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115 |
W is for Walt Whitman's Soul
|
One of the very first Indian words to enter the English language was the Hindustani slang for plunder: "loot."
WILLIAM DALRYMPLE
It sits with a fork made from a lotus on an ivory chair eating an elephant steak in the company of bears and feral nautch girls on a monsoon evening incandescent with an appetite as mighty as railroads spann’d across seas and reclines, its cheeks burnished, its ass varnished by suns setting on bronze and sugared with saltpetre, its torso a tableaux for the annals of rectitude, the theatre for roiling or robust passage, a veritable Suez Canal towards missionary victories which thrust from such bejeweled and oiled loins anointed by coin— that emission of plump plums, lump sums into the Ganges, that coiling coy virgin maiden winding her languid locks, batting her lashes to its lashes— its spine a gentle wire. Supine, its belly swells with salt and figs with meat and treaties, it corks open a profound song— itself it sings into books heavy with truths on the chair dressed with leather and raw hides kissed by ox blood smeared with beef dung lined with raw silk woven from worms plucked from boughs basted across its pious beaming eyes its spidery ghosted lids, and its byzantine glance unmoors from its Chinese porcelain and crosses the ebony table polished with lac secreted from the cloaca of the kerria lacca set with glazed cakes eaten by pinked mouths wearing crimson robes, to its guests polished and glossed and stained by the ooze drawn to color the uncolored raw linen, the wood, the human. Then its wrist cuffed by gold and cowries and studded with coral draws a whisper- thin muslin veil dyed carmine— sucked from crushed scale of cochineal boiled in ammonia and bled into curds and rouge glinting sanguineous and turbid between bug and rug snug a thug in redcoat or a turncoat carrying urns of this stuff— from estates of cocoa coconut calico— across its face while soft éclairs of chocolate bumble out from its plumed rump choked with gum and linseed flax and cassia cinnamon and pepper like so many lines of blood underwriting the mutton and not the goat so it can sell them with a name of a place like scarves or garlanded whores moored to wharves suckled by mother of pearl or teas named after Earls and they with whole scores to settle settle for homemade cures nettles ginger turmeric— a paste or to taste—and it steals and seals in letters scented with sandal sent abroad waxed and pressed with cornelian gems honed from ground it owns and makes stone from their flesh ekes ink from their sweat soaks indigo in lye fermented with time and makes color so it can bid for its own passage, the passage, O of this soul, to India!
| Divya Victor | Social Commentaries,History & Politics,Money & Economics,Race & Ethnicity |
116 |
J is for Jarasandha
|
There once lived a great king whose twin wives could bear him no children. A wandering sage saw the king’s grief and offered him a magical mango. She who ate the mango would be with child. As he had two wives, the king cut the mango into two perfect halves and offered one half to each wife. After nine months, each wife gave birth to one lifeless half. Horrified, the king ordered these clots of flesh to be left in the forest. A wandering demon found the two lifeless halves and cupped one in each palm. When she brought them together, the two halves fused and a whole child was made in front of her eyes—the demon named the child Jarasandha.
Years passed by and this child grew to be an intimidating and invincible warrior. In a fight with Bhim, an equally invincible warrior, Jarasandha was ripped in half by his enemy. But, each time he was ripped apart, his halves found a way to meet up and become whole. Krishna, who witnessed how Jarasandha’s flesh found its own way back to flesh, motioned to his own cousin with his fingers: toss the halves of his body in opposite directions, he
suggested.
So, when Bhim ripped Jarasandha apart once again, he swung his left half to the right side of the arena and his right half to the left. And his body found no way to return to itself.
