Stillborn (never the interlocutor)

when grandfather typed
the strike of the j on paper
always left a blur, a shadow
the way your name does when said aloud.

yours, the silent name
a thought word so seldom given breath
that it forms wholly between the lips
and impacts the air more heavily
than those that surround it.

it has not lost its surety
in that way of other words,
their syllables plundered and meaning flayed
by their casual incursions
but that’s because it’s without you.

your name, needing you to fill out its sides
and bring it music. Your name,
never thrown into a room or field,
never curled by a smile,
weighs far more without you.

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

A Line in the Sand

1.

What did I know of consequences?
The game delighted, so I played
like a child, heedless, unaware
of the migration of senses.
First, my eyes, translating the world,
drifted into yours, layering sight,
mirror-mazing perception. Was it my face
then, or yours, that I looked upon?
Then, my skin stretched – the whorls
on my fingers like galaxies, the lines
on my palms like rivers across sand
dunes – and my body grew beyond
itself, beyond yours. With our left
hand I reached up to drape a fine
cirrus sky shawl across my shoulders.
With our right, I stroked the wind.
Our Siamese legs straddled distances.
I breathed your breath, you thought
my thoughts, both of us configured
into the folds of one space. Who was
I then? What were my thoughts?
Where did I stop and you begin?

2.

Yes, once there were no boundaries,
and we were both lost, adrift on land
extending in every direction as far
as shimmering hallucinations could
rise – the directions merging,
indistinguishable; the space around
us vast and thirsty; our words
emptying into it like the last drops
from a canteen, rivulets drying out
as they were spoken. Reckless,
I promised water, you promised
shelter when there was none –
and we cupped trust in our hands
and made-believe. Without boundaries,
we shrivelled in the heat;
the earth’s crust scorched our feet,
the unremitting sun burnt our skin.
I wilted in a haze of silent recrimination:
shamed, overcome by so much space.

3.

I/you/we do not occupy this space
alone. Place an ear against the stars
or on the ground, let your skin tingle
as if a storm approaches, pay heed
to the movement of ants. Resonances
multiply: a tension in the air, a low
hum, a faint vibration. Who built
this cairn of rocks? What spirit watches
over this place? What does this hill,
that tree, these boulders signify?
What other markers are strewn about
this land that you and I cannot see?

4.

Out of grief I drew a line in the sand,
raised a fence, tried to explain
that you would find me always
behind it, that you could come
and visit me here as often as you
want, on the understanding that
after each visit you would leave again –
so that I could grow back into myself,
my small body, my hands; so that
I could touch your cheek and know
that it was yours; so that I could be
outside the tears in your eyes.

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

The Wisdom of My Mistakes

On this particular night in May
You’ll light a fire
Out or in, it doesn’t matter
Set the ritual like this
Take the sticks the jackdaws left
In the middle shed as an act of revenge
(but that’s another story)

Add a teaspoon of kerosene
Toss a fistful of incendiary words
And crack a match. Crosshatch three
or four young spruce logs on the flames.
Then blindfold choose a talking log
And place on top.

Know that your entire future lies in choosing well.
Fake the confidence it takes to complete the gesture.
It gets easy after that. Night settles into orange, grey
And black. Rare and sacred on this particular night
Are the candles burning uniformly. The wind from the east
Is shy in our northwest promontory.

The talking log is slow to start and whatever was said to the rose
To coax her open must be more vigorous with wood,
But density’s intricate legacy is consoling.
Whatever voice whispered sweetly to the wind
That made her soften, sends me a loving message too.
In sibilance. Don’t sophisticate.

Suppose on this particular night
The log talks to the wall for an hour and
Won’t address you at all.
Laugh. Know we all need an audience
the talking log is teasing you.
Beg, entreat the log to prophesy.

Just when you’re ready to admit defeat
and study the illuminated wall,
look up as the branches of the ash tree
reach for the ink blue heavenly sky
above your head, watch as the heavens sparkle.

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

Duality

I was holler soft
in your tender way,
you were fierce and there
in my grim wasteland.
I may be nailed to a cloud,
seared by its silver lining,
you may prefer frayed yesterdays
to troubled tomorrows
yet ever the breath
is yours or mine:
who knows?

