TWO POEMS
by Martine Bellen
Hey Diddle, Diddle
And the cat jumped over the Milk Moon, the Spoon Moon, the Sleepy
Mean Moon. Not the Flying Fish Moon. Or the Tiger Shark
Moon. Moon of the Terrible. Moon of the Raccoon.
Not the moon that swung atop the arboretum: the Peach Moon. Peony
Moon. The Moon When Trees Pop. The Lotus Moon, Mum Moon.
Raspberry, Blackberry, or Sassafras Moon. It was the pelican that
perched on the Crane Moon.
The cat never jumped over the secret moon peeping out of swift, high cloud:
The Bony Moon, the Windy Moon. The Hungry Moon. Moon of Ice.
Singing Moon, o Mulberry Moon
With a full-moon’s might.
The maroon-colored cat jumped over the magnificent Moon of Horses.
The Moon When Geese Return in Scattered Formation. Moon When
the Calves Grow Hair. The Moon When Leaves Are Green. The Moon
When Leaves Are Gone.
Never the dreaded Dragon Moon. The Panther Moon. The Moon When
Horns Are Broken Off. Never the Twelfth Moon when a million
brilliant eyes light dense bramble
Below that most hallowed one:
The Moon When Eyes Are Sore From Staring at Bright Moon-Lit Snow.
And the cat jumped over the Milk Moon, the Spoon Moon, the Sleepy
Mean Moon. Not the Flying Fish Moon. Or the Tiger Shark
Moon. Moon of the Terrible. Moon of the Raccoon.
Not the moon that swung atop the arboretum: the Peach Moon. Peony
Moon. The Moon When Trees Pop. The Lotus Moon, Mum Moon.
Raspberry, Blackberry, or Sassafras Moon. It was the pelican that
perched on the Crane Moon.
The cat never jumped over the secret moon peeping out of swift, high cloud:
The Bony Moon, the Windy Moon. The Hungry Moon. Moon of Ice.
Singing Moon, o Mulberry Moon
With a full-moon’s might.
The maroon-colored cat jumped over the magnificent Moon of Horses.
The Moon When Geese Return in Scattered Formation. Moon When
the Calves Grow Hair. The Moon When Leaves Are Green. The Moon
When Leaves Are Gone.
Never the dreaded Dragon Moon. The Panther Moon. The Moon When
Horns Are Broken Off. Never the Twelfth Moon when a million
brilliant eyes light dense bramble
Below that most hallowed one:
The Moon When Eyes Are Sore From Staring at Bright Moon-Lit Snow.
Cat
The cat belongs to
Me. The cat belongs
To the house. The cat belongs to
The other cat. The cat
Belongs to itself. The cat
Belongs to the forest. The
Cat belongs to the bird and mouse.
The cat belongs to the mountain lion.
The cat belongs to no one. The cat
Belongs to nothing. The cat belongs
To everyone, everything.
The cat has a name
That I gave it. Everyone knows the cat’s name
Is not its name. It is my name for the cat.
Sometimes the cat refuses to acknowledge
This name and sometimes the cat
Plays along with the life I’ve created for the cat.
Sometimes the cat pretends that it doesn’t live in a realm
Different from the one that the cat and I
Live in together. The cat has needs that must be met
For the cat to live in my house, though most of the cat’s time
Is spent elsewhere. I invite the cat to live with me
So I can perceive some of the “elsewhere”
In which the cat spends much cat time.
The cat shares what I can’t see by maintaining
An existence in my house and by responding to
The name I gave the cat.
I know there will be a moment
In the circuitry of space-time in which the cat will discard
The name and forsake my house for good
And will exist only in the fields
I cannot see without the cat living in my house. On that day,
I might say, “The cat has moved full-time into the wild.”
Or I might say, “Miau-miau has run away.”
The most recent books by Martine Bellen are GHOSTS! (Spuyten Duyvil) and2X2 (BlazeVOX).
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