In the Toronto airport, where I’ve arrived for a conference, I watch an older Punjabi lady—made to sit in a wheelchair behind two lines of customs officials, a security guard, a translator, and a service-staff member—scream that her son is outside the airport may she please just go tell him she is here she is here she is here please. I stand there holding her hand, my own luggage reluctantly traveling in loops on the belt. Beta—child— she says to me: please tell them my son is here and I am here what is the problem let me go let me go to him.
| Divya Victor | Relationships,Family & Ancestors,Mythology & Folklore,Fairy-tales & Legends |
117 |
M is for Michael Jackson and Malcolm X
|
In the epilogue to The Autobiography of Malcolm X, Alex Haley recounts meeting a pensive Malcolm at the Kennedy airport, watching newly immigrated children “romping and playing” in their sudden home. “By tomorrow night,” Malcolm says to Alex, “they’ll know how to say their first English word—nigger.”
Before cable television arrived in India, America was a white nation. I imagined New England snows dusting California and Miami’s beaches stretched across Appalachia. America was a papier-mâché parody patched together by a cheaply hired prop maker. Geographic accuracy was sacrificed to the interpersonal dramas of Betty and Veronica, and the American banquet was limited to the malted and fried offerings in Pop’s Chock’lit Shoppe, where the Riverdale gang solved the real geopolitical problems of how to get Reggie off Moose’s back with the help of Archie’s fumbling charms. Here, class warfare came with a side of fries. There were rumors of distant family members “settling” in “North Dakota” or “Oklahoma”—names that put themselves together like Lego castles: hard-edged and jutting out with an abrupt L or a particularly pokey K.
Blackness was just a rumor too. Blackness flickered in the background of photographs they sent back from these mysterious locations: here’s an uncle waving at us from a glittering Times Square (Los Angeles); here’s an aunt waving at us mid-way through the soft-focus neon breakfasts with Aunt Jemima’s maple syrup (made from maple leaves); here’s a nephew waving at us next to the poster of a red and white Michael Jordan in a quilted bedroom, his rotund brown body snuggled in tie-dye and tucked into tartan flannel sheets. Blackness was a rumor, that is, until Michael Jackson’s Bad ripped into our consciousness and suddenly, knobby-kneed pre-teens found a way to make stringy curls with coconut oil stolen from their mothers’ kitchens and started moonwalking backwards into my Social Studies classrooms, all snappy crotch and jaunty limbs. We girls rolled our eyes but we kept on watching.
It wasn’t long before Jackson’s unsparing gaze, draped in slick black leather, began replacing the glowing pastel Ganeshes and Saraswatis hanging above study desks. But replacing an elephantine god’s soft paunch with lean, mean celebrity did not save us from our own ignorance of how blackness and brownness were connected through a struggle for economic self-realization and human rights. While kids in Chennai were rehearsing Michael Peters’ signature choreography for “Thriller” and pretending to be zombies—little exemplary half-dead spectacles—Union Carbide was industriously shirking responsibility for the Bhopal Tragedy, which choked thousands of Indians to death, and black mortality was spiking in violent, homicidal protest of the US DEA’s drug buys and cocaine busts.
In other words, Tamilians blinked away Michael Jackson’s blackness. We kept the heat and thunder of his fat synth bass, which found its way into Ilayaraaja’s electric disco in films of the late 1980s like Vetri Vizha and Agni Natchathiram. We kept the ebullient automation of his moves, which became a muscular theme in Prabhu Deva’s blend of baggy breakdance and whimsical terukoothu folk dancing in the 1990s. But we forgot his blackness. In time, the lightning of his presence was replaced by the grey hum of CNN, Cops, Law & Order, and the dull horror of handcuffs on dark wrists. Posters yellowed, cassettes spooled out, and my moonwalking classmates found their scientific calculators and study guides again.