Fearless of ordinance
and hell’s enlightenment
we strip height from mountains
we dilute oceans
we thicken air:
in a future as fickle as changing minds
you storm nano
I cradle massive.

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

The Conversation (Risen)

You were climbing, when I first saw you,
down into the floor of a Fitzroy pub.
Whose grave was it, again? Your father’s?
Our Father’s? Your own? No, your shadow’s.
It was mine too. You could disappear

easily into any crowd of real or typical men,
I thought then. Over ten years on and you’re still
climbing further in, trying to live
up to the poem’s title, Risen. What are we
trying to find? Or escape? Clue – if tradesmen

really should tease us both every day,
it’s not about the obvious thoughtless reflex,
but desire, what leans out of us towards others,
suffering in their various bodies under
the wheel of the world. Forget tradesmen, I mean

anyone. Sure – I know my anyone is not yours,
but perhaps what links my hump to your square jaw
is something about women or men or
poetry’s clichés on feeling. Abstractions.
But I’m assuming when I should ask …

Back then, as you descended, I lost sight of you
behind the crowd of heads. At the time
I thought it was unfortunate – now,
it seems like a scene you keep re-enacting
in order to escape it. Like climbing

onto a stage to become invisible. What we want here
will happen by accident if we try. Because actually
I don’t know you that well, but I do
sniff flowers in Coburg. Who wouldn’t?
By the way, tell me what you mean by “team”.

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged ,

She Who Shines in the Dark

What flavours did the deep dark have for you,
Eurydice, lost under the earth? What textures,
so far from the sun’s heat like a plush robe
around your fair shoulders? Did you
taste the sharp juice, the tiny pits –
the queen’s vivid red seeds
beneath your tongue?

The path back up was so rough,
and of course the dead go unshod.
The rocks scraped your heels,
dug into your dainty arches.
The memory of his song – his plea,
laced with the marriage hymn, the funeral wail –
trembled in your mind,
but with each step it grew fainter.
The light grew brighter.
He, obedient, did not turn.

The queen’s fingers are long and pale.
The queen’s hair is silken midnight.
The queen’s eyes shimmer like dark water.
The queen’s lips taste of pomegranates.

Did you catch your foot on purpose,
knock loose that one small rock to startle him
into a reflexive turn? Was it an accident,

or was it the queen’s dark glory set against
all the memories of mortal, fatal love?

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

All Things

Persephone
How can I tell her, my own mother,
that I long for the autumn to turn?
When I first take his seeds upon my tongue
I gag, but soon I swallow them with ease.
The earth swallows me in turn.
The bright world fades, means nothing.
I give it scant thought.

Demeter
I am your mother.
What else can I do but wait?
Though I gnaw at the branch
of the tree outside my room
which bears no fruit,
until my gums are bleeding.
Will nothing hasten your return
or the tree’s first shoots of green?
I have waited out more winter days
than I care to count.
I wring my hands until the bones grate,
my menses cease with the seasons
and only death to all things
will quell my nerves.

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

Orchard Sour

I’m collecting things
for a perfect life,
in a sparse garden
with a quiet lemon tree.

There’s an assortment of wine
corks tucked in the corner,
waiting for the elephants–
a graveyard of grapes.

During the night I grow
a polished claw-foot bath,
to scare the crows away
from the cherry twins.

With a pair of nail scissors
I trim the short grass
and carefully feed it
homemade lemonade.

Nectarine juice drips
in tracks down my arm,
the flesh fills gaps
between my crooked teeth.

Eventually I feel clean.
The sky no longer scares me,
but I still lie flat on my ribs,
bleeding blossoms.

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

Animal Control Answers a Jackalope Emergency

A woman called,
said creatures had
overtaken her garden.

Foul things, she called them.
Cursed things.

She may have been right
about the curse.

Sometimes
el chupacabra is a dehydrated coyote carcas.

Sometimes
a unicorn is a rhinocerous.

The tragedy, of course,
is how illness spreads –
rabbit to rabbit,
garden to garden.

There is no otherworld here,
only cancer, the tumors
unexciseable, leaving only shadows
in the dark.

