Taylor Graham

 

 

     

     

    NEW ORLEANS

    The blind windows glisten against rain

    and wind, after subsiding seas with corpses

    floating on the broken tide. From somewhere,

    distant voices call for an accounting. How

    many thousands dead? Where will the living

    go? What will it cost, who pays? But

    the old river that nursed this city knows

    its answer. Already it finds a new way

    down, eddying against what used to be a pier,

    a wall. Purling water, a tenor saxophone.

    Make me a pallet, it sings. Listen, there’s

    the trumpet calling saints and refugees.

    A few familiar ghosts gather under stars.

     

     

     

     

    IF YOU GO OUT LATE ENOUGH

     

    far into the woods where it’s very

    quiet, and listen

    beyond your own pulse ticking

    and the susurrus of breath and breeze,

     

    could you hear what you might take

    for messages?

    Deep in the forests of stars

    and planets

     

    so many travelers trying to get home

    in that immense dark

    in which even our Earth shines

    as a direction point

     

    when viewed from a certain

    perspective

    and the only illuminated passage

    is the Milky Way.