I watched a truck churning under a wire convergence and the sky above doped entrails coming from Europe Where had the turtle gone, the one puffed in the curve of the fox?
Now clambering onto the icy porch I open the door into smells of brass polish, wood polish pots full of bones.
Winter’s wind rattling time holds me in I must make marmalade with Seville oranges with their thick rutted craters, sadly moon-like
a little sweetness of the blossom worn on bridal veils will come back as the flesh boils soggy with pips and Demerara’s sweetness pummels
and I’ll be beaming ear to ear, beaming, full of a sugar high, then fall. I don’t think I’ll be flying to Jamaica, but at least I have a box of jars
My house will be dressed of stiff forsythia branches, blooming while I pull on stupoods of wool socks, and wax my boards
I watched whirling snow collapse, loshing on my face, signs of a dream, unsettling separating mills and boon from reality.
If I had cast a spell stirring boiling sugar And whispered ancient simple words And as spring soars from the dirt he would say agapa me
and my house full of worms, fat as fingers would dissolve which is why I must plant, for butterflies to flutter O my mighty easel, you are not like nature
though you are like a highway of roots, clamped with straps Supported or shaded, you reveal all that I am.
The light begins to drop out of ticking stars onto the snow bank behind the studio the place where crimson and ochre mate.
I am really a painter and my brushes are words which glaze accidentally across vellum, spurning censure.