Still Life with Vase
I often wonder what the investigator 
will say about my body after it's found
how he will lift my hair with his pencil 
searching for the entry wound noting how fragile 
and worn my bangs are from cheap bleach
and the coroner once I am on the metal bed 
still in its steel arms
she will perhaps record the bloom of 
bacteria on my molars calculate 
the faulty brushwork
she will take her calipers to the white
flesh of my sides measure how the rings
of fat encircle me like the belts of Saturn
and then she will weigh my liver swollen
with doctors' faulty interventions
the seat of my anger bile bubbling out
even when the air is dead in me
they will poke and explore 
these slim-fingered bodysnatchers the 
clockwork of my vessels 
the chainlink fence of my lungs 
perhaps I am shot stabbed and burned but
I think it is more likely an accident someone 
fell somewhere a car swerved to avoid a goose 
a bottle thrown out a window by a child 
who likes to hear 
smash
I think it will be a glass vase old and not 
too valuable holding irises just spoiled
that shatters in the next room and
a sliver will fly
arrow to my heart
and I will think about the incredible
dust as I stare at the cobwebbed beams above 
my back to the carpet faint smell of mold
everything suddenly still and rushed
and as the room yellows and then 
yellows again I will be sad that I
didn't kiss you long enough that morning
kiss you until you grunted
when the coroner finally comes to wiegh 
my heart she will find it enlarged she will 
speak of an extra 2 ounces to the man holding 
a plateful of my intestines beside her
and this because of that day when we sat 
out on the bench by the river 
and stared at each other 
just looking and
said nothing,
saying everything
first time visitor to your incredible blog...just breathtaking! consider yourself rhizomed :)
ReplyDeleteThanks Robert!
ReplyDeleteChristine: powerful stuff.
ReplyDelete(blushes) thanks Ivy, comming from you that means alot
ReplyDelete