Year’s End

for Audre Lorde and Sonny Wainwright

Twice in my quickly disappearing forties

someone called while someone I loved and I were

making love to tell me another woman

had died of cancer.

Seven years apart, and two different lovers:

underneath the numbers, how lives are braided,

how those women’s deaths and lives, lived and died, were

interleaved also.

Does lip touch on lip a memento mori?

Does the blood-thrust nipple against its eager

mate recall, through lust, a breast’s transformations

sometimes are lethal?

Now or later, what’s the enormous difference?

If one day is good, is a day sufficient?

Is it fear of death with which I’m so eager

to live my life out

now and in its possible permutations

with the one I love? (Only four days later,

she was on a plane headed west across the

Atlantic, work-bound.)

Men and women, mortally wounded where we

love and nourish, dying at thirty, forty,

fifty, not on barricades, but in beds of

unfulfilled promise:

tell me, senators, what you call abnormal?

Each day’s obits read as if there’s a war on.

Fifty-eight-year-old poet dead of cancer:

warrior woman

laid down with the other warrior women.

Both times when the telephone rang, I answered,

wanting not to, knowing I had to answer,

go from two bodies’

infinite approach to a crest of pleasure

through the disembodied voice from a distance

saying one loved body was clay, one wave of

mind burst and broken.

Each time we went back to each other’s hands and

mouths as to a requiem where the chorus

sings death with irrelevant and amazing

bodily music.