Two Poems by George Franklin
Lot’s Lament
Because I could not see what she saw, I invented the burning city that gives no heat, I planted the pillar of salt that is no resource, And now, as their shadows wave at my feet, I imagine the horrified look she gave And salvage her look that has turned from me. I almost forgot the pillar, the unfinished temple, My marriage to impossibility: I keep finding The face that abandons me: still turning, Too violent and rapid to feel, Like colors that blend on a spinning wheel Whose motion I neither inspire nor postpone. I want to wear her, to wear her out, But my face is no more expressive than stone. Though it shatter me, I must break within Where she stares beneath my forehead’s drawn skin, Toward the mended vision reversed past my eyes, Toward a law I cannot recognize, To the haven where I am accused and disowned, Where the wheel is stopped and I break apart Into colors that I have never known.
Elegy in Broken Stanzas
George Franklin’s most recent book of poetry, Lamentations, can be found at Ristretto Books.