de Unamuno
So
I am going to die, they said.
What do I do with this information?
Barefoot on the cobblestones, the Mediterranean
filling my lungs, I stagger and nearly trip
on the streetcar rails.
It's the middle of the night, there's no traffic,
but pretty girls just park where they want to
anyway
and I sink to the ground with my back against
the passenger door of a white Peugeot
and sob until a stray cat emerges
from the haze at the edge of my eyes
and stands watching me.
Somewhere behind me is a fountain,
burbling water falling on marble, it sounds like a woman's voice-
not just a woman, but a mother-
a mother's voice, singing to a baby awakened in the
night
by some incomprehensible terror.
Well, some nights are like that.
When I was a kid I would have recurring dreams of being on a boat
on a vast ocean, all alone, nothing but the sea forever on all sides and the sun burning overhead and a thick white rope coiled around my hands and wrists and forearms. Nothing would happen, no storm or shipwreck. I would just drift, until I woke up.
The atoms of the human structure, the synaptical architecture
miles and miles of nerves and veins
an unending expanse that one day has an end.
A bicycle zips past, a boy pedaling carefully over the rutted cobbles,
a girl clamped to his back, laughter.
It scares the cat, who scampers away into the dark.
My bones are hollow, I am a bird,
I vomit worms for my nonexistent children.
To remain silent is a lie, but what do I do now,
when the boys gather in their buzzcuts and their veined arms
and scream Viva la muerte
without a hint of irony?