Effigies
They delve into cubic rubble tunnellers
of particularity burrowing
through the multitudinous dusts of brick
ash the skin’s microscopic scales
Touching at last beyond a chair’s straight
back an elbow crooked in a sleeve
A child and a woman as they were at a table
together when the dust met them
(meeting itself could go no further)
The house closed over them choked every opening
took each hand upon the table their arms
her breasts beneath the porous woollen shirt
Laid itself heavily over the bright kerchief
Embalmed the boy’s ink curls
The searcher’s hands uncover them clothed
for winter mid-morning They might be
plaster casts in their blanket of ruin
Even the chalk loaf she was about to slice
with the sand knife
The rescuers bring oxygen
(It spills before them in a flood)
They bring light to the dead
But the dead (who are their own effigies)
have no need of it
from Technologies and Other Poems, Polygon, 1990