Elizabeth McLagan

August 12th, 2013 § 0 comments

On the themes of Epitaph and Life Cycle

ELEGY FOR AN APRIL MIDNIGHT

In the cut earth that glitters up
the light of pitchfork and spade

in the wind-whipped sheets
of clouds and the smear of red tulips

in the industrious cities of worms:
drunk on camellias, on the smoke

of flagrant weeds under our feet
almost unnoticed whispering

of half-swollen buds – I unearth
your words – that breath whose voice

was cut off. Steps crossed the dark
boundaries, gray curtained gray,

an hour whose name no one
could repeat, however close it came

to the heart. The storm velocities
bore down a mountain of weak

fast-falling light. One thrush calling
far away, not far, close at hand, clear.

BITTEN

So confused by the spiritual turns of the wind
and the light falling in enormous gray patches,

I’d arrange my blood to be open, my wings
to tie themselves like curtains to your windows.

But who could miss the absorbed expression
of clocks wound up to reel the afternoon forward?

Yet there were good days too, that today make me clutch
the pen to my breast and write on the skin of the world

its strangeness. And when the sky walks through the pond’s
green darkness and the fingers of trees lengthen

like embittered saints, I’ll come back to the dawn, its iced
tendrils that in the end dissolve the slow mortar

of the tongue. Though my blood enters like a fire the belly
of another, much remains in the mind’s dark shifting,

where moth-like shadows dart in front of me and
dragonflies strike the surface to drink and not be drowned.

Author Biography

Elizabeth McLagan lives in Portland OR and has a book of poems, In The White Room, just out from CW Books.

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