But the rumors of racial difference in George Bush Sr.’s America continued to bloom and wilt in morose cycles in my childhood homes into the 1990s. In damp clusters, it grew like moss under rocks. Rootless, it stretched its stringy arms and held us by the ankles; it grew like mold between bathroom tiles; it spun itself fine and strong, webbing into corners where our brooms couldn’t reach. In time, the mossy rocks lined our after-dinner walks past the hibiscus bushes. In time, a grandmother slipped on the bathroom tiles and stayed in bed, fed conjee by a fatherless girl brought in from the village and the moss grew between her toes and drew her into the earth where they buried the nameless pets and tossed the chicken feathers. In time, the spiders hung so low they fell into pickle jars every time a child fished for a gooseberry or a slice of stony green mango from the brine. And from this brine, in time, we learned to believe that it existed. And as Tamilian families began drifting from the flashy monsoons of India to the June gloom of the California bay or to the sharp wet summers of the Keys, they carried the damp and stench in suitcases and buried it in hushed conversations. They made a poultice of moss and spider web and lodged it in the prayer books, hung it around the children’s necks like a talisman, and they said—as long as she doesn’t marry a black man.
| Divya Victor | Social Commentaries,Money & Economics,Race & Ethnicity |
118 |
How It Worked
|
It was hard to sit there with my father,
watching one of my sister's girls playing
a set of tennis against my son or daughter
because he'd forget himself and with a groan
of disappointment or a grunt
of sympathetic exertion make it clear
that he was rooting for my sister's child
and against mine. There was no use
calling him on it, because he'd deny it
and get angry. So I would get angry
but try not to show it, until I couldn't
stand it any longer and would get up
and walk away. That was how it worked
between us, the unspoken building up
like thunderheads above the tennis court,
where the kids played on, not caring who won
and hardly noticing the sky had darkened.
| Jeffrey Harrison | null |
119 |
In Memory of My Heavy Metal Years
|
There goes the
aluminum, the antimony, the arsenic
the barium, the cadmium,
the cesium, the gadolinium
the lead
the mercury
the nickel, the thalium, and
the tin.
There goes that job spraying lawns
with chemicals, driving the Merc
three-quarter ton
with a tank on the back
and no brakes
through West Vancouver, bouncing
the wheels against the curb
to stop
and on the steep
majesterial streets
that afford such views
that they could hire
two talentless dickbrains
to weed and feed
front and back
and back again
in two weeks.
That was a heavy metal job
that probably killed
a lot of salmon too.
There goes the shotgun
pellets from the pheasants
we shot out in Abbotsford and Langley
plucked and hung
in the concrete basement
in New Westminster
fresh
with the stink of pheasant guts.
Oily, delicious pheasants
roasted always
with a little buckshot
after a day off.
There goes those summers painting
houses with my brother
wire-brushing off
the old paint, breathing
it in on the wooden ladders
white guys working
on a tan
and saving up for the Peugot
ten speed. There goes
the seventies
out from my body.
Led Zep Humble Pie Burning Spear, and
Marley too, adidas, big E Levis
from Lee's Men's Wear on Sixth Street
there goes that brown house
paint, broken down
and pissed out.
There goes those years
beachcombing along the Fraser
from New West to Lulu Island
pulling out cedar blocks
that had floated free
from the shake factory booms.
Pulling the blocks out
of that industrial muck
grey green and foamy
down near Scott Paper, the mill
that Larry worked in until
it moved
production south.
Then stacking and drying the blocks
to split them into shakes
with a birchwood
hammer and an adze. There goes
that industrial mix
from the Fraser
from the riverbank
from the bars by the river.
There goes sucking on
a hose to get some gas into that
golden sixty-six Valiant convertible
with the leaky roof and
the 273 and putting it
right into the carb to sputter
the piece of shit to life
Again. Still, pretty great
to have a convertible with a radio
(turn the radio on
roadrunner roadrunner!)
and a five-gallon gas can
and a piece of garden hose
and a mouthful of
Regular, a mouthful of
Regular Leaded
from the Chevron
in the strip mall across Tenth Ave.
There goes working
on a printing press
under the sidewalk
of the storefront at Cambie and Hastings
that was later the Caribbean place
and is now
going to be gentrified.
There goes that time.
There goes all the shitty renos
on Broadway, on Hastings, on Commercial Drive,
there goes the dust
from that wall Mike took
down with a chain saw
when Talonbooks was above the foundry
and there goes the foundry dust
and the sweep of chemicals
that would take your head off
like six beers later at the Waldorf.
