RELIQUARY
by
Jamie Dedes
We flew along the freeway yesterday under
a cold coastal expanse of cerulean ceiling.
Β·
It reminded me of you and how we dusted
the vaults of your mind to rid them of fear
and the old lexicons of grief and guilt, the
whalebone girdles of unfounded faith and
everyday conventions, sticky and saccharine.
I thought of that one sea-green day we spent
Β·
under just such a sky in a land far away and
how we changed your name then and rewrote
your story to tell of oak trees instead of old times.
You sketched flowers blossoming in the dust
of a spring that promised but never delivered.
Now we donβt speak of men, but of cats with
Β·
their manner of keeping heart and claws intact.
We tell ourselves stories in music that resounds
in deep sleep. After all the ancient calls to
feral festivals will still and time coming when
we no longer play in margins, memories hung
on our skeletons like Spanish moss on cypress.
Β·
It pleases me that fissures spin into poemed reliquary
and the pinkΒ poeu de soie I wore to our prom that June.
Photo credit: Stupa (reliquary) With Pillars, Gandhara 2nd Century courtesy ofΒ PHGCOM under the terms of theΒ GNU Free Documentation License


awesome jamie.
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I remember this from your other blog. I love it still.
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Thanks, Gayle! π Have a wonderful day.
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