By
Beate Sigriddaughter
ATTENTION
It feels like a great blindness
has settled on the land.
I grope around and suspect
you notice me most unhappy.
You pay attention then.
When I am angry, though,
you really notice. It is a wonder
I am not raging all the time.
A tiny consolation:
how we take the sun for granted
too, and gravity. Nature is
indifferent. By nature. But you,
with you I dreamed of wandering
side by side, confirming
our exquisite place in this
maelstrom of molecules
in the whirling of stars.
I want my small exception
without having to remind you.
I want to rekindle
your eyes. It is wrong to be
listless and blind and hungry.
The time of the lioness has come.
EXCUSES
I hear our cry for love, like
children having learned
the stern mechanics of attention.
If we are sick, we can collect.
Pain is honored. Dead,
we would finally be missed,
though perhaps not enough.
We can never be sure of
enough. We call ourselves
unworthy and hope for God
and the world to disagree, and
to invite us back into the center
of the universe,
especially our complicated God
whom we appointed purposely
to be sure of someone’s love
out there, for loving yourself,
though highly recommended,
never seems adequate.
And so I sacrifice and ache
and moan to dramatize to you
my merits in the field of love.
Do I claim love then as—what
would you call it—an excuse
for doing something with my life?
And what exactly is it I would do?
Breathtaking, inspirational. Loved them.