Today's poem is by Rick Hilles
Larry Levis in Provincetown
(June, 2007)
So, this is how I am summoned from nothingness:
in faded cut offs, moonlighting at Connie’s Bakerywhere I keep reading Rilke to Jenny, the pastry chef,
who rolls her eyes, & blows flour into my tired face.Beneath my limp baker’s hat & stained white smock
I still wear my favorite Hawaiian shirt, the colorof bubble gum, absinthe & night. We are permitted
to choose but one companion for the great journey,so Garcia Lorca is here with me;we arrived last week
as "guest worker summer help." You’ll be happyto know that our work continues, as before, in Death.
Last night we finally had that conversation aboutthe moon, & mirrorswhy they can’t tell us
everything they see. We stood at an ivy-lined gatetwo summers too late to deliver Stanley Kunitz our best
vermouth & news of Roethke and the other immortal poetswhose ranks by now, at long last, he’s joined. Instead,
our poet of black notes took off his white tuxedo shirt&, facing Stanley’s last masterpiece, his front yard
garden, which still revises itself in preparationfor his return, Garcia Lorca revealed thumb-sized
lavender crescent moons, the eerie constellationacross his chest above the heart, the scars of bullet holes
from Franco’s Guardia Civil; he told me everythingfrom the faces of the firing squad to digging his own grave.
He says the landscape of his dreams has already driftedfrom the Alhambra’s gardens, wading pools, & almond groves
to the salt marsh at Black Fish Creek & the starlit wisteriahe affectionately calls, "These endlessly creeping vines
of strumpet braids!" And the delicate braids of Challahwe braid each day rise like old lovers awakening to our touch
restored. You should see the lean, aristocratichands of Garcia Lorcathey’ve never been so strong!
I didn’t think such mortal progress was still possible for us.Or that I would again be permitted access to the knowledge
that comes in a love amplified by the stirrings of the world.And then I recognized something in the insistent, winding
taproot of an oak, which pierced me with the recognitionthat is holy, & I felt the tug of gravity’s widening spell.
So that even if Garcia Lorca and I are just scraping bywith all the others working for peanuts in high season,
to be alive again and living in a hot seaside townis good as any afterlife
& probably our best chance at happiness.
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Copyright © 2012 Rick Hilles All rights reserved
from A Map of the Lost World
Publisher
Reprinted by Verse Daily® with permission
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