DRINKING LIFE
Poem for Today - October 20, 2014
WHAT
LIGHT DESTROYS
Today I'm thinking of St. Paul—St. Paul
who orders us, Be perfect. He could have said,
Touch
your elbow to your ears, except
that if you broke your arm, then snapped
your neck,
You might could manage it. The death inside
the flawed hard currency of what we touch
bamboozles us, existing only for that flaw,
that deathward plunge that's locked inside
all form,
till what seems solid floats away,
dissolves,
and these poor bastard things, no longer
things,
drift back to pure idea. And when, at last,
we let them go we start to pity them,
attend their needs: I almost have to think
to keep my own heart beating through the
night.
I have a wife and four pink boys. I spin
on all this stupid metaphysic now
because last afternoon we visited
some friends in town. After the pecan pie,
I drank until my forehead smacked the table,
and woke to find my shirt crusted with
blood.
When Mary didn't yell at me, I knew
she finally understood that I was gone,
dissolving back. As we rode home, I tried
to say, I'm
sorry, Hon. The carriage bucked
across
the mud-dried ruts and I shut up.
And she, in August heat, just sat, head
cocked
as if for chills hidden in the hot, damp
breeze,
as if they were a sound, time merely
distance.
0 Death, I know exactly where it is
your sting. And Grave, I know your victory.
That night, around the tents, the boys
caught fireflies,
pinched them in half, and smeared them on
their nails,
then ran through pine-dark woods, waving
their hands.
All I could hear was laughter, shouts. And
all
that I could see for each one of my sons
were ten blurs of faint, artificial light,
never too far apart, and trembling.
Like fairies, magic, sprites, they ran and
shouted.
"I'm
not real! I'm not real!" The whole
world fell
away from me—perhaps I was still drunk -
as on the night Titania told dazed Bottom,
"Put off your human grossness so, and
like
an airy spirit go." But even then
the night could not hold long against the
light,
and light destroys roots, fog, lies,
orchids, night,
dawn stars, the moon, delusions, and most
magic.
And light sends into hiding owls, fireflies,
and bats, whom for their unerring blunder, I
adore the most of all night fliers. But
owls,
hid in a hickory, will hoot all day,
and even the moon persists, like my
hangover,
some days till almost noon, drifting above
the harsh, bright, murderous morning
light—so blue,
so valuable, so much like currency
that if the moon were my blue coin, I'd
never spend it.
© Andrew Hudgins
In Upholding Mystery,
An Anthology of
Contermporary Poetry,
Edited by David Impastato,
Oxford University Press,
1997, pages 72-74
photo by William Abranowicz