There goes the mystery
unmarked jars of cleaners and solvents and grease
that Larry nicked from the mill
and we used on the cars and bikes
and on our hands.
There goes that job at the self-serve
Shell with a car wash across from the college
when it was in temporary trailers
just to show that education
for the masses
was taken seriously.
And there goes, hopefully, the dust
and everything from that week
in September
when what was stored in the three
buildings of the World
Trade Centre was pulverized
and burnt Into the air
and Nancy and I stayed in the apartment
with t-shirts tied
over our mouth and nose
and didn't go out until
we went to Milano's
where the Fireman drank for free
with the IRA guys
leaning at the bar. There goes
that time.
There goes the
Aluminum, the antimony, the arsenic
the barium, the cadmium,
the cesium, the gadolinium
the lead
the mercury
the nickel, the thalium, and
the tin. Broken down
pissed out.
There goes those jobs, those times
there goes those relations
of inside and outside, of work
and nerves and fat and soft tissue
and synapses.
There goes that set of relationsinside and outside. There goes that body
that use and surplus | Jeff Derksen | Living,Coming of Age,The Body |
120 |
The Wall
|
Someone has opened a giant map
and with the tips of our fingers,
each of us suddenly blind,
we track the black cold of this monument
for names we know
like finding a route home.
Lost here
this damp spring morning,
the cherries exploding like the fourth of July,
we wonder how many maps of Viet Nam
sold those years,
so many strange sounding places.
One of us holds a magnifying glass
to McCarroll, McMorris, McNabb,
small print in the polished stone,
the way a neighbor, say, in Neoga, Illinois
might have done, late at night
searching that faraway land on his kitchen table,
hearing again the morning paper
thump against the front door,
that boy on his bike in the dark
grown and gone—what was his name,that kid from down the block?—
Khe Sanh, Da Nang, Hanoi.
--for PFC William "Willie" Searle
| Bruce Guernsey | null |
121 |
Strict Diet
|
Though the doctors said no salt,
salt was all my father craved.
His body bloated, skin water-logged
and gray, still he wanted potato chips,
honey-baked ham, greasy slabs
of Polish sausage from Piekutowski's.
He begged for pepperoni pizza,
garlic butter, ribs slathered in sauce.
But when I did the shopping,
I searched only for labels that saidlow sodium and no preservatives, instead
bringing home heads of broccoli,
turkey burgers, shredded wheat.
And when he died anyway,
guilt gnawed me like an ulcer—
how could I have denied him
his few final pleasures?—
until I found Big Mac wrappers
stuffed under the car seat,
jars of pickles in the hall closet,
and hidden among wads of tissues
near the night stand, his stash—
a half-used canister of salt.
I sat down on his sagging mattress
now stripped of stained sheets
and studied that blue label
with the girl in the yellow dress
holding her umbrella against a rain
of salt still falling from the sky.
| James Crews | null |
122 |
First Fall
|
I’m your guide here. In the evening-dark
morning streets, I point and name.
Look, the sycamores, their mottled,
paint-by-number bark. Look, the leaves
rusting and crisping at the edges.
I walk through Schiller Park with you
on my chest. Stars smolder well
into daylight. Look, the pond, the ducks,
the dogs paddling after their prized sticks.
Fall is when the only things you know
because I’ve named them
begin to end. Soon I’ll have another
season to offer you: frost soft
on the window and a porthole
sighed there, ice sleeving the bare
gray branches. The first time you see
something die, you won’t know it might
come back. I’m desperate for you
to love the world because I brought you here.
| Maggie Smith | Living,Parenthood,Relationships,Family & Ancestors,Nature,Fall |
123 |
You Could Never Take A Car to Greenland,
|
my daughter says. Unless the car could float.
Unless by car you mean boat. Unless the ocean
turned to ice and promised not to crack.
