A
Today, you see only the letter a when you read.
All other letters fall awaythe pouting y,
the disconcerted r, the liquids caught inside
the concave uall gone in the absolute a. In Hebrew, the first letter of the alphabet is
aleph, as is the Greek alpha. In school, large apples hang on walls, a giant A bright red. Red is the color of a. A rushes
into your first words, barbaric and without shame, stamped as it is on report cards and
meat.
Pin it to an adulterers blouse; shout it as you careen into the rocks, or just
before; or when you rise out of bed at night in sweat, knowing only what you dreamed was
so elemental you have no word for it. An apple a day keeps the doctor away. Apple an and
away. And your apple falls away from the page that stays the way its able, that lies
there, lies to you.
Allah, Adam, Ariel. Every time you form your mouth around the a-ness of the a, or listen to a newborn learn its name, or a poet
from A.D., when and becomes a, and catatonic
becomes aa, and aardvark becomes aaa, and and
and becomes a awhen all the words bow
down and lift up their sails to the wind of your voice, your gift to the wind and the
world youre in, your stars, your names for God; when you see thousands of as and nothing else, say the letter over and
over. Say a, say a. Say a, because one day, one by one, they will
disappear, leave the page, your head, and the silent, infant world.
from
Consolation Miracle (