From: 31 Stations: Morning Hours
1.
“love can sometimes wear the face ofviolence”
The subway doors shut—
Heavy, moist air,
August in the city.
Where I live, where I hide,
my face masquerades for hours—
a calm, cool solitude—
menace lies inside forgotten containers,
anxiety a response to thoughts,
chains, this lack of light.
Resting my face against
scratched glass,
the familiar empty station.
2.
The familiar empty station
Inside the Chekhov moment space
finally expands toward the window,
hair following and sleep, shatteringnotions
of other, it all is “other”
but also “I am”
is the dawn before language,
the visit of the mind itself
next time the cock crows,
undone by the birth of light
3.
. . . comingtoward the “Ashes of”
—accustomed as Iam to pencil
releasing a shadowfigure:
Salted water and heat in the summer,
smells of dustand rosemary—
In a skimpy bathing suit gesturing
empty handedtoward the beach,
various flagsbeat/dangers of water
The past not just “a souvenir”
The family permeates all at the station
That small girl, fists on hips, too—
Where gestures are that large