Put your nose into the pages of my book he said,
and
I will talk to you from my faded-papered grave.
I
did as the poet asked, but all I did was sneeze.
A
dusty, musty, pocket inside-out sort of sneeze.
Touch
the parchment words of time asleep
on
the park benches of my mind, wrapped
in
sheets of words, rustling and warm.
Run
your fingers over them, he said.
Run
them over the dry-stone walls around my poems,
and
stepping on the turned-down corner pages,
climb
up gingerly and peep into the fields
of
my wildflower words swaying in their heyday.
Count
my candle birthday pages, slightly ripped
with
ageing, where fingers have thumbed the days.
He
says it's where all the emotions have stained
the
pages, watermarking his milestone ways.
Notice,
there's no silk paper to hold a fine pen line,
but
blotted bleary wide the black ink seems to say,
of
course, these words have been placed this way
by
the hand of my mind and troweled into place.
See
my sad photo on the cover? See my dark eyes?
Do
you see the dark pleading there?
My
words were sculptured long and hard, he said.
Hearsay?
I dare say. But that's what he said to me.
Well
there you are, I thought. What could I say?
But
indeed, there he was. He was right there, indeed he was.
Oh,
my word, how his words, when stirred from slumber,
kicked
my words right back at me.
I
reached inside his jacket pocket (he asked me to)
and
lifted his half-hunter watch, ticking of his times.
It
beats in my hand now,
and
with his hand upon my brow,
I
know what makes him talk.
With
fingernail ink he has clung on inside
this
book that shakes with rage, or weeps,
or
hugs, quivering with love. You'll not
shake
him out, however loose the pages,
for
as I squeezed, he squeezed right back.
For
he is buried here enshrouded in his voice,
and
enshrined within that voice was ...
ME!
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