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

Choreographed Calabash

Limbo a kind of dance, barely mentioning motion:

a dove, a dish thrown at the wall, a cavalier smileb

a pout that can’t be partitioned, your vague comment
merely: Don’t throw the calabash melon out.

Calabash, code for don’t throw, don’t abash, don’t cast about
for what you can’t say. Don’t dance the subject.

If by chance I found your meaning in a cryptic note,
you can’t say I’d advanced

my heart about the garden where I sit limbed –
bowed as the mourning dove in his spottery coat

spotting me here in the garden rows with crow,
(garden plot as context).

Please sit on the fence with me, doubt what we say,
(epoch disease: the quibble) help me

save this cumbersome calabash planted between
pirouetting delphinium, whining forget-me-nots.

Let all secrets remain in their pockets; I once tried to
say something certain; it died on the vine

though the rest of the garden
kept dancing.

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

Hank’s House

He lives in the last
house where every stone
in the street
has been thrown
through a window
at least twice
once to come in
and once when
he throws
it back out

some of them have specks
of blood
theirs or his
in the last house
there is no more glass in the frames
and no movement
anywhere
against the western sky
but for the flight
of stones

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

Crow

Crows are clever.
They use sticks as tools,
speak non-idiomatic French,
start but do not finish cryptic crosswords.
Crows were the first to wear black to book launches,
to peck at wine while avoiding a rival.
A crow is watching you now.
It has your number in its little black book
probes the synapses of your brain
unfeathers your nest
has you where it wants you.
The crow is more inventive
than any of your lovers.

Nothing will ever be black and white again.
Here comes the pain, so bite on it,
the crow in your veins.
You’re not going anywhere now
alone.

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

Another Story

Once there was a raven
girl wiping weary towels
across the face of spent
plates, tuning here and there
to my announcements as I
hold these colours open, cold
bears huddled in the pages
and chickens preening their
selfishness with wheat; close
these bindings, my nieces, as
we beacon a story, not lions,
snarling claws and a blue
balloon, voices unfurling
a bang; do you hear as I
involve us in this plot?
I am able, I can read
this to the end.

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

Moose Drift

The moose doesn’t mind the winter.
He perceives the frost and snowy boughs
without comment, without bitterness,
though snow encrusts his antlers.
A tremor shakes his flanks but he endures.
The world may be shagged with ice
but its glitters please the eye.
Yet the sun is an impostor
shining coldly in a cold sky.

The moose scuffs a pile of blue snow,
nibbles the branch of a pine tree.
His sound is the sound of the forest,
the sigh of the wind, a twig-snap,
an ice sheet crashing like a sidelight.
But the moose doesn’t flinch,
doesn’t see it as a rebuff to the day.

No, it will snow again, and he
will gather himself as the wolves
stream down from the snow-capped hills.

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

lost in translation

treading water, i wait for her to jump

suspended between pontoon, sun rebounding blue

i find a bee, wings lashed to water’s surface

unable to fly or drown, happens to us all

soon marooned on my daughter’s foam board

damp forelegs forlornly towelling down

seems there are too many hot days and watery errands

in this place

overhead, the helitankers with their long tongues

i have pulled many bees from the indian ocean

one aesopic day, caught in traffic

they will come carry me high over the city

she jumps and the yellow board drifts

is retrieved by another swimmer

careful, a feathery kneed passenger

he hears watch out, there’s a bee

flips the board over and smiles, don’t worry i’m okay

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

Ellipsis

Rain streaks the window. Somehow her hair
holds the smell of matches struck.

The wind is loose around walls outside, tying itself
up in trees (birch leaves soft as ash).

She watches: breath showing and fading on glass.
He said if, and she waits, not knowing his language,

all the things he might have meant.

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

Mother Tongues

Most of the time we lived in mine
or appeared to

you had been here as long as I had,
arrived in my birth-year,

but had to wear it in
second skin

(your sixth, if we count
unspoken Classics)

though there was always
a tacit understanding

we could call on yours
and it erupted, comic hernia

in the shared gut of our daily
dealings, at times of great

frustration, bemusement or when
words failed you.

