Thursday, October 22, 2015

Tonight I Can Almost Hear the Singing by Silvia Curbelo


There is a music to this sadness. 
In a room somewhere two people dance. 
I do not mean to say desire is everything. 
A cup half empty is simply half a cup. 
How many times have we been there and not there? 
I have seen waitresses slip a night's 
worth of tips into the jukebox, their eyes 
saying yes to nothing in particular. 
Desire is not the point. 
Tonight your name is a small thing 
falling through sadness. We wake alone 
in houses of sticks, of straw, of wind. 
How long have we stood at the end of the pier 
watching that water going?
In the distance the lights curve along
Tampa Bay, a wishbone ready to snap 
and the night riding on that half promise, 
a half moon to light the whole damned sky. 
This is the way things are with us. 
Sometimes we love almost enough. 
We say I can do this, I can do 
more than this and faith feeds 
on its own version of the facts. 
In the end the heart turns on itself 
like hunger to a spoon. 
We make a wish in a vanishing landscape. 
Sadness is one more reference point 
like music in the distance. 
Two people rise from a kitchen table 
as if to dance. What do they know 
about love?