Beginnings
Onsets
are a tyranny—
when we freeze up
under pregnant expectations,
fearing
some judge, our
own swift brain,will damn us
inglorious to an ignominious doom
or
else plunge us full-force
at that bull with the dual horns,
red cape tossed out
with
flair, banderillas poised
as if we knew what dangers
we faced, sage maniacs
of
the ring—
surmising the end
makes everything so much
easier,
we can dance in the chase,
pretend our adventure offered
somehow a bushed fox,
knowing
all the while
that true beginnings terrorize
every thrill-seeking heart,
more
mysterious than where the cosmos
bangs to when it begins spreading
its poem, its angle, its life.
Tell
us the rhythm to start:
we'll circulate with glad abandon
in our sacred bones.
Starting Out
One foot, then another.
Heart lifts weight like a stone,
wraps its shawl. Eyes
gaggle and move soberly.
No one yet
knows the victims,
the war hasn't been shot
or blown, sides hardly chosen,
clouds only just gathering.
Our oven bakes
bread:
It rises. Something will be eaten,
a farewell toast, last clutch
in the ripping throat.
The dawn is
high:
We must fly.