Unless Greenland floated over here,
having lifted its anchor. Unless we could row
our country there. Our whole continent
would have to come along, wouldn't it? Unless
we cut ourselves free. What kind of saw
could we use for that? What kind of oars
could deliver one country to another?
She asks, Why is Greenland called Greenland
if it’s not green? Why is Iceland called
Iceland if it’s greener than Greenland?
Unless it’s a trick, a lie: the name Greenland
is an ad for Greenland. Who would go
promised nothing but ice? Who would cut
her home to pieces and row away for that?
| Maggie Smith | Living,Youth,Relationships,Family & Ancestors |
124 |
Parachute
|
Because a lie is not a lie if the teller
believes it, the way beautiful things
reassure us of the world’s wholeness,
of our wholeness, is not quite a lie.
Beautiful things believe their own
narrative, the narrative that makes them
beautiful. I almost believed it
until the new mother strapped
her infant to her chest, opened
the eighth-floor window,
and jumped. My daughter tells me,
after her preschool field trip
to the Firefighter Museum,
about the elephant mask, its hose
like a trunk, and the video of a man
on fire being smothered in blankets.
She asks me if she knows anyone
who got dead in a fire, anyone who
got fired. When will I die? she asks.
When I was a child, I churched
my hands, I steepled my hands,
and all the people were inside,
each finger a man, a woman,
a child. When I die, will you
still love me? she asks. The mother
cracked on the pavement—
how did the baby live? Look,
he smiles and totters around
the apartment eight stories up.
Beautiful things reassure us
of the world’s wholeness:
each child sliding down the pole
into the fire captain’s arms.
But what’s whole doesn’t sell
itself as such: buy this whole apple,
this whole car. Live this whole life.
A lie is not a lie if the teller
believes it? Next time the man
in the video will not ignite.
The baby will open like a parachute.
| Maggie Smith | Living,Death,Parenthood,Relationships,Family & Ancestors |
125 |
What I Carried
|
I carried my fear of the world
to my children, but they refused it.
I carried my fear of the world
on my chest, where I once carried
my children, where some nights it slept
as newborns sleep, where it purred
but mostly growled, where it licked
sweat from my clavicles.
I carried my fear of the world
and apprenticed myself to the fear.
I carried my fear of the world
and it became my teacher.
I carried it, and it repaid me
by teaching me how to carry it.
I carried my fear of the world
the way an animal carries a kill in its jaws
but in reverse: I was the kill, the gift.
Whose feet would I be left at?
I carried my fear of the world
as if it could protect me from the world.
I carried my fear of the world
and for my children modeled marveling
at its beauty but keeping my hands still—
keeping my eyes on its mouth, its teeth.
I carried my fear of the world.
I stroked it or I did not dare to stroke it.
I carried my fear of the world
and it became my teacher.
It taught me how to keep quiet and still
I carried my fear of the world
and my love for the world.
I carried my terrible awe.
I carried my fear of the world
without knowing how to set it down.
I carried my fear of the world
and let it nuzzle close to me,
and when it nipped, when it bit
down hard to taste me, part of me
shined: I had been right.
I carried my fear of the world
and it taught me I had been right.
I carried it and loved it
for making me right.
I carried my fear of the world
and it taught me how to carry it.
I carried my fear of the world
to my children and laid it down
at their feet, a kill, a gift.
Or I was laid at their feet.
| Maggie Smith | Living,Life Choices,Relationships,Family & Ancestors |
126 |
The First Woman
|
She was my Sunday school teacher
when I was just seven and eight.
He was the newly hired pastor,
an albino, alarming sight
with his transparent eyelashes
and mouse-pink skin that looked like it
might hurt whenever she caressed
his arm. Since Eva was her name,
to my child’s mind it made great sense
that she should fall in love with him.
He was Adán. Before the Fall
and afterward, her invert twin.
And she, Eva, was blonde as well,
though more robust, like Liv Ullmann.
I loved her honey hair, her full
lips; her green eyes a nameless sin.
(Not that I worried all that much—
the church was Presbyterian.)
In Sunday school, her way to