What can I tell you that you do not know

Of the life after death?

Your son’s eyes, which had unsettled us

With your Slavic Asiatic

Epicanthic fold, but would become

So perfectly your eyes,

Became wet jewels,

The hardest substance of the purest pain

As I fed him in his high white chair.

Great hands of grief were wringing and wringing

His wet cloth of face. They wrung out his tears.

But his mouth betrayed you – it accepted

The spoon in my disembodied hand

That reached through from the life that had survived you.

Day by day his sister grew

Paler with the wound

She could not see or touch or feel, as I dressed it

Each day with her blue Breton jacket.

By night I lay awake in my body

The Hanged Man

My neck-nerve uprooted and the tendon

Which fastened the base of my skull

To my left shoulder

Torn from its shoulder-root and cramped into knots –

I fancied the pain could be explained

If I were hanging in the spirit

From a hook under my neck-muscle.

Dropped from life

We three made a deep silence

In our separate cots.

We were comforted by wolves.

Under that February moon and the moon of March

The Zoo had come close.

And in spite of the city

Wolves consoled us. Two or three times each night

For minutes on end

They sang. They had found where we lay.

And the dingos, and the Brazilian-maned wolves –

All lifted their voices together

With the grey Northern pack.

The wolves lifted us in their long voices.

They wound us and enmeshed us

In their wailing for you, their mourning for us,

They wove us into their voices. We lay in your death,

In the fallen snow, under falling snow,

As my body sank into the folk-tale

Where the wolves are singing in the forest

For two babes, who have turned, in their sleep,

Into orphans

Beside the corpse of their mother.