Poetry |

“Preamble To Forever” and “Clearcut”

Preamble to Forever

 

Some blood still in it. Some yeast to make bread from a body;

some bones not quite ground down enough to swallow. Still,

some solace when the mice chew through the rafters & open

the sky to our song. Sometimes it is like this. Veined with light,

a white clapboard church choked in vines & your parents

somewhere in it doing whatever the dead do to stay lit. Some

things will be just where you left them. When you come back,

the same mountain mined beyond repair & the same lack

of children in the park. Just dogs. Concrete. The sky still gives little slack. Those

old paper prayers from childhood snagged on

the same branches. Same birds with all the flight knocked out

still struggling to ascend. Wings like tiny windows open & close.

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

Clearcut

Water as it cuts

through whiskey.

 

Add an aspirin uncoiling.

Its contrails. Skyless.

 

An old man coughs bright

red stars into an oil rag.

 

The last time I saw him my grandfather was a winter

bird filled with panic & thirst.

 

                                    Cold, distant, raging sun.

 

                                    His son in the earth in a state

                                    that could hardly be farther from home.

 

                        Those prayers he used to terrify me with

                    drowned in a train whistle, though no one’s

                    seen service here in decades.

 

I want to say all this is true. That spit & shake means an oath

                        fulfilled. That lost things find their way back to us

 

                                    eventually.

 

But now the narrow corridor

of his body. Barely shoulder-width.

Lungs, a ghost town. All its industry

                                                            spent.

 

Like coming up for air, he’d say. Each breath.

 

Like measuring your life in fallen forests. Because each part

is heavier than the whole

 

& the whole is so damn heavy.

 

Nicotine-brown fingertips.

Failing eyes. Learning at last

to listen with our hands.

 

Now a crust of candlelight.

Song. & song. Its scar.

 

Contributor
John Sibley Williams

John Sibley Williams has recently published As One Fire Consumes Another (Orison Books, 2019), Skin Memory(University of Nebraska Press, 2019), and Summon (JuxtaProse Chapbook Prize, 2019). He serves as editor of The Inflectionist Review and works as an editor and literary agent.

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