At uni the man who ran
the language lab said, facetious,

that’s how they catch spies
get them to count or say

times tables, you can always
trip up a mother tongue

coax it, shy animal, or
smoke it out, too brutal.

I pull on the tip and up
comes a whole scarf, colourful,

knotted to others and
not about to stop, a magical

evisceration but I want
all of you, things you have

names for that aren’t
seen here: Zwiebelturm,

Trachten, Bergbahn
or fragments, foods from

childhood, still stuck to their
labels and longed for

though irretrievable:
Hagebuttenmarmelade,

so that we cook up together
a Wähe, a Brei

because die Liebe geht durch
den Magen
– goes through the stomach

like language, and last but not least
the cloud of names

buzzing about my head, like Pigpen’s
dust but unseen by others,

unmerited, since I could not live up to them
and they sound now, so many

years later, nearly obscene
with lost intimacy:

Süsses, Schönes, Gutes,
Schatzi, Putzi, Liebes
.

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

Mississippi

Caddy in Adelaide, from The Sound and the Fury

You offer me crab apples, lightning bugs, a red pick-up with a confederate flag
passing black men walking for miles, the gentle roll of the flat road
leading to some other county. I wrap the warmth of my body
around your great rivers, my hips and elbows curving with each bend.
I let clear water from creeks splash my skin, hold white pebbles
in my hand then pack them away for a time like now.

I smell you, Mississippi, petals of honeysuckle wet like my own;
your name a soft stammer on my tongue, like a lover’s.
I romanticise you as wild and random: native honeybees
flirt in the juices of a full-bosomed magnolia tree
where in its branches the trill of a mockingbird, and over there
the sound of someone’s pleasure at three in the afternoon.

Sassparilla, Chickasaw, loblolly pine, dead skunk.

I can hear your guitar and your fiddle, your children and your unborn babies
the old stories – of mammies, of the fields, of dead brothers.

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

South Rim

Conversation, Where’s the river?
overheard

Beyond, wedging itself
further into red rock

Skimming the crust
or surfing the horizon

Soaking the silt-gifting walls

Ducking from gulches, from
washes, from side canyons

Oh—there’s the river

A mirage of silver light,
parachuting down the waterway

A spate of life, a pocket deluge
snaking along the desert floor

No—where’s the river?

Perhaps she’s gone under,
subterranean

Perhaps she recreates the sipapu
foam flocking to surface

What river?

What river?

What mere lazy stream?
What choppy gush?

What surge?
What rush?
What soused gutter?

The Colorado River

Now clay-colored,
now brilliant jade

Now glassy, now dirty milk

Feeder of saltbush and pinyon
Slaker of yucca and juniper

Exotic water of the west

Oh—there’s the river

Turbulent dream
Misfit stream

Fissure aqua,
Rapture

No, you can’t see the river

Imagined sliver of raw silk
along rock

Ghostwritten braid

from here—the sign says so

Your watchtower fails,
water prevails

Speaker Where’s the river?
Oh—there’s the river

Speaker —No, wait, where’s the river?

What river?

Speaker The Colorado River—
Oh—there’s the river—

Speaker No, you can’t see the river
from here—the sign says so

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

Interlocutor

So far, my name has been left off
the inflection of your question
as though it were a ticking meter,
inescapable and kept to the last second;
your fingers were like shifting clock hands
your eyes opaque bottle tops on a shaken drink
your words, a tide approaching slightly then retreating
and so the forming of your mouth over the vowels
of my name was an unexpected sunshine,
a night parrot landing on my hand;
you are relieved of your timidity, and I
of my ordinariness in your mind:
I have now been solidified in it;
acknowledged and alive
in your world;
I am named

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

A White Woman’s Guide to Indigenous Art

When you first arrive, the doors are shut,
Big white doors, space off limits, nothing
To see here, wrong day, wrong time,
Interior closed to outsiders, go home.

She is somewhere in there, you are not.
When you return, a second coming, the passage is clear,
Navigable, free open spaces,
Place open for business, welcome.

You enter.
Wandering around, you search for her name,
Carol Maanyatja Golding: part of it easy on the tongue,
Part of it

A planet apart, a language away,
Untranslatable, unsayable, other.

