
in the rubble of Earth’s design, 

souls lost, souls renewed,
a storm pushing so many
waves into the cave, etching
its remarkably evolved design
no human hand could replicate.

Laugh Phoenix

You are my laughing phoenix,
I am yours.
Our cackling woke the dead.
Endlessly we cracked jokes
waiting for the fire engines (not red)
to arrive. 

No, wait!  Hurry!  Get back
inside.  Let the smoke
choke us out of five hundred years’
worth of played-out puns.
Six hundred too many Arabian nights
have us cracked up under the moon. 

Reduced to ashes, we could ask to be blood-red,
winged beauties next to one another
drying feathers forever in the desert. 

But you would not reinvent yourself
with me.  For me,
the ashes scatter irreverently.  For you,
tradition’s fire in the belly burns
as  you wait for ladders and hoses. 

Dry as the skin of wakened dead,
the puns will reduce me
to tears for five hundred or so
more years.  Unless, of course,
you weren’t my last,
laughing one.

Scratch (Day 2,426)

Graffiti isn’t graffiti
unless she calls it.
On an old water tower crowning
an abandoned grain mill— 

perhaps. “Erin I love you” attaching
itself to the “and then it got
very cool” end
of Ashbery’s poem on a pedestrian 

bridge—definitely.
These messages 

you leave
for her in waterfall rushing
to flow into southern lines—
she thinks they won’t disappear too soon.

The Founding (Day 2,244)

He finds her one
piece at a time
along railroad tracks, in riverbeds, beneath
piers, over gutters. It takes

months to find her mouth,
but the hands appear
without effort. His search begins

when he’s walking
along the shoulder
of a dusty road
outside a town he has considered home. Not
so much anymore. A patch
of sapphire light

in the distance drags him
into the brush—a freight
line that time forgot. Wild flowers
he knows someone would call weeds,

except for that color. It draws him in. There, surrounded
by ties and a broken empty Wild
Turkey bottle caught in the dirt, two imperfectly round
stones the color of an angry ocean
before the eye
of a storm. They become
the start, his decision

to invent a woman
from what he can’t know.
In the gathering,  

he is not literal—no black
tupelo twigs for limbs, no
algae strands for hair. No,
he collects what he collects
because she is guiding him
to make her whole, complex
enough to hold his attention

for longer than the discovery
of each piece. There is only one
rule he follows:
he must be walking.

Kokomo (Day 2,439: Take 2)

When I visit
my sister
next month, I will
think of you
still pretending 

your banana
seat bicycle
with string-ray
handle bars

is a horse.