Friday, November 22, 2013
Joanna Sit -- two poems
Ephemeral
When Michael Johnson of English
Comp. 150 asked what it meant,
I told him, “something
that doesn’t last long. You know,
like the half-life
of a dream, a bubble
that you pop
inside childhood,
some would say that
another word for it
is ‘fleeting,’ but it’s not
a synonym
‘cause ‘fleeting’ implies
flight, movement, a kind
of elusiveness, and if you
really want to look into it,
‘fleeting’ is a word made
dishonorable by Jason
and all pirates of his kind,
fleet stealing the fleece plus
the killer girl (later he’d be sorry –
but more on that in your Intro.
to Lit class), birth of Aphrodite
and the Trojan War, blood soaked
ships sailing on winds of sacrifice,
sands of Iwo Jima, smell of napalm
on China Beach, the word
is different from that, as you see,
‘cause it has no movement,
no history, no promise
of violence, maybe a trace
of pink in the sea foam
from a dying soldier…
note that it is constant,
but not, it’s there but for a moment,
and the moment depends
on what you think of time -
long enough, not enough,
but it’s enough, as in the relativity
of time, which you can read
about in your advanced physics
class, except you wouldn’t learn
about the mass of loss, how
much that weighs, and the speed
in which it travels in
its own light, or missing
something that was never there,
a word whose noun you can collect
in plural, bid on its history, which
brings me back to
the point that it’s not
like the idea of the temporary
even though neither can be
traced. We, shameless, try to
give it time, or definition,
like jail in place of guilt.
At the end, temporary only implies
coming constancy and promise,
rewards of waiting for another
that’s not and so in this case
there’s hope and in that, a sense
of return, so temporary is the lover
filling in for love (the word made
flesh, the word made mortal), a way
to wait for reincarnation, some
redemption when you keep the moment
for more permanence, like
the cotyledons of ferns,
the coleoptiles of grass,
the true subject of Whitman as opposed
to the true cause of Dai Yue’s Lament
of the Flowers in Dream of the Red
Chamber (also later, when you take World
Lit in your Junior year) would be
the leaves of the cactus pear,
blooms on the cherry tree
and everything you see
and everything you know.
************
Daylight Saving Time
It’s going to get dark
early soon, night barging
in before we have a chance
to eat at the table, even if
by “we” I mean
the rest of the world
outside these windows, even
if by “eat” I mean drink,
even if by “chance” I mean
no choice but
all of this, without
invitation or rejection
a gust of wind raises
the curtain, a leaf having enough
looses itself from the elm
and the end of day.
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