t.e.n.
Another poem. This time about how my brain doesn’t work. And ancient Russian dead languages.
t.e.n.
God’s arrow, ten is your name
This arrow is God’s own
The God directs judgment.
Birch Bark Letter No. 292
I will walk overland from Olonets
I’ll go to the shores of Onega
Birch bark message in hand
Dash my knuckles on the blushed granite
Slip silent on the water to the shore
Of an island where the sweet scent of larch oil clings to breaths of fog.
This arrow
It has a name now and is owned.
Controlled.
Electric and yet so human
dashing roughshod through our skies our clouds our limbs our brains.
This arrow fells trees, men.
All that remains is a blackened hole
burn-rotting the core of a massive spruce
smudging out fractions of memories, moments.
To assign a name to the nameless
is to pin it down.
Limit.
This arrow needs a limit.
And I, a tree with no scars.
Destruction of the tangible is its own horror.
Horror has a place in nature.
It is the devastation of what we cannot see or prove
what we only feel
that is true havoc, true madness.
True madness must be contained.
I will walk overland from Olonets to Onega
tell the islands
tell the shoreline
all the way to Medvezhyegorsk.
Deliver the Charter Letter –
confine with a name so that I may be set free.
12.22.10