Title: Muruntjarra munu Walu, you don’t even try,
Too many consonants, too many vowels:
This journey is for the eye.
And immediately you feel it, you think you can feel it, the power

Of polymer coloured like earth
Placed onto canvas in patterns.
But there it stops. These furrows and dots worth
So much to someone— curlew song? kangaroo tracks? the slow burn

Of ancestral campfires?— build to a darkening loss in you,
A hunger, a famine, black spots before the eyes.
Where is the world? You cannot make sense

Of her dreaming, her signs, no sense
Of the story within the lines, can surmise
Less than naught in her pointillist design, hitherto

You have rarely felt whiter.
Give me two eyes, a nose and a mouth smiling out of a possible face,
Give me a door, a window, a roof.
You want to erase
All that is wrong here, want your heart to feel lighter,

Safer, less random, less subject to discomfort, this.
You need something stronger
Than two hundred years, an age or two longer
Than six generations of see how it goes, let me in, let me out, hit and miss.

Welcome to country. Take off your shoes, take
What you want, take it, take all of it, it is yours.
And then, when there is none of it left anymore,
Nothing you want, you can take the memory
and break

It to bits, and bring all the pieces to a Federation Square exhibition
Like this, and take her ticket, and invite her in, both of you nearing extinction.

A background of black. Clusters of dots— orange, yellow, pink, white—
Beneath a lattice of lines. You screw your sight
To a magic-eye hope that a picture you recognise might just pop out
But it won’t. You watch waves of indigo, blue swirl about
And try to imagine a sea in a desert but you can’t. You stand there,
Stupid, and call her name Carol! Maanyatja! Golding! You stare
At the painting, white noise in your head, crying Speak! Speak!
But she doesn’t. You flip the catalogue for clues, some kind of critique

But this work is not included. She has a black skin,
You have a black heart, but you can’t seem to join the dots. If some
Kind of inherent relationship exists, a code or secret
To allow you in, a connective thread, no matter how thin,
Linking her land to your own childhood home
(Melway ref. 47, F1), face it, you just cannot see it.

This place is pleasant, Heave away, haul away, isn’t it.
White-washed walls, an-apple-a-day, a surfeit

Of everything, for everyone! everyone! Bought from the Crown
At an acre a pound in 1841, the German orchardists cleared the bush
To plant new trees in pleasingly logical rows. You are six years grown,
You have what you need, plus a dog and a bike to push.

This suburb has been here forever. Weekdays you learn
To count numbers, read rhymes, you can sing your alphabet
Backwards. Weekends you wander with unconcern,
Piano and tennis and Sunday School, the television set

Black and white. Yes, childhood is all that childhood should be.
And losing yourself among the Koonung Creek edges
And hearing your mother’s voice Jordie! Jordie!
You follow your name, all the way home, back to cold chops and three veg.

You never did see an indigene
Dad, what does Koonung mean?
Until you were twenty-one.
She was drunk on a curb in Bruns-
Wick Street, cursing and screaming Please! Please!
And you drove her straight up the road to St V’s
Where she promptly gave birth on the linoleum floor
By the Male Toilet door
Right there and then
In front of the men
Going in, coming out
Her baby came out
A pale brown newborn son.

When you rang the next day she’d gone.

There is a place called Walu, way off the Melway,
A waterhole in sand-hills near a large salt lake
Between Warakuma and Papulankutja
(The east Gibson Desert of Western Australia to you).

This is where she was born.
Language: Ngaanyatjarra
Skin: Panaka
Year: circa 1930

Two ancestral men and a little boy were camping at Walu rock hole.
The men went hunting and left the little boy behind.
The men returned with an emu and pulled out its heart.
The boy was holding the heart and blood spilled onto the rocks.
The boy ran away with the heart and turned into wind.
The blood stained the rocks and can still be seen today.


You fly home over agitated bones, you will sleep
Among doors and windows and rooves,
Recite stories about little girls and big bad wolves
From the spires of a Europe steeped
Within, and the traffic jams up like cattle
In your heart, you are stalled, there is ceremony beneath
The neon and tarmac and ten percent off, small relief
As the centuries start to do battle
And you drive way, way out of your way
To the place where the avenues cross,
The peach trees and pear trees you climbed as a kid are lost
Under lawns, and the people, where are they,
Who is left, who is gone, where have we gone.
Where has history gone.

