
Poetas y Pintores: Artists Conversing with Verse
The Artist The Poet
Regina Diaz María Meléndez
"Pass Back Through Me" (detail)
2005
Acrylic on Canvas, 30" x 40"
The Poet
María Meléndez
Remedio
Let go your keys, let go your gun,
let go your good pen and your rings,
let your wolf mask go
and kiss goodbye
your goddess figurine.
There is a time to grip
your talismans,
a time to strip yourself of them.
Spirit and flesh
will have sometimes had enough
of go-betweens—
A refastening
of our noses and our ears
onto our soul
can only be accomplished
in the company of master exemplars.
Take wolves, each with a soul full of scents:
asperine willow leaves
and damp earth, willow-rooted.
At the end of summer, a wolf’s soul hears
cottonwood catkins’
long trajectory down an ageless azimuth,
feels, in her inner ear,
myriad shifts of air
as the tufty seeds ride twilit rays
and glow as we imagine all
eternal things to glow.
A remedy for when you’ve lost your sense
of Spirit in the world,
a simple spell for home lycanthropy:
Smell the new season,
acrid, tensed to grow
in budding wolf willow,
and feel the heat recede
from a moose’s corpse—then
recuerda esta loba.
Recuerda…from the Spanish recordar
which is at root not remember or re-mind,
but pass back through the heart—
let her pass back through your heart again,
this wolf.






