Poem Begun on the Day of My Father’s Death and Completed on the Day I Dreamed of My Own
Into the now-hushed —
+
this overture of emptiness,
skin’s stake in the gravity of opening —
everything —
fire in the air,
we go light-lit and sheen —
sky having once more made
this world of blue:
o self:
even the ocean ends
+
how long have I waited to think a thought
that was not
its shadow?
In the next
will I know?
Will
+
the stars
when they whisper to the dark to undo its dress
recall how to shine?
What otherness besides
/ beside —
this
can we know?
+
What I have not done?
there must be a door to what to
do — as though time is an apology for time.
Curtains part like clouds
— all entrances are exits:
what do we find
when we find
that which we sought without looking?
+
Lord of the hypothetical —
[what if you are the only one
who feels what we do not?]
hear my prayer —
+
every mystery is the greatest,
not just what fails to prolong —
— in the inextinguishable:
there we live the way the undying
fire within burns us to live,
strikes us like a match
to be the metaphor of our own igniting —
what darkness lit by that light?
+
bones kerned
and bones kilned:
bones on the back of bones —
each breath is a bone and within each breath a body:
tell us again —
what do the living do
inside the landscape
in which nothing is visible except the vanishing
the existence of one state
does not mean
necessarily
the existence of another —
departure does not mean
arrival
+
Let us look at the air
as though it were some kind of idea —
let us conceive this life
as a corridor —
let us rise
into continuity as a mode of suspension:
let us be the medium, the decussation —
let us recall:
everything is transfusion —
let us
learn to adapt
ξ
Dean Rader has authored or co-authored twelve books, including Works & Days, winner of the 2010 T. S. Eliot Prize, Landscape Portrait Figure Form, a Barnes & Noble Review Best Book, and Self-Portrait as Wikipedia Entry, a finalist for the Oklahoma Book Award and the Northern California Book Award. Before the Borderless: Dialogues with the Art of Cy Twombly, was published in April from Copper Canyon Press. His writing has been supported by fellowships from Princeton University, Harvard University, Headlands Center for the Arts, Art Omi, and the MacDowell Foundation. A finalist for the 2021 Balakian Award from the National Book Critics Circle, Rader is a professor at the University of San Francisco and a 2019 Guggenheim Fellow in Poetry.