Certain Rivers

When it hurts we return to the banks of certain rivers

—Czesław Miłosz

 

When a river’s crossed,

how many families hold their breath?

 

Breath-made rivers they cannot keep inside,

one after another, the only thought: Adelante.

 

Later, with children,

with hours of work wearing down the body,

 

these breath-made rivers run through

dreams and stories

 

they tell their children not to voice—

small faces hold still

 

while questions begin to course

and shadows dam the back of the throat.

 

*
 

I have made a myth of our river;

in telling the myth, one river becomes

 

many rivers, the one my mother crossed

lost in the one I cross now

 

in ink. You can’t step into the same river twice,

but you can try:

 

the sound will grow, will lap and splash,

sound of displacement,

 

sound of will, of wanting, in your mind,

sound of steps going nowhere.

 

*

 

Water knows how to be lost,

has a need for it, just watch:

 

the rain is all scramble and clearing

of tracks; watch a napkin

 

over a puddle, how water goes for broke

to be lost,

 

clings, rises,

soaks the fabric, pretending part

 

like it does in clouds that grow, give,

and clear.

 

*

 

Shadow is a kind of water

in that it knows one way to be lost:

Just wait, it says, just wait.

 

*

 

Water knows its way to truth:

you can see what lies at the bottom

 

of rivers, you can wash away the dirt

to see your hands again. Water is, then, not

 

the truth but a way to it; shadow then

is not a lie but something also passing over truth.

 

Down the street at noon, you cannot look around

without seeing others making the same, strained face.

 

A country also knows its way to truth,

but can choose to pass over it.

 

In this country of water and shadow,

truth is strained from our faces.

 

*

 

My mother turns to water on the phone,

the river of her voice carries the years between us,

 

years where I have strained to catch

something of our changing faces.

 

The river of her voice is a kind of truth I know,

I see what lies at the bottom of these years,

 

I wash away the dirt

and see my hands tremble.

 

*

 

Water knows how to be lost,

has a need for it, but it cannot choose:

 

a river runs to ocean

and is not lost, just ocean;

 

a river runs dry and is lost,

you think, but later it returns,

 

and only then do you ask

what is a river, but never answer,

 

happy to have the river.

People know how to be lost to others,

 

crossing rivers helps.

People know, but they must choose,

 

and, even then, they are not lost

to themselves. Mother, you brought me

 

with you over water,

over a way to truth,

 

over the distance of your shadow,

and in shadows now we wait

 

for the other to call.

 

*

 

Sometimes she calls in tears,

and like an earthworm when the rain comes

and fills its burrow, a part of me

 

works itself out to the surface to breathe.

I can hear the water in her words,

flooding sentences of love

 

and regret cloud what I know

how to say. Whatever actual clouds

in the distance between her and I

 

rearrange as she continues

to break and give herself over

to the ten or fifteen minutes it takes

 

to grieve that one cannot grieve,

 

no hay tiempo,

tus hermanos, esta casa

nunca está limpia

no ves

Cuída bien

esa niña tuya

Lo siento

no hablamos suficiente

deberíamos

gente muere, ¿sabes?

 

I know

 

this voice from other nights,

other cold moments when I’ve stopped

in my life to listen, drummed

 

out from the dirt of where I live

and made to gleam like rain

and worms, glass bottle shards,

 

the hard face of a television

clicked off to leave a house quiet

but for the pleading half-whisper,

 

half-snore of a woman

with no time to grieve.


Also by José Angel Araguz

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