INVITING YOU BACK, By Joan Campbell
The breath of tea warm in a cupped hand,
I can look back on it now. The dark tree shapes
inhabit the sunset. I guess I’m saying goodbye
to the tropics. But just for the moment
let us say I have invited you back. Sit down,
sit down. The book keeps falling
open to the missing page while you sleep.
Earth to moon then steadfastly more. To watch
your breath rise in the light I’ve put you in
would only be a form of self-indulgence.
Do dreams rise to reinvent the past? I have
given birth to a flower that sings in your absence,
while winter brings another and another
snow until the low light leaves.
This night, without you, is long
and like a lost moon, its gown of light
strewn across the floor, a light I cannot
wear a moment more. If I rise to pull the shade,
the moon takes back its dress. Either way I lose.
I am in the city reading again, how foxes
are killed for their fur. How they shock them
from the inside until the skin bears
no resemblance to their death. Also,
Derek Walcott. How he feels
“vague as the moon in daylightâ€
after someone astonishing has left him.
People keep telling me how good I look.
Sit down. Let me tell you.
1993. Joan Campbell lives and writes in Morro Bay, Calif. She has published her poems and essays in several magazines and journals. Reprinted by permission.
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