The Rock in Mid-Lake Disappears & I Who Might



as well be a fine young prince am in cold water
treading. 12 feet out
                                     in all directions: fog. Without
emotion. The muffled plashing is my arms.
Gasps, mine. In eerie
                                       mist, Siddhārtha, curious,
left the palace. From gold-wheeled chariot saw a new thing,
wasted flesh. Lost
                                  all bearings. I kick my legs,
still health-club toned [oh, I’ve paid dues] & stay a bit
afloat. Saw too
                            the rot of leprous beggars, heard
fever’s starveling mutter. That fog—the color
                                                                                  of my hair beneath
what pricey grown a hemisphere away & pretty-boxed-up
henna does. The water
                                          coldens. Saw a corpse, its moisture
vapor in the pyre. I, muscles
                                                    frosting, who live North
American planet-spoiler, must suck hard air
                                                                                  & call. Saw bony
laborers, oxen a-sweat, insect bodies
                                                                    plowshare-sliced. But who
might hear? 1 friend is sick. 1, chafed raw. The rest
are sinking. With tired fear iced, I
                                                              shout. A voice from far no
-where
              responds. Not the Śākya sage. A man not dead
but in chill smoke, beyond location. My nostrils
                                                                                       drift
above the ripples. I call again: in dream his name
bells
          clear. Yet wakened by my own loud plea, I hear
it is a formless groan
                                       from middle-night, that hauls me [no,
no aim accomplished] out of gray lake,
                                                                       [into his drowsy
answering]
                      onto our chill [compassionate heat] white
rock [or temporary floe] of dryer-tumbled sheets.


Post this page to: del.icio.us Yahoo! MyWeb Digg reddit Furl Blinklist Spurl

Comments

1 |
lost/found friend
Second attempt----
I am in charlottesville, hanging out after brain operation---still alaska connected butfamily is here.....
call 617-784-5969
or email cgparson@gmail.com

thinking, thinking of you
Gail
— posted 09/17/2011 at 21:17 by GAIL Parson
2 |
Courier
The way you utilized spacing in this poem carries the reader through your dream state in a very authentic way--and I appreciate, this morning, the way "Without/emotion" contrasts "tired fear iced."
— posted 09/27/2011 at 12:05 by Mara Eve Robbins
3 |
I like the way this poem is in three places at once. Love the word 'coldens.'
— posted 10/01/2011 at 21:05 by Richard Garcia
4 |
Love the words "fog," "mist," "eerie," "smoke," "gray" that enhance the dream & dream-like quality. Also, great contrast between fog and "boxed-up henna."
— posted 10/19/2011 at 01:19 by Judith Terzi
Name
E-mail (Will not appear online)
Title
Comment
To prevent automated Bots from spamming, please enter the text you see in the image below in the appropriate input box. Your comment will only be submitted if the strings match. Please ensure that your browser supports and accepts cookies, or your comment cannot be verified correctly.



Powered by Comment Script
del.ici.ous  stumbleUpon  Reddit  Facebook    Digg   RSS Feed Icon

About the Author

Jeanne Larsen, author of Why We Make Gardens (& Other Poems), is Susan Gager Jackson Professor of Creative Writing at Hollins University.

Joseph Fasano, October

Cate Peebles, The Gift Shop


http://www.facebookloginhut.com/facebook-login/  http://www.facebookloginhut.com/facebook-login/ http://www.facebookloginhut.com/facebook-login/ 



Boston Review Newsletter