![]() The House Gift
Egg-white house, old ache in the rafters, small as a button but yearning for zero: a sparrow parts the chimney and veers for my face. I wanted my nevers again, my immaculate touch-down to the durable granite of love too heavy to move: this gift, implacable bird's-eye sorrow reared from the original fairy tale's page I don't like it. I offered no signature, my nature altered, and I'm over my hurricane. Rocking room to room, this bird threatens my gravity, threaded through like a pearl from the evening's stem. Didn't I break all eighty-eight bones of my compass, my wingspan spun from my awkwardness? This bird returns to the shell with monstrous wings, wings clumsy as shovels in a fist of dirt. It's covered with ashes, sloughing off cloudcaught in my hair, brown tumor bulged upside down on the floor to meet the applause: this blessing's too unwieldy. But open one door, one terrible goodbye, hellothe sparrow flings like a shout for the trees. From Volume 185, Number 2, November 2004 Copyright © The Poetry Foundation |