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Replying to a comment on:
Lines Composed in a Vancouver Skyscraper (Free verse) by david
It has taken me three years
to come to this view.
I know now
that the body
is a river, water flowing from a stone
whose bones and muscles
and organs are flowing.
I have watched their shapes
in the molded Burrard Inlet,
contained and onrushing, below bridge
after bridge vertebra to the valley,
a brown finger of water that still
powers the mind, lying long
in the trestle arms of this city
whose sentence is hard labour.
Eye level atop a church
across the street, Mary the Virgin
stands modest and giant,
her back turned to the fuming
of ghetto where some evenings
the brightest vision
is the flash of a streetlamp
on a jogger's white Nikes.
At night, the red sirens
spinning mute across the inlet
converge like gentle pulsars
at some accident.
An hour later, one pulls off,
hovers at a distance.
All is gesture and sign.
Along these streets
are the children of coal miners,
who have watched the ground carefully
swallow their fathers, sometimes
even digesting the trapped men, turning
their bones back into lime, into coal.
It is the oldest fear:
that the earth may recall you.
Along the top of Grouse Mountain
lies a stole of colour
unnatural to sky. Twilight's blue collar.
But the mountains are a fishing
village: steep, hearty, and solid.
At night, the lights and stars from this
window make the cityscape
an Ethiopian bride. As cars bolt
around a curve of streetlamps,
their shadows flush with their forms
like carefully guarded souls. And the inlet
churning its wet whispery thighs,
the inlet pouring blood dark
under the bridges, in the inlet
I find my astonished limbs
and all the stateless gels within me,
desperately carnal, mute, wholly flowing,
unburdened toward a distant shore.
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