Margaret Gibson
Sonnets on the Eightfold Path*
Take a zooming shortcut. Be a phoebe,
balance on a limb. Tail-wag, fly away.
I love spring mist, the jonquils’ moist yellow—
nothing slapdash out there. The narrow
fellow in the grass doesn’t dash, it sidles
or stills itself, hoping I won’t notice.
As for me, I count one to ten on each outbreath.
I want to clear my head of thoughts.
Breath-death, breath-death. In and out it goes.
Life should be life with no trace of death.
Death should be death with no trace of life.
I rarely make it to ten. No problem. Start
over. And when I do make it to ten? Begin
again. Breath-death. Balance on the hyphen.
No, I’m not cooped up at home. Homebody,
arm-chair traveler, tourist of the woods,
gardener whose garden is my lover’s body,
sky-in-the-pond gazer, cloud oh-so-slowly
going nowhere, I could stay here forever,
and that’s precisely the problem. Revise—
change it up. How’s this? Rooted, ready
to spend my life here, I’m also prepared
to leave here in the morning if need be—
an attitude that seeks to balance the sheer
luck of being here at all with the will to choose
the road that leads everywhere all at once.
Clinging’s an adopted child of fearful mind.
Trouble is, the mind can cling to freedom, too.
Because I am, you are. Inseparable,
we interact, interweave, sustain,
enrage, entertain, sometimes mourn.
Earth’s a revolving evolution
of die-back and start over, an inscrutable
roll of the eons. I have star dust in my bones,
an opposable thumb, a much too keen
sense of survival and danger. Watch me
twitch and quiver, nose to the wind, very
like that shade of brown on four nimble
hooves now stalking my lilies and garden
roses. The vole skulks, the red-tail rises
above a world that’s cruel but generous.
It’s “the way things is.” Go on, eat my roses.
I remember waking to bells, city-wide,
an ode to joy on the loose, and to sex, also
before breakfast. Hard rolls, chocolate.
That was 1970, the Klimt frieze
to Beethoven, 1902—before my puritan
parents were born. Just now, I receive
a friend’s photos of Vienna: a rhino
in the zoo, (exotic); the Klimt, of course;
a building bombed to rubble WWII
in the German retreat: beauty and waste,
No one, and something always held
captive. Nowhere is there joy without angst,
the fuel of pleasure. See Klimt’s golden women
(with pubic hair) (behind them, skeletons).
Habeas corpus—but who has custody
of the mind? Thoughts come in flocks, sway
through the air, and then the bird gang’s gone,
only to be replaced by words I wouldn’t say
to my worst enemy. Mind rhymes with kind,
but thoughts kick like a cat in a sandbox
who’s just done with its business and has its eye
on climbing the curtains. The drunk monkey
is another way of putting it. Just breathe.
Offer the elephant a little stick to hold as we
move through the day, trying to outwit the fox.
Yes, it’s a zoo. Yes, we pretend to love reason, do
justice, listen closely, follow the heart
to the greater good . . . Then the mule stamps its foot.
Am I in over my head? Well, it’s my head,
and I jumped into the old pond on my own
volition. Or so I contend, old frog unsure
if I’m moved by free will or by the crazy lure
of the depths. Watch my thoughts float, surface,
then melt—airborne. Gone? I’ll just be a lotus.
There’s mud down here aplenty to root in.
I’ll meditate until I’m provisional, makeshift,
rather than slapdash in the image of God
as I was told. Or is God made in my own
image of the self, transformed by the unlimited
power I covet when I’m tangled up in fear.
So much for old pond, frog jumps in—splash!
Enough. I’m on my way up now for air.
I’m asked if I think I can make a living
writing poems. That’s a question to ignore.
One good look at the word livelihood,
and it’s clear I’m in it for nothing—
for life, for life’s hooded mystery laid
bare. For that alone. Each line is a road
to nowhere. Each word is a silky snare.
Gather and let go, follow the impulse
that leads away from my indulging the will
to pleasure only. Now don’t get me wrong,
I’m in it for joy, not for gain. As for pain
that flashes along a nerve—it lessons
me, relaxes my grasp on impasse
and fear. Gather and let go: a discipline.
Take action? Or do nothing? It offends,
does it not, doing nothing when the Earth
is endangered—too much carbon, and a greed
that profits off another’s poverty, ending
life as we know it. But do we know it?
We know, Take no prisoners. We know, I’m safe
enough, who cares? We know the complicit
pact between deceit and action—
and we do nothing? Doing nothing is
an action. Here’s the rub: Nothing doing
is a spiritual path that embraces life’s
generosity and protects it by doing nothing
that would harm. We come as close as we can.
Make an effortless effort. Take a breath.