|
black box song Something starts the shadow of a cross Motion across a field The finite stasis, an objection One speaks & the words struggle From wheel to wheel the reels worker in another sense meaning soldier. shop, set up as a sort of slogan, opening to an empty field.
nyabingi villanelle
The city arcs inward toward itself. Eventually If you trace the word city in dust The city, ablaze. Smoke then can be shaped like a cup
One could complain of an emptiness about the throat, At the reins, columns of ash—tugging; Smoke can resemble a page, One could go a lifetime without revision. One word borders another like
The city's lost face. Streets, gone empty The city arcs inward toward itself. Eventually, The city, emptying its womb Certain phrases, already flammable: One could wrap each letter in a damp cloth, Though surrounded by trees, the city is open
Not force but ritual— Each letter wrapped in a damp cloth each letter, wrapped in the smoke
Smoke hung over the city as they neared the sea. The city was a shadow receding, burnt black, The capital like a hand outstretched The clouds, preparing to A breeze easing under the door One could construct a building without nails
Ash gathers under the tongue The rations have lasted for twelve days Tracks lead back to the sea Though they have removed the capital
Borders were crossed. One spoke of being free The city arcs inward toward itself, You need only imagine a door, The story, an heirloom
Never having left the capital, You need only imagine the passing They've practiced building in silence. Their tongues, abandoned.
Eventually, They have traced each river to its source. Some root in soil, stone or flame. Each bone contains the city,
In tracing each river to its source There was a slight echo like that of hammers Stones under their tongues The distance between dust & ash, an echo you need only imagine the city, it's bones |
Noah Eli Gordon's work has appeared or is forthcoming from Hambone, American Letters & Commentary, Word for Word, Verse, jubilat, Columbia Poetry Review, 3rdbed, The Styles and 580 Split. He is a finalist for the current National Poetry Series and is one of seven editors for the new literary magazine, Baffling Combustions.
|
| Copyright © 2003 Noah Eli Gordon all rights reserved. This text may be used and shared in accordance with the fair-use provisions of U.S. Copyright law, and it may be archived and redistributed in electronic form, provided that the editors are notified and no fee is charged for access. Archiving, redistribution, or republication of this text on other terms, in any medium, requires the notification of the journal and consent of the author. |