In response to Song of the North
In response to Song of the North
1.
God is gone boating,
the radio says.
He did not come
to this decision easily—
the journey, an edict: the
image must sustain itself.
Who then owns these
faces reflected in the water?
2.
Ten letters swim in my stomach.
If only heaven made house calls,
maybe I could be sick.
Return the favor. Broadcast a
joyful noise, expel
every wet and blessed word,
know what shape the mouth takes, its
emptied and rawest form.
3.
There is no there, there.
My shirt and pants wait on the chair,
watch and cigarettes on the dresser,
glasses on
the bedside table,
all exactly where I left them.
But despite the careful notes I took,
I cannot find myself.
My room forgets me as it drowns in hair.
4.
To recognize the holy requires
knowledge of a miracle: the inability
to evacuate our humanity.
The image of God alone, fluttering
like a great sail, billowing
in a wind that is breath of our breath.
The divine achieves escape velocity.
Yet the clay calls, even from the bottom
of the ocean—waving hello, farewell?
5.
I couldn’t dance with them. The Hassidim
my father joined so effortlessly, caught up
in a Bar Mitzvah celebration. I stood
with my arms crossed, leaning against
a security fence, counting automatic
weapons I’d never before seen in my life.
My father, rhapsodic; the Wall, mortared
in prayer. I was thirteen
myself and wholly underwater, unprepared.
Baruch et Adonia ha-mevorach, something
something. Who knew. Now, thirty-three yrs on
who cares? I can’t even find the verse on a calendar.
I remember I was sweating, and took my yad-
hand away from the text, forgetting my
lines.
The passage took whole minutes to find. The melody
lost in my throat, treading in place.
6.
He, that is, God
seemed to miss
the point
of the complaint.
Yadda Yahweh,
this and that.
Where were you
when I framed
leviathan’s tail,
the tyger’s symmetry,
or whatever?
Hinenni, genius—
wherever you go,
there you are.
Oh, my sin, come
shield me from
His bloody whirlwind,
this overflowing grief.
Make me faithful.
But not yet, Lord, not yet.