Whenever I yawn on the lawn
with my sister’s toy poodle on my lap,
he cranes his neck to sniff my breath.
What is it about the odour
of my lungs that makes him snuffle it
down like a muzzleloader?
Does a whiff at those moments,
looking down his nose,
show the echt aspects of my psyche
in tea leaf respects?
When you yawn, your entire head
scrunches. For just an instant
your thoughts short-circuit, adjourn,
reset, and wring
out with the exhalation.
Raf could be catching the eye
of the thought in my sigh / the waft of
cognition / the fragrance
from half-baked ideas.
As he sniffs, his pupils dilate,
scouring the roof of my mouth
with those big grapes in case
essence has a presence
within the ridges of rugae.
He seems bothered there might be something in there
stealing air – in cre men ta lly
impelling the yawn from the beginning.
My suspicion is: steeped
in the lower lobe where
the alveoli only inflate at the apex
of an earnest breath, one’s soul is found,
stuck at some juncture
between blood and air,
slushing like flotsam – coral
in spume. The ethereal spirit glugs
around bronchiole depths as gas
rushes in faithfully to replace the vacuum
that would otherwise set in –
the same wet flapping
you get at the bend near the end
of a toilet unclogging.
I submit as proof: dead people
don’t breathe. They become sans soul
matter once their chests cave in.
Ce léger parfum est mon âme.
You can’t spell ‘spiritual realm’
without the words
‘real’ or ‘ritual’.
What’s the running theory
on the soulless sophisticates
Theophile Gautier begrudgingly
bootlicked with popularist critique?
It must take the kind of yawn drawn
long enough, only the languor
and insouciance of privilege
could stent an exit
wide enough, for the soul to slip up
and out one’s oesophagus – only
to dispossess its host, husked
of any moral sustenance,
of any fair heir left in there.
Grandad’s spirit left with his final breath.
I know this because he flinched a little and gurgled.
Whilst upright, a thin line of pearlescent drool
oozed from his mouth that night,
up his cheek and into his eye.
On account of this, pro tem,
I’m a little sceptical of Sir Isaac Newton.
It’s safe to say I’m in no need
of exorcism or a discount deal
at the Tobin Brothers’.
Each time I set the seal
back on a yawn, Raf sinks
back in my lap as if
I’ve caught him in the act,
severed mid-séance –
a conditioned avoidance response.
Hopefully he’s just content
ectoplasm isn’t gathering in the chaps of my lips.
Which is not to say it has evaporated
hitherto or gathered since.
The flicker in his eyes might
simply be embarrassment –
that one of his humans
is comprised, at his core,
of vacuousness and regrettably
a fair pocket of chronic miasma.
I do, after all,
yawn lavishly
and have asthma.