Self-portrait with phonemic analysis
I kneel at the Calvary,
the sun—pelting on my skin like a rainstorm
of fragmented pieces of glass,
I drag my self towards a crucifix
where phonology says:
[a boy] —> [a broken boy] / [grief]—[grief]
I think myself a guitar’s string
blessing the threnodies of the aches in this poem,
who will crush pomegranates
into juice for me?
Who will beat the bush of this boy into
a floral garden of roses?
Who will pour joy like a fricative sound
into the living of this boy?
I seek the rule to the deletion of grieving, where:
[grief] —> [deleted] / [bliss]—[bliss]
Where I will sleep through the night
without the body of a knife lurking in my dreams.
Where I will sleep through the night
without drowning in the pool of my own fears.
Where I will sleep through the night
& not wake up as a butterfly’s wing.
But insertion says:
[insert]—> [grief] / [bliss]—[bliss] of a boy.
Recently, I touch things & they flower out a
monochrome
of death & my father—how he squeezed life out of him
like an orange.
Dear poet, when will you stop performing an autopsy
with poems on all the broken things you know,
This poem, a psych ward, this poem, a psych nurse
which grew from your psyche.
Like a wood frog, I’m still holding my pee
through hours, through the night
where pain is a bagpiper blowing its pipe
to me in these times of war.
Source: Poetry (April 2022)