You look down the wide black road
with the thin white line
And don’t know which bone to move.
You need a song to sing, a chant, a stick to hit
But you can’t, you don’t know where to begin. It
Gets you then, This is longing, This is love,
This is life, This is death,
call it dreaming. Call it design.

And you deepen your breathing, endeavour to silence
The mob in your mind, quiet the science
Of statistic, attitude, aptitude, god, everything you have been taught.

You empty your head of all thought—

— And slowly, so slowly, the clamour recedes.

And slowly you enter country…

You take the first step to undo your heart,
That you may finish,
that you may finally start.

When at last you arrive, the painting is open,
Wide and open as a poem in a book,
Come in, sit down, have a look.
Your story may not be Ngaanyatjarra clan

But perhaps it is here, part familiar, part other.
And perhaps you will read of a long lonesome
Voyage. Of leaving behind the knowledge of home.
Of seeing the arms of your grandmother’s grandmother

Wave, diminish then fade to the white Cornish fog.
And perhaps you will read of the babies and bones
That tell you you are no longer alone.
That your story is one dot of many in time, a moment, prologue

Of earth, sky, fingertip, door.
A possible face, even yours.

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

Ratiscan

The male stands simply enough in regulation grey. It has two tall slab sides, an informed roof, and three red lights which continually flash in dumb warning. As might be expected, the short female is more complicated. Broadly built like a tin house, she reveals a square doorway filled with dangling black strips of rubber, able to let bulky belongings through onto rotating belt, first, and then a marshalled band of steel rollers. These carry solids away for up to three meters.
Her steady green light remains on display, matrimonially close to his ruby trio. Lacking the distinction of rollers, he at least rests on a figured crimson carpet. They patiently complement one another, even when silent. Mutual loyalty is the name of their game. To live inside an airport, that must be something.

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

At the Hair Salon in Big Sandy, Texas

A warm stomach rests
on my arm. Breasts squish
against my shoulder blades.
Fingers fold back my ears,
gently but firmly lift my chin.
The clippers’ power cord
tightens against my neck,
stretches across to the outlet.
Without my glasses, my head
and shoulders in the mirror
are a blonde and black blur.
After spraying a fine mist,
the girl grips her scissors
and drawls –
You ain’t from around here,
is ya? Where y’all from?
– Australia
Neat! Did y’all drive?
– No, it’s a bit far. I had to fly.
You speak English real good.
Did y’all learn it in school?

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged

Conversation about Coleridge

So you know how I reminded you of how
I’d said Coleridge invented the word
subconscious, and then I said but I don’t think
I can have been right? Well, while you all
went on to the pub to talk like Coleridge
into the night about Aeolian harps or meme theory
or Bronies or whatever arcane topic
played itself out over your intellectual strings,
I entered the labyrinth of my H-drive files
and located there notes on the unconscious
according to which Leibnitz and Wolff
in the seventeenth century already
used the word; in the eighteenth, Rousseau
was experiencing with passionate intensity
what Leibnitz and Wolff recognised in theory;
and oh, by the nineteenth, the sturm und drang,
the amnesiac dreams, the vertiginous descents,
the wilful belosing of regular sense …
I wouldn’t read any further if I were you.
Turn back to your drinks till I am through
this dark and haunted section of my notes,
this inner chamber, this extra quarter inch
of largeness on the inside where no
string sounds …
Finished? Hungover? Not quite sure
how you got to where you’re at? We’re
on the same page, then, and right
at the end of my notes is what I must have
remembered when I reminded you of how
Coleridge invented the word subconscious
which he didn’t: the word was …
psychosomatic!
And now I’d like the word
psychosomatic to take us in a loop
back to the start of the poem to give it
the shape of Coleridge’s conversation poems
but instead, the word seems to have
caused some sort of a block, and
what is that knocking sound I think I hear?

Posted in 52: INTERLOCUTOR | Tagged