On How It Will Be In The End
Another Night in the Ruins
* |
Galway Kinnell
1
In the evening
haze darkening on the
hills,
purple of the
eternal,
a last bird crosses
over,
‘flop flop,’ adoring
only the instant.
2
Nine years ago,
in a plane that rumbled all
night
above the Atlantic,
I could see, lit up
by lightning bolts jumping out
of it,
a thunderhead formed like the
face
of my brother, looking
down
on blue,
lightning-flashed moments of
the Atlantic.
3
He used to tell me,
“What good is the
day?
On some hill of
despair
the bonfire
you kindle can light the great
sky—
though it’s true, of course,
to make it burn
you have to throw yourself in
...”
4
Wind tears itself hollow
in the eaves of these ruins,
ghost-flute
of snowdrifts
that build out there in the
dark:
upside-down ravines
into which night sweeps
our cast wings, our
ink-spattered feathers.
5
I listen.
I hear nothing. Only
the cow, the cow of
such
hollowness, mooing
down the bones.
6
Is that a
rooster? He
thrashes in the snow
for a grain. Finds
it. Rips
it into
flames. Flaps. Crows.
Flames
bursting out of his brow.
7
How many nights must it take
one such as me to learn
that we aren’t, after all,
made
from that bird that flies out
of its ashes,
that for us
as we go up in flames, our one
work
is
to open ourselves, to
be
the flames?
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