Two Poems
*
Granaries as long
and winding as
the shores from
which we look
at the lit ocean, behind
us the fertile land, rivers
coming to this sea, silt
behind us thousands
of years
the vertebrae compressed
the spine bending
forward forever
behind us
offerings of fire held
in falcons with outstretched
wings, built brick by brick*
flight
abandoned, vanished
in unpredictable encounters
before us rusted barges
the daily fragrance
of spices in oil
a fatigued infinity of sea and sky
what can I
go toward?
remote acts
fires kindled on
empty clearings, sloping
toward the east
chanted word
vigilant thought
dispersed
astral distance wedged
in the spinal cord
behind us a broad land grown
narrow
at its very end
*
Alluvial broadness
bearing great river plains
spreading in the slow
thoughts of animals
that graze converging
in the perfect speed
of the predator’s
chase beginning at
each instant
this ancient of days
at every moment
the universe at stake
broadness flooding plains
the river’s wide mouth
repeating what is always
unprecedented
* A reference to the ancient Indian agnicayana ceremony in which bricks were used to build a huge falcon on the ground. A fire was then lit on it to make an offering to the gods.