The Gold at the Bottom of the River
There are beautiful things in the sadness,
else why does woe, woe and ever mourning
and sounds of a boys' choir sting and stab
at unseen wounds, known but forgotten?
a gate opens, and music, birdsong,
we were never warriors the way we should have been
but this is our Valhalla; we enter like the gods
who never paid for the walls, who never feel
the bite of iron in the back, just the dampness
of the blood and
leave the gates open behind, because whatever
could hurt us now
but each other?
It is always twilight, the edges of things are always obscure;
there is a shape, indistinct, on all sides, above and below;
the edges we don't see
cut
so softly
I thought it was a kiss;
when it was over the heat lingered
like my name on a breath
exhaled in the cold night, drifting up toward the moon.
Dissipating, finally gone, high above the roofs,
drifting over walls,
through leaves, like a memory finally released,
turning sparkling folding over itself,
and the bells ring in the morning and the birds leap from the branches
and the sky is high and the rich shall have their ice in summer
and the poor shall have their ice in winter
and the water will flow over and over and on
and they will close the gates
and say themselves, yea at last we are free at last we know solace
and then and then-