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Carolyn Srygley-Moore: Two Poems
Casting Out | The Whistler's Tarantula
Casting Out
Heydrich: Hitler was your lodestar: inventor of
The final solution
You’d depart
Your blue-eyed house
Like a common salesman each morning, kissing
Your children first.
The last time, assassinated (but we could not name you victim).
Even you hoped your creation would be
Your salvation; thought
Changing the lines of the world
Was facile as crossing uncrossing the legs.
Not thinking, however, that even a murderer must be transparent
In order to comprehend.
Some nights I hang out in the deathtrap of
Your body, tossing a coin
In the pelvic cup, rattling
A pencil along your ribs. I am simply an artifact
In your death as I would have been
In your life, a mad woman.
Transported, gassed at the camps.
I find, tucked in your cranial sockets, a love letter
So yellowed now it could melt away,
Run through
The downspout with common rain.
Yet who would love you?
Full consciousness is fierce and dark, unmeasured
Space from which the lodestar
Shimmies. And consciousness is cavernous
As history
Casting out the demons of the past
Into you, you
Who are still sleeping.
  
The Whistler's Tarantula
Stranded at the pinnacle of the carnival ride, the wind
lecherous as the sandman. The lake is the flat oval of
a doll’s shadow, almost meiotic. In the water,
something flowers, the face of the drowned. You ask
what is
the birth of music? Wet your fingers,
I say, rub the lip of the soda bottle, whistle into the hollow:
the stolen violin will erupt.
Thus the living ripens in the vineyard. Light is a blade.
A faceless someone is courier
of sheet music, a wedding duet: neither bride
nor groom can whistle on key. Check the harmonica.
Any astrologer can tell you, the stars
are fixed there’s nothing the human
can do about it. Everything has happened, yet we
cannot recall the other’s name.
Chill of daybreak, a red star ripens among the lichen.
Turn the stone. The preparers
forgot to ribbon the trellis, the orchids withered
before we began the vows. Our future, midwifed,
had a caesarian section then
healed, quickly, like water. The catgut
stitches dissolved, there was simply a scar to kiss,
a carnival game trying on faces to endure.
In this particular light, a sliver of sunset that could break
glass, the tarantula appears bald
as a wig. He grows hirsute in the red flower
pot, then, all by itself, the arachnid could startle
a monster. O above it all, you
were once a sweet sweet man, now a
temper disembodied, bruising the whistler’s mannequin.

Poet's Biography:
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Carolyn Srygley-Moore is a graduate of the Johns Hopkins University's Writing Seminars, where she won awards for her poetry. She has been published by The Antioch Review, The Pennsylvania Review, and other journals. She currently resides in upstate New York with her husband and daughter.
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