
Rage, Rage
26
In my dreams, I track
the sails of drifting ships,
white moths fluttering
before the wind.
I think I have caught them
in overnight traps,
but they fly each morning
in dawn’s unforgiving light.
I give chase
with pen and paper,
fine butterfly nets
with which to catch
and tame wild thoughts.
I grasp at things
just beyond my fingertips.
I wake up each morning
unaware of where
I have traveled
in my dreams.
Comment:
White moths fluttering before the wind – my dreams at night. How do I trap them, catch them, squeeze them between my fingers, hold them, pin them to the show case of memory? I remember in Oaxaca – the young boys, trapping the moths. Huge, gigantic butterflies, moths, as large as birds. They severed their wings, and sold them to the passing tourists. Such beauty, such colour.
I heard an angry buzzing, looked down, and saw flightless bodies, wings clipped, rowing their stumps of bunt oars, skidding sideways across the gutters, and dreaming painfully of the stars.