O morning star, east rising—splendorous eternal light and sun of justice; come, and shine among those who sit waiting in darkness, in the shadows of death — “O Oriens,” Vesper 5 of the O Antiphons
O, when the sun crowns and births, when the potshot lights, torn through the east, flood the black earth: passing through fenced lots, gazing on open sores; turning over wearied thoughts and knocking on locked doors while the eyes of men— sons of Man—remain closed, like a fist, or a grasp—so desperate— you drown, we all drown— in our own throats, enthralled—pelagic, manic and churning—the rage of the Trojan prophet; your precious parrot’s fresh and precious white waste— may I feed the flies? cried the mottled jester, aggrieved and underemployed— decapitated— with gusto, as it were— in the off hours, any afternoon— when the flies are finally fed— when a prophet, rouge smeared, stirs:
already the light has departed
yet how desperately some cling— and how weighted: the wilting reach of wisteria— still waiting.