Updated: 5/31/2004; 1:28:06 PM
3rd House Party
    The 3rd house in astrology is associated with writing, conversation, personal thoughts, day-to-day things, siblings and neighbors.

daily link  Thursday, May 06, 2004

The Reservoir

A work in progress. [Slightly updated. Like I said, WIP.]

The Reservoir

 

We circled the man-made lake

pedaled on all sides

the blue surface reflecting.

 

I showed you where 

I once sat crying

there - see

 

where the dam flooded

whole villages behind

a massive stone wall?

 

Now quieted, reserved:

controlled releases only

a centrifuge pumps

 

the whole works submersed

all that you can't see

or dare know.

 

Later we spun around the carpet

two left feet and two right
ever circling, only circling.

 

Herida de Amor

I think the poem of the day today at Poetry Daily is for Ernesto:

Herida de Amor

Ah, it's been a long time, no? the waiter says.
Yes, I say, unsure. I am the only customer.
I ask for a Budweiser. You are always doing that,
he says, Here you should drink Mexican beer.

He gestures to a poster on the wall.
A woman in a dress patterned with small bright birds,
dances and holds a bottle of Pacifico,
the birds swirling around her.

OK, I nod. I have never been in this restaurant.
I've never seen this man who greets me.
There's the last squint of daylight
through the window. A blurred sun
burns down behind the hills.

He brings the Mexican beer, takes my order,
and sits at the table.
Do you remember the watch I used to wear? he says.
No, I say. He rolls up his sleeve,
revealing the pale outline on his brown skin
where the watch used to be.
I gave it to a woman, he says,
and now I am sad
because the watch is gone and so is she.

With his fingertips he flicks
some specks of salt from the checkered cloth.
He lowers his head, speaking softly,
Now I have all this time to think of her
and no watch.

He gets up and puts a quarter in the jukebox.
The song sung in Spanish
is a song of pain.
I hear him in the kitchen singing,
Herida de amor.

I listen and remember.
Although the woman I'm thinking of
never wore a design of birds,
I see her coming to me
in just such a dress.

I hear the sigh,
the sound the dress makes
when it slips off her body
and she steps out of it

and all those bright birds flutter down,
huddle together on the floor.
The waiter brings my order.
He looks out the window,
the feminine outline of the silhouetted hills.
It is always darkest at night, he says
without irony. And I know
what he means, know he is right.

He's not talking about the night,
but the second night, the dark
within the dark when I wake and wonder,
Where did she go?

And I am left to imagine a migration
of beautiful birds and women.
The women dancing, the birds flying around them
down in Mexico.

Gary Short
10 Moons and 13 Horses
University of Nevada Press

 


Copyright 2004 © the 3rd house party hostess