for J.M., on her birthday
While waiting at the airport:— LAX, London, de Gaulle
or for a train to El Paso,
Paddington, Howrath, Milano, or Seoul
—look around. You knew them
once.
Look again.
Uncertain strangers are as
familiar
as your own face in the mirror.
Look at her.
Sweet Jesus she is,
Sweet Buddha, Demeter, Theresa,
Sita . . .
Look at everyone; each one.
Imagine!
Without him
the world could hardly recognize
itself.
Without her
memory would lose continuity,
dreams fade
and history, unwritten,
would dissipate like so much
smoke
of ancient burning cities.
Look at everyone as other
than what they first may seem.
Oracle, gardener, warrior,
peace-maker, sophist and queen
yogini, tailor, demi-god,
vagabond, impresario, libertine.
Look! Look at him as humble,
good-hearted,
holding impeccable integrity,
courageous, wise and kind—
or,
capable of genocide, greedy,
grown cold with bitterness,
with the fear that binds like
sharp wire;
the dereliction of an unraveling
mind.
See everyone as otherly
assigned,
not what their appearance describes.
That woman once imagined herself
a man; that man a woman—
in their soul or behind the
veil of clothing.
That child construed herself
an old, old man.
That nonagenarian, a child
again,
a Samoan dancer, an Algerian
playwright,
cutting hay in Samarkand,
or mending fevers with a
steady hand.
Look at this one as a mythic
gambler;
or as your lover,
as the assassin of all deceptions,
a teller of truths.
Look at that one as the
era’s great painter
eating paint like de Kooning,
eating time like Paul Cezanne.
John Coltrane, Anna Akhmatova.
Jimmy someone-or-other—everyone’s
canary.
What happens with him happens
to us all.
Set your heart right for
him.
Every morning and every night
set your heart right.
Understand that everyone
has lived a most difficult life,
unspoken, filled with uncertainties
and sacrifice.
Look inside,
to touch the never mentioned
secrets.
Stand for a time, at the balcony,
on the street of this life,
to glimpse the procession
in moments that last forever.
You waited all your life.
You lived twenty-five years
to find this,
fifty years, you could say,
lifetimes, you could say. Look
at her. Look at him.
You waited all the time that
ever had life to it,
and more..
Ancient forests were shimmering,
before flowers and voices
ever existed,
anticipating these moments
Look at the new hills rising
out of the green maze of early summer,
the bright bird splashing in
the fountain,
the soaring larks of spring,
what is gone, bitterness
and stale regret,
and what leads us on towards
each other,
what we imagine, and what
we beget.
. . . all this, while waiting
a few minutes
for the bus,
or on the train
in Mexico, Mauritania,
New South Wales, or Spain.
© Caitríona Reed May, 2000