After Aphex Twin

There is a lithe patient on the hospital bed:

steel bed of needle points, cold as an array of stars

withering in distant galaxies . . .

A sun is chiming

in syntony with the incarnadine and

beige glass sheets of ocean water . . .

The mares are bound by the cart:

all the sun fell into their hides, and faded in

the men’s paper skin, thinking deeply in the pit of

their beings; ethereal bodies in their clarity barely

effulge from their brows in unexpected moments

I have to meet you at the park, the lush and fountained

park past the locus of noon in the smaragd of early

evening – to share these curious orisons and parcels

with you, my friend, and the copse of yearling trees that

I keep watering in my secret pocket. My hope is that you

might elect me with the stars, tallest diamonds, highest

points in the heavens that breathe as they hear even

the tiniest sounds of our thoughts.

As you intuited in the past, I have little place on this plane.

I am no Jesus, no Jesuit, no friend of the masses.

I am only the net catching the signals of transient beauties.

I must be already there, beyond the slope, waving

a quiet hailstorm as you pause for an instant

in the green and blue world.