Coyote and Selected Poems by
 Lamar Thomas



Coyote
 
 Yeah, and the night limped around like it was trying to go somewhere,
 like out of Carrol County, but it didn't and neither did I.
 so it's just me and the street lamps downtown cowtown 1 a.m.
 Not a star in sight and nothing's open all night but there's some
 eggs at Casa Huddle, been waiting all day by the week-old bacon
 by the grease geyser and a tarnished Maxwell pump.
 Home is sounding better by the minute, out there, self bound,
 out there by the pines where the stars always shine
 and the insects call and chant to the night.
 Yeah, like this never happened before and the phone rings on time.
 Let the darkness rain down on the rascals and rogues, on the land,
 on the caverns of the coyote prince; I have tasted the clay,
 chewed upon the sunrise in a dozen cities and found nothing
 so sweet as the southern summer moon.
 As though baptisms were not pure ritual,
 as though I've lived this course in southern mysticism past,
 yet past the prime of indecision into action and desire.
 Me, alone with my solipsism and a thousand constellations,
 where animal heart is an echo growing stronger in my lungs,
 growing out of the chronic dreams of misalliance and master races,
 seeds sown in the groves of neophytes and fisher kings, suicide kings
 where the world is nothing but reflections and fear... fear...
 yeah, fear keep'em all from climbing.
 In the black hour those owl wise swoop down on the bell ropes
 and burn in the light of the dying mirror sun. Better to burn on
 the wing than stooped upon the ladder with some Moloch prince
 in a three piece suit, better to screech in the storms
 with a new vision of life, alive with all that lives in the treetops
 and shadows, in gulf stream and prairie, forest and hill, yeah,
 dreams of the beasts on the edge of extinction, they come.
 They cry. Dreams of the coyote prince seconds before the snare snaps.
 Naturalist, rattling the cages of a language that's forgotten salvation,
 when animal rhythm passes so shall we,
 asphalt concrete glass and steel.. poof! memories of the land...
 a getaway from the lights, from engines' rhythms, blood in the sand
 for a moment before the buildings rise and it's all just city,
 but never open all night. And the dirt roads shine.
 Well, the night limps around kinda faded and gone,
 bird calls in the dawn and the distant combustion howls,
 cities rise and fall in the dust, but out here,
 our here in the back roads, my heart, all red clay, pines and springfed
 really is open all night, is the one direction unadorned with death.
 Loving the land and the hammer that nails it down.
 Loving the Rising when our own mortality strains,
 pulls upon the bell ropes and begs for mercy.


Copyright © 2000 Lamar Thomas
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