Poetry |

“Legacy of Blue,” “Incarnations,” “Incarnation Intercept Sonnet,” “Riven, Driven Back” & “Jacob’s Ladder”

Legacy of Blue

 

 

Blue of contusion, blue of the sea at noon

summers when thunderheads build on the thin line

 

the horizon comes down to; blue of Mary’s gown

standing beside her son in agonies

 

ten thousand times across the Renaissance.

None of this will give me back the man

 

my father was to me: blue his last chair,

a sort of Swedish modern with matching footstool.

 

There he sat, looking for my mother in a sky

Michigan unfurled for him eleven months

 

and then he left to me, like Mother, to these words.

I started with words; all words are wounds,

 

no, they are clouds; they refuse to hold the son.

Reader, I wanted to say: a father is every man’s first man.

 

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

 

Incarnations

 

 

I

Don’t count it heaven, the light between the trees.

It’s only heaven’s presaging, like these,

the sparrows I fall back on when I write,

the little wings in the drain’s rainwater gold

in front of my house. When I kneel down here now,

where they drip their twitterings to be transformed

I’m at the edge of the Transfigurations,

leaf-clogged, detritus- and shit-clogged.

 

II

You have to dredge to find the ordinaries

or pull them down from branches that their wings spread,

the branches wider so we see through to skies,

shattering the ones we’ve circumscribed

by our belief in dimensions we have heard.

There’s singing there we hear and then let go.

That’s how incarnation comes. It releases us —

 

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

 

Incarnation Intercept Sonnet

 

It’s always heaven

I won’t see again

in this life, the light

flaming between trees,

live oaks establishing

my yard’s horizons.

 

But to keep vision

intact, I stand back,

asking nothing of it

but the sun’s stance

on the diurnal,

incarnation’s  probe

of recurrence,

that fire I walk through.

 

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

 

Riven, Driven Back

 

 

We have these mornings

we are born again.

We have some others

breaking through our eyes,

showing us yesterdays,

tomorrow’s tomorrow,

all dull green Edens,

Adam, Eve, the snake

dun assemblages.

 

But in happenstance

begins miracle.

Look, this one sunbeam

breaking on my floor

splays a world in place.

The flaming sword, gate,

cherubim watching.

I can make a day

out of the unknown,

nakedness, two trees,

and my own terror.

I can walk backwards.

Ready, Paradise?

 

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

 

Jacob’s Ladder

 

 

My soul has taken in the clear, cold light

paradise offers when we have lost enough —

parents, lovers, children, friends, directions back —

 

then we are alone with the Alone again,

our witness to all things we find in changingness.

 

Aloneness has its own music, it digs in heels

to ladders lowered from the unseen clouds.

It raises wings to scale the rungs, ascend, descend —

musics we’ve never heard, angels expressionless

until we face them, choose to give one face.

What profiles we exchange then in our rise and fall!

What company we keep! Am I going up or down?

Transversals, circles, zigzags, parallelograms?

Contributor
Peter Cooley

Peter Cooley’s eleventh book of poetry is The One Certain Thing (Carnegie Mellon University Press, 2021). He is a Professor Emeritus at Tulane University and was Louisiana Poet Laureate in 2015-17. He lives in New Orleans. The poems appearing here are from a new manuscript, Accounting for the Dark.

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