Michael Burkard's blue line.

Voice like that of letters eaten by grass.

— Yves Bonnefoy, “Passer-By, These Are Words”


Look at the light in the windowpane. That means it's noon, that means we're inconsolable.

— Richard Siken, “Scheherazade”


A BLUE LINE

for Denis Johnson


Hey, look, when you used to come into my kitchen
I didn’t even know where to stand, it was my kitchen,
but it was yours, that quickly. And the evening had
a metal mouth which was meant to scare us, but we
listened to the desert instead.  You taught us.
Unemployed, fuck the moon.

Years later there’s a dog biting into my book.
I pass the book on before too long. I hear feet
running toward the bank, then back again. It’s
night.  The wives have come home to look at
the husbands who are thinking through
someone from earlier in the blue day.

The blue line.  The blue hat.  The blue Atlantic
and that incredible blue distance to the small
apartment on the other side of the blue continent.
The blue judge, the blue court, the blue copywriter
good enough to say goodbye instead of staying.

Hey, once in the blue rain I was screaming for
you. It was more foreign than a foreign city.
Every time I left the house the rain got bluer,
and I had to turn back. Worse, I felt trapped.
It went on and on. I went nowhere.

I didn’t even know there was still a blue line
from me to you, that if I had just followed it
I would have found you: lonely like me then,
with your mouth to the window, and the stars
blinking but saying write darkly for now.

Write darkly.


by Michael Burkard