Semaphore
During summers, one of my college professors
would make beautiful Persian rugs, and near
completion, he would tie nearly
a thousand little knots in the fringe; I asked
him what he thought about as he was tying
them, so small he had to use a jeweler's eyepiece
to see his work. And he said without looking up,
Each knot is a hatred I have kept harbored
in my heart. I was stunned and looked at him
but he merely kept working. I pointed to a random
knot and asked, This one? He glanced at it and said,
That is my son's first wife, who left him and drove
him to sadness. I pointed to another; he glanced again
and said, That is mine, when I am ungrateful. Another.
That is the cafe owner, who never remembers my name.
I said, Surely there must be hundreds here.
One thousand three hundred seventeen, he said back.
My heart is vast and capacious, there are caverns of hate.
I went home, saddened. That night I dreamt
I was lost in a great cave, an underground
metropolis of spires and cliffs and outcrops.
On every surface - walls, floor, stalactite,
stalagmite, pebble - was etched my name.
I reached out to touch the lettering, and
my fingers came away raw and bleeding.
The next day I had coffee with the professor
and said how sad I felt he must be.
Sad is not the word, he said, drinking slowly.
He set his cup down and looked me in the eye.
Think of the the thing you dislike most in yourself,
he said quietly. He waited. It was not hard,
this thing was always just below the surface of my
thought and living. You have it, he asked, and I nodded.
Think of the next thing. And the next. Do you
see how their corners meet, how their fingers touch?
Do you hear the honey dripped from one to the other?
They are as salt to salted earth, as sand to billowing dune.
If sad is not the word, I asked as we shook hands
in parting, then what is? Embodied, he said
after a moment, and picked up his briefcase
and strode off.
I thought about him for weeks after that day,
his knots and his embodiment.
I dreamt of fingers interlacing, of snowflakes
whose points melted into one another.
I tasted honey on my lips when I woke.
The thing below my surface grew and one day
boiled over and spilled its banks.
Weeks later, he called me, having heard of my
trouble. Why do you think I make those rugs,
he asked. It is to bind each hatred separately
and apart. When I tie each knot, I go back
into my memory and relive each hate, and it
escapes through my fingers to be caught up
in the knot. It is twisted in upon itself
and cannot escape and return to me; it
consumes itself and immolates.
Sometimes it is hard to find the threads,
and it must be left to ripen, for not every hate
is ready to be purged when you wish it.
Some hates you must live with, forever.
Some hates make your loves stronger.
It is up to you to know the hates you
can live within and beside, what you are willing
to sacrifice to make room for it.
I have made nearly twenty rugs, he said,
in my life, starting when I was a young man.
The heart is cavernous, like the hollow earth.
It bears rivers, tides, rivulets.
It speaks the first tongue and knows itself
even if we do not. A phantom within a shell,
ghostly as the
half-moon
at the root of a fingernail.