Metaphor
(after a text by Yi-Fu Tuan)
I.
The metaphor I love it is like this:
We are mariners on a sea.
Below deck bored and
surviving. Suffocating
we are in the dark.
Vivid and rushing surround
the vast and worn waters
and we know only murky telltales,
only candled flicker
encased in
mildewed plank.
The metaphor it is like this:
goes from mariners to
majesty. The ancient and
aching. The unbounded light
above.
The metaphor I love it is like this:
it assures an answer.
What else? What more?
Aching light unbounded.
A majesty. A miracle
above.
II.
As a child
I thought death throes was
death throws.
Never seen it never ever seen it never
‘cept for movies and TV. Didn’t read books
so I thought death throes was
death throws.
Thought death meant throwing limbs
through sheets
last gasp last breath
last one. Wonder what
will come:
throwing limbs
through sheets?
I thought death throes was
death throws
until the chaplain,
the chaplain she explained
death throes.
She gave me a book that spoke
death as transition: a little book
center-stapled
squared not quite
octavo-sized.
The text read “e” “s” not “w” “s”.
Turns out death throws is
Death throes: single iterant of
body’s fitful shutter.