The Angel of the Rushing Waters
I have seen you as a purple bruise in a yellow sky,
as a Scottish soldier with drawn sword
at the edge of the tame land and the wild wood,
as a snowy owl with fierce talons and fiercer eyes
as an Indian death-lord traveling abroad
in a Johnny Cash outfit, swinging a lasso.
I have felt you enter as a gentle breeze
stirring the curtains of a window in a hospital room,
and in the raw, thrusting horse-power
of the dark lord bursting into the sunlit maiden meadow.
You are a sexy devil.
I love you better than your brother Sleep.
Through aching nights of absence
I have longed for your embrace.
I have run your errands,
speaking in your voice to the old golfer on the plane,
negotiating with your razor-sharp precision
the terms for a possible life extension.
I have taken ailing humans by the hand
to your deep pools, to find you – if they dare –
in the troubling of the waters.
Few can look into your black sun
but those who do are different.
To know you, to walk with you,
to feel you always at the left shoulder
brings courage and late October light.
You love to dress for occasions.
I have encountered you as a dandy in evening dress,
as a red Irish big-bellied god, and an Indian flame,
and a white lady whose footsteps are frost.
Your image is rarely in public places
though the medieval mind, like the mind of
puts skeletal reminders of you at every turning,
mocking the vanities of the world.
On our wedding day
I want you to reach from the sky in your robe of stars
and catch me in your voluptuous embrace
and leave my old garment under the blanket of earth.
But if you choose not to come in your goddess form
I want you to be wearing my face.
Art: "Dancing with Azrael" (c) Robert Moss
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