The Liar (poem)

The Liar (poem) Poem Text

The Liar

What I thought was love

in me, I find a thousand instances

as fear. (Of the tree's shadow

winding around the chair, a distant music

of frozen birds rattling

in the cold.

Wherever I go to claim

my flesh, there are entrances

of spirit. And even its comforts

are hideous uses I strain

to understand.

Though I am a man

who is loud

on the birth

of his ways. Publically redefining

each change in my soul, as if I had predicted

them,

and profited, biblically, even though

their chanting weight,

erased familiarity

from my face.

A question, I think

an answer; whatever sits

counting the minutes

till you die.

When they say "It is Roi

who is dead." I wonder

who will they mean?