Thursday, September 19, 2013

Job

Earlier this year, I put together a book of poems on Blurb and had two copies printed: one for my man S. and one for my sister. Even though the idea of the book was to create a personal gift for a specific occasion (our Paper Anniversary), I got a real rush out of seeing my words in print. To publish what you write on the internet is one thing. To hold it in your hands, to put it on a bookshelf... that's quite another.
Although this particular collection of poetry contained almost all old poems, I did feel like I should write a new one for the occasion, and I was surprised at how easily this one came to me. Though you can, of course, purchase a copy of the book here (same as the link above), I've decided to make the poem public as well. We'll save secrecy for my next collection.

Job

I return always
to the vast, obsidian bowl of space
embedded with stars, each
tugging planets, all spinning, some
with days only an hour long, some
with ice, some with maybe
more of us.

We speak of belief.
Job did, and he was answered

with space, though
what he asked was of death and loss
and time.

We say forever.
And when I hold

you, I’m not only the mouse
hugging the cheese, or the swimmer
with his orange vest, or even the mind
wrapped around reality;
I’m also the last servant, spared by space,
flown home, escaped

to tell you.