A Night in the Field

I didn’t mean to stay so late

or lie there in the grass

all summer afternoon and thoughtless

as the kite of sun caught in the tree-limbs

and the crimson field began to burn,

then tilt way.

handily asI hung on

handily as night lit up the sky’s black skull

and star-flakes fell as if forever—

fat white petals of a far-off flower

like manna on the plains.

A ripe moon lifted in the east,

its eye so focused,

knowing what I knew but had forgotten

of the only death I’ll ever really need

to keep me going.

Did I sleep to wake or wake to sleep?

I slipped in seams through many layers,

soil and subsoil, rooting

in the loamy depths of my creation,

where at last I almost felt at home.

But rose at dawn in rosy light,

beginning in the dew-sop long-haired grass,

having been taken, tossed,

having gone down, a blackened tooth

in sugary old gums, that ground

where innocence is found, unfound,

making my way toward the barn,

its beams alight,

its rafters blazing in the red-ball sun.