Point of Departure, By JANE MILLER
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We never thought pleasure in the
detached world
would be as much as a grain of salt or
sand.
When we were young, yesterday,
one foot after another on your day off,
we went straight from the movies to the
seashore
knowing art and life were separate,
friendly,
and if the streamwater wasn’t fit to
drink--
I cup my hands now, thinking of love--
it was cool and a symbol, music came
from it,
and the elk poisoned themselves only a
little--
after a hundred years’ absence a small
price.
This late in the day,
a cliff and waterfall below us in heaven,
elk ghost the laurel and chaparral
of the Point Reyes coast,
fogged in, an adaptation for our time
as one might imagine an air-conditioned
desert
to have been.
We are saturated in thought
as once with light
anyone could walk six miles easily on
the sky road.
Still equal to the life which called them
forth,
the tule elk churn opposite the blocked
sun,
freak children
of the universe, feeling its size as
comprehensible.
No relationship beyond
that though--
the California shore is alone on earth
along the San Andreas fault,
as a snake on my property once
gone has a presence.
Life only imagined hurts,
that’s why we’re still here in the painless
eucalyptus air,
invisible, night and day invisible. We’re
left
with some things hardly alive
among gods, questions,
awe--
how is my life with a stranger from this
world?
From “August Zero” by Jane Miller. (Copper Canyon Press: $11.) Reprinted by permission.
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