RYAN WILSON


Face It

Image

A silence, bodied like wing-beaten air,

Perturbs your face sometimes when parties end

And, half-drunk, you stand looking at some star

That flickers like a coin wished down a well,

Or when you hear a voice behind you whisper

Your name, and turn around, and no one’s there.

You’re in it then, once more, the stranger’s house

Perched in the mountain woods, the rot-sweet smell

Of fall, the maples’ millions, tongues of fire,

And there, whirl harrowing the gap, squint-far,

That unidentified fleck, approaching and

Receding at once, rapt in the wind’s spell—

Pulse, throb, winged dark that haunts the clean light’s glare—

That thing that you’re becoming, that you are.

from The New Criterion