Where I Went
I auditioned for the part. And this way
I came to dance
to a confusion of heartbeat monitors and
portable radios. And so it fell upon me
to be the singing one
in a room given too much to silence.
In the intermittent light I was
speckled and
free. At the far end of each jaded afternoon
I was a six-foot dispenser of
effervescent drinks.
The ward was in need of a popular song
and I was it – a sponge to remove
unnecessary detail
from the ceiling so no one
was reminded of a world before
this one. I was
the overflowing one in the parched room.
And beside the far bed I was a student
of an Austrian architect
a pair of sunglasses grazing the night sky.
For him I wrote ‘Vienna’ across Evans Bay.
But in the morning
he told me, it was the designs of Maori buildings
I wore upon my chin. I was light-footed
in the crippled room
where the floor stared up at me
an ensemble of coloured things, my words
a cloth to soak them up
or remove them. Later I emptied
all the instruments of their music
like fruit, then I emptied
any other thing that might contain
music. I stayed all night in the day room
and the night stayed
with me. I was its furniture, its sweeping broom,
ninety per cent song and ten per cent flesh
of its body. I was paid
to weep in the laughing room and laugh
in the room of diminished hope. I was
the ripe one
in the spoiled room, where it fell upon me to dispense
glasses of water and ceilinged sky to the
recently awakened
and to those who awaken each day
with a fresh skyscape sewn across the surface
of their heads. These men
and women who could see through me.
I brought them the brightest drinks, the most
iridescent straws
and the coloured shadows that fell upon
their throats as they drank were both the last
shadows of a fiery world
gone out and a reflection of
the next to come. When I left the dying room
I was the shape of everything
into which I had been poured.
And the room behind me was empty
and I was filled
to overflowing with it, where I went.