Nested Things

Nested Things 

Every day we make this earth less alive, less legal.
What is this diminishment 
but sin against god 
which is a program
to generate complexity?

Clare Pollard 

The dust-laden wind of December 
Smells Saharan. 
I lie in my cold bed as words 
from the chapel hang from the ceiling, 

from dust you come, dust you go… 

World, listen. 
I diminish society—a union 
of homemade fire and salt  
carving judgment for my body. 

I mold darkness in my tongue, 
in my illicit moaning, in decibels flying 
high against the wrench 
of the room’s stillness. 

Sometimes my body is a pool  
of wreck— 
a contraption forged for  
complexity, 
many times a parcel of society, 
a throne of judgment. 
I carve judgment for my body. 

A man walks in the street  
lacing the dusty wind with fire, 

awake from your slumber… 

if the cold night could give up silence, 
‘but who wants to hear what is evil?’ 

At the trailing corner of my 
night, I kiss the floor, unsure of the next 
word, next name, next posture. Unsure 
of the marble floor peering 
blank in the dark. 

World, listen. 
When my knees cling to marble, 
what name should I put on my tongue— 
the devil sweeping through the streets 
with chaos, or god watching from the sky? 
What foot parades mercy? 

Back in Hawaii, afternoons 
were planted on solemn walks. 
I wrapped my gaze on a slender 
aspen shaking off for winter, blooming 
for spring. 
A tree knows no regret. 
If society would listen…