Darling
1
I break this toast
for the ghost of bread in Lebanon.
The split stone, the toppled doorway.
Someone's kettle
has been crushed.
Someone's sister has a gash above her right eye.
And now our tea
has trouble being sweet.
A strawberry softens, turns musty,
overnight each apple
grows a bruise.
I tie both shoes on Lebanon's feet.
All day the sky
in Texas which has seen no rain since June
is raining Lebanese mountains, Lebanese trees.
What if the air
grew damp with the names of mothers,
the clear belled voices of first-graders
pinned to the map
of Lebanon like a shield?
When I visited the camp of the opposition
near the lonely
Golan, looking northward toward
Syria and Lebanon, a vine was springing pinkly from a tin can
and a woman with
generous hips like my mother's
said Follow me.
2
Someone was there.
Someone not there now was standing.
Someone in the wrong place
with a small moon-shaped scar on his left cheek
and a boy by the hand.
Who had just drunk
water, sharing the glass.
Who had not thought about it deeply
though they might have, had they known.
Someone grown and someone not-grown.
Who thought they had different amounts of time left.
This guessing game ends with our hands in the air,
becoming air.
One who was there
is not there, for no reason.
Two who were there.
It was almost too big to see.
3
Our friend from
Turkey says language is so delicate
he likens it to a darling.
We will take this
word in our arms.
It will be small and breathing.
We will not wish to scare it.
Pressing lips to the edge of each syllable.
Nothing else will save us now.
The word "together" wants to live in every house.