The Promise of a Word
into a word. They said
I might not be happy
with the choice, for it sticks:
there is no going back.
As I write this, I still do not know
its name, but I need to write-
after all, we forget invitations
and go places we are not welcome:
dead fingers, held in place
with the same wires hidden inside
to make a fake tree look real
but cold: there is no disguise
for death, and frigid fingers hold
nothing–no secrets, nothing–
and this is the easy part:
the dead know where the rain
is born, they know the last
word breathes life into the first–
but all I have is the promise
of a word that is still not here
and may never arrive
in time–in fact, I hope it stays
right there in hell.
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I want to know who “they” were who invited you. Several lines jumped off the screen and grabbed me by the throat . . . “after all we forget invitations and go places we are not welcome” and “the dead know where the rain is born”.
I might tell you all about “they,” but first we must pass across the sacred river that flows through the basement of the Brickskeller. Then, it will not be a matter of telling you; I will have to tell you. Please understand that waterboarding may be involved.