| If tonight the moon should arrive like a lost guide crossing the fields with a bitter lantern in her hand, her irides blind, her dresses wild, lie down and listen to her find you; lie down and listen to the body become the promise of no other, the sleeper in the garden in its own arms, the exile in its own autumnal house. You have woken. But no one has woken. You are changed, but the light of change is bitter, the changing is the threshold into winter. Traveler, rememberer, sleeper, tonight, as you slumber where the dead are, if the moon’s hands should discover you through fire, lie down and listen to her hold you, the moon who has been away so long now, the lost moon with her silver lips and whisper, her body half in winter, half in wool. Look at her, look at her, that drifter. And if no one, if nothing comes to know you, if no song comes to prove it isn’t over, tell yourself, in the moon’s arms, she is no one; tell yourself, as you lose love, it is after, that you alone are the bearer in that changed place, you alone who have woken, and have opened, you alone who can so love what you are now and the vanishing that carries it away. Copyright © 2014 by Joseph Fasano. Used with permission of the author. |
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