And it was at that age . . . poetry arrived I didn't know what to say, my mouth And I, tiny being, taken from Isla Negra, a notebook
Eventually, I went to live across the sea. My house was set up in magic places, taken from Isla Negra, a notebook Ode to a pair of socks Maru Mori brought me My feet were Nevertheless So this is taken from Odes to Common Things
Poetry
in search of me.
I don't know, I don't know where
it came from, from winter or a river.
I
don't know how or when,
no, they were not voices, they were not
words, not
silence,
but from a street it called me,
from the branches of
night,
abruptly from the others,
among raging fires
or returning
alone,
there it was, without a face,
and it touched me.
had no way
with
names,
my eyes were blind.
Something knocked in my soul,
fever or
forgotten wings,
and I made my own way,
deciphering
that fire,
and I
wrote the first, faint line,
faint, without substance,
pure
nonsense,
pure wisdom
of someone who knows nothing;
and
suddenly I saw
the heavens
unfastened
and
open,
planets,
palpitating plantations,
the darkness
perforated,
riddled
with arrows, fire, and flowers,
the overpowering
night, the universe.
drunk with the great
starry
void,
likeness, image of
mystery,
felt myself a pure
part
of the abyss.
I wheeled with the stars.
My heart broke loose with
the wind.
Monsoons
chapter of waves,
of
wind and salt, eye and eyelid
of a stubborn underwater star.
Wondrous the
extravagance of the sun,
the ample green of palm trees,
on the edge of a
forest of masts and fruit,
with a sea harder than a blue stone,
under a
sky new-painted every day,
never the delicate boat of one cloud,
but an
absurd gathering--
rumbling thunder and water falling
in cataracts, a hiss
of anger--
gravid monsoon exploding overhead,
emptying out the great bag
of its power.
a pair
of socks
that she knit
with her
shepherd's hands.
Two socks as soft
as rabbit fur.
I thrust
my feet
inside them
as if they were
two
little boxes
knit
from
threads
of sunset
and sheepskin.
two woolen
fish
in those outrageous
socks,
two gangly,
navy-blue sharks
impaled
on a golden
thread,
two giant blackbirds,
two cannons:
thus
were my
feet
honored
by
those
heavenly
socks.
They were
so
beautiful
I found my feet
unlovable
for the very first time,
like
two crusty old
firemen, firemen
unworthy
of that
embroidered
fire,
those incandescent
socks.
I fought
the sharp temptation
to put them
away
the way schoolboys
put
fireflies in a bottle,
the way
scholars
hoard
holy writ.
I fought
the mad urge
to lock
them
in a golden
cage
and feed them birdseed
and morsels of pink
melon
every day.
Like jungle
explorers
who deliver a young
deer
of the rarest species
to the roasting spit
then wolf it down
in
shame,
I stretched
my feet forward
and pulled
on
those
gorgeous
socks,
and over them
my shoes.
the moral of my ode:
beauty is beauty
twice
over
and good things are doubly
good
when you're talking about a pair
of wool
socks
in the dead of winter.
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