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Last Poem of my 45th Year by Craig Erick Chaffin
I thought of how a whale's white ribs could choke the sky's blue neck, massive vertebrae half-buried in sand,
and how a keel cleaves the sea while the wind zephyrs canvas to swell and propel the long black ship toward shore,
heaven in a blue mussel shell, smooth as the firmament. I believe there is a place for old men, in the arms of their loves.
Although Dante put Odysseus in the eighth circle for deception, both Gods and men, I think, underrate his love for Penelope.
II
Think of the beached skeleton again and the absence it creates, a neck of sky on which an ivory choker hangs,
its central jewels composed of vertebrae that housed the temple of marrow, a metaphor for a core if there is one,
something more necessary than the defenses we erect to keep from crushing each other in the heart or in the head.
III
A throat of clouds caught in the pincers of a whale's ribs recurs to me, like a mead hall with the walls blown out.
At the end of its open tunnel I see a dull sun stuck to the smoggy apron of the horizon. Tomorrow Helios will drive his steeds over
the brown San Bernadinos and down the cement-gray Los Angeles River, but my love's hair is silver and her eyes are green.
(published in Stagger)
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