JOHN GREY
QUANDARY
To understand love
one must embrace
the allure of its paradox.
Yes, when looked at abstractly,
it can only become increasingly
complex,
So best observe its results
e.g. the same person by your side
day after day.
This simplifies matters.
At least, until it doesn’t.
For example,
what of a lover’s almost entire
abandonment of romance
for the cutting of grass,
the washing of soiled underwear?
Love is too damn obtuse.
Think of it as a series of
centrifugal gestures.
Or a liquid poured on the surfaces
of glances, of conversation,
so that no detail of it emerges.
Love is really an evolving
continuity,
whorls of feeling that
form an interlacing skein
that can endure the imposition
of an indefinite number of outside
influences
but becomes less and less
like anyone’s idea of love.
The best I can come up with
is that it’s a series of
labyrinthine circumstances
mixed with both refined and coarse
situations,
the result being a kind of mental
and physical bond.
To be honest,
the entire arcane dimension of love
is where it loses me.
Better it be understood inherently.
It’s not at its best in the
telling.
SUNDAY MORNING
Sunlight set up camp at the tip of
my nose.
I opened my eyes slowly.
A curtain moved gently.
A window shone blue.
I couldn’t see Saturday night
anywhere.
I rolled over
into a surprising emptiness.
It was soft enough.
The mattress saw to that.
But no way it would be
making me breakfast.
My alarm clock, as always,
ruled over the dresser.
I scowled at time.
I was expecting a woman in the bed
beside me.
Not six thirty.
IN SUBURBIA
The avenue has a current
rubbed smooth from house to house,
that whistles through
what each false front carries
inside,
helps lift it above
the sidewalks of the poor.
Here is the car to drive,
the garden to emulate,
a picket fence to secure the psyche
like dead bolts do the doors.
It is America.
Something is empty
but it’s not the belly.
Something is lost
but none of what has been
acquired of late.
JOHN GREY
JOHN GREY is an Australian poet, US
resident. Recently published in the Homestead Review, Poetry East and Columbia
Review with work upcoming in Harpur Palate, the Hawaii Review and North Dakota
Quarterly.
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