for Sydney
One for grass (field of sighs).
One, perfect pitch (voice’s veil).
Clocks (sun’s ascent, demise) –
you name it: blessed, wholesale.
One for bringing me to this day
should not be repeated for the same
event but once in thirty days –
attrition by repetition
when I always thought
the strategy of prayer, accretion.
Since you cannot form the sounds
for the soul’s return to the body,
I will – including your thanks
for middle and index fingers,
which sate you until the hunger says,
cry out, in perfect pitch – innate to infants.
All: cry out. (How loud the finches!
A regular Friar’s Club meeting. A ten-hen party.)
I have told you that birds say “chirp” and “tweet” –
please understand, I am a poor translator,
living off one flat ear while the other
berates the past in triple-meter,
counterpoint of Cossacks on horseback,
fields of conscience underfoot.
I am incapable even of mimicking
you mimicking me,
and so we wait for the lift
in Babel’s lobby: our speech will never
grow less confounded
than on this day – yom zeh – today,
to which we have been brought.
(The why I do not know.)

Butler and baker, both dreamed:
one of the vine, one of bread.
One filled up the Pharoah’s cup.
One whose crumbs the birds devoured.
You will be restored, I told
the man whose night sang of wine.
The other hanged. The birds supped.
I told the Pharoah: only
God interprets dream. I hope
you’re on good terms, he winked. Fat
kine and full corn mean plenty.
Withered ears, of having none:
famine. Boom, bust. No one blinked.
Once, I dreamed I was the sun.
Pity the baker his head
now separate from his torso
and served up tartar to birds,
hanged from the terebinth tree.
If I seem hard, it’s that I
wonder: does dream instruct fate,
or from fate take its cruel cues?
And pity poor Joseph, stuck
in jail for being too good-
looking. I forgot about
him, the good turn he did me.
Now that Pharoah’s dreams of kine
and corn keep us up at night,
should I let Joe save the day?
My specialty was angel-
food cake: harder than it looks.
Inside each, I baked a small
angel: difficult to find,
unless you know their grottos
and habits. They like to scratch
the noses off our idols.
Of course, my source was bound to
dry up – and so, my pastries.
Jailed, I met a guy who sifts
signs and symbols. I told him
of the seven loaves atop
my head and saw his fallen
face. Aw, say it ain’t so, Joe.


Patty Seyburn is a frequently published poet, author of Mechanical Cluster and Diasporadic Poems, and Co-Editor of Pool.
© 2006 by Zeek Magazine and the author. This article may not be distributed for commercial purposes without the express written permission of Zeek Magazine (). Reprints and other distributions must contain this copyright notice.
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