The Proper Binge » words » poems

Annunciation at the Hookses

Annunciation at the Hookses
by Michael Symmons Roberts

With or without wings he is coming
at incredible speed from everywhere
to this baking terrace -- to here --
as she pours herself an ice-cold drink
outside a house that rocks on cliffs.
She wears shades, flakes in a deckchair.
A red crescent dries above her lip.

O Gabriel make her waking as gentle
as the eye-blue of a distant sail.
Still she’ll drop her half-full glass
in shock and joy at what you ask.
With a choked-up ‘yes’ it all begins-
the afternoon sea will leap and scale
the cliffs to offer its obedience.

The sun will nuzzle like a pet
at her ankles, and in that twilight
shells will sing the vespers of love,
and momentarily across the globe
the day will check in mid-stride
like it’s just stepped off a tube,
looking for bearings, the way up and out.

« before :: after »

August 2007, Yvonne Koh