I AM NOT READY TO DIE YET

My death peers at the world through a plumeria tree

And the tree looks out over the neighbor’s house to the Pacific

And the blue water god commands this part of the world

Without question, rules from the kingdom of secrets

And tremendous fishes. I was once given to the water.

My ashes will return there,

But I am not ready to die yet

Nor am I ready to leave the room

In which we made love last night.

This morning I carry the desire to live, inside my thigh

It pulses there: a banyan, a mynah bird, or a young impatient wind

Until I am ready to fly again, over the pungent flowers

Over the sawing and drilling workmen making a mess

In the yard next door, over water

And the memory of your shoulders

In candlelight.

It is endless, this map of eternity, like a watermonster

Who swallows everything whole including the bones

And all the terrible words and how it blooms

With delectable mangoes, bananas

With the most faithful of planets,

But I am not ready to die yet.

And when it happens, as it certainly will, the lights

Will go on in the city and the city will go on shining

At the edge of the water—it is endless, this map

And the waves of longing from the kingdom of suffering

Will linger in the room in which we made love last night—

When I am ready to die I will know it,

As surely as I know your gaze

As we undressed close to the gods in that room.

There will be flowers, there are always flowers,

And a fine blessing rain will fall through the net of the clouds

Bearing offerings to the stones, to all who linger

Here—It will be a day like any other.

Someone will be hammering

Someone frying fish

The workmen will go home

To eat poi, pork, and rice.