Jazz
Today I’m thinking about this child’s life—
the rags of it, the ragged waves of it, the vaporous
fumes of it, the split tree, stomped-out spark,
the one-eyed, peg-legged pirate of it, the overripe
kissed-to-bruises fruit, the exposed
negative, the burned-out-bulb marquee. And then
I start thinking maybe there’s hope.
Maybe his life could be like jazz
that starts out with a simple melody,
nothing complicated, nothing jittery or twisted,
and then breaks off, kisses it, waves goodbye,
ripens the notes, tears the tune to rags,
strips it, pokes out an eye, burns it,
sends it up in smoky wreaths,
reaches inside and steals the honey,
bees streaming out in black ribbons,
and when it seems as though it’s long gone, ashes and bone,
when it’s strung out, wrung out, blasted
with a wrecking ball, bombed out, concrete dust,
it slides over and spirals up in one high thin note
stretched so far you can’t tell if the ache
is bitter or sweet, it returns
to the melody, rinsed pure and clean of the past,
you almost can’t bear it, the deliverance,
the song come home.