But we have painted over the chalky folds,
the snow- and smoke-folds, so carefully,
so deftly that many (Did you bet
on the margins, the clouds?) that many
will have gone, unnoticed,
under. Water under water,
"earth that moves beneath earth."
We have added
silver to the river, dots of silver,
red, figures-which-are-not. Tell
me what their names might have been,
what were last and first, what spells
the unfamiliar, awkwardly whispered, syllable?
And what of the blue rider, the Arab
horseman, the cavalier composed
of two shades of blue, one
from Vermeer's Delft, the other
from that metallic element called
cobalt, Kobolt, goblin? What scene
is he watching? Is it expired space
the fixed eye observes? Is it
the river which has no center, the
whiteness of the city when you say
Paris is white? Is it the arches
of the bridges now narrowed to slits?
Is it the liquid
voices themselves
he watches grow silent?
The voice of closed eyes?
Or the two
impossible young
in the lighted room
who speak only of rain?
Scene which has no center
or whose center is empty,
elsewhere. The way white is said
rejoining an earlier whiteness
between the done and the not-yet
rolling off the tongue
almond, almond-eyed,
eyeless, denialwhite
as the zero code, wordless,
a language of rhythm and breath.
(In erasure the chestnut
flowering toward origin
among the names for white:
blanc de titane, blanc de zinc.)
I met her there at the crossroads.
I don't remember who spoke.
Two breaths, two patterns of echo.
We have painted a bridge's eyes
narrowed, its mouth spurting sand,
dots, more dots, bright,
not visible to the eye.
River of dots rising,
stream of sand with no center.
This was both before and after.
Palette knife beside a photograph.
At recess the children's cries
through the studio windows,
station clocktower to the right,
ochre of expanding sound,
tongue to mute tongue, tendrils-
tendons-over rooftops.
Didn't it turn me-
he asks of his eye-
didn't it polish me
like one of its stones,
remingle and remake me
and draw me quickly down
to where each night in sand
the hour sounds?
We met there at the crossroads
near the small arcades.
I can't recall who first spoke,
who said, "the darkness of white."
We shared one shadow.
In the heat she tasted of salt.
This poem has not been translated into any other language yet.
I would like to translate this poem