Grand Coteau
October 3, 2014
God holds my body like the boy did
when he took me by the waist and lifted me from the concrete he spun me
in circles i was a single chrysanthemum against his chest.
when spring break came i curtseyed
into the louisiana dirt
never ceases in its longing:
it wanted to startle me
to be my only cradle and
the palms that pushed me off the cliff and into the mouth of
God.
i saw this: he holds the arms of North south East west under his tongue the babbling intonations of angels
the angels don’t babble.
they know how to swim.
we walked to Mass in the morning when it was still so dark
(in secret, we linked arms because it was still so dark) but after
when God’s Son jumped to his feet on the hardwood floors
and bled his sunrise into the palms of my hands i rubbed open my eyes
and ran into the cemetery
and swooned
i asked You for a blink in my direction a single finger.
You gave me something swelling
in Your upturned hand
You held my body.
the roof of God’s mouth is a bed of Yellow flowers whose name i can’t pronounce.
no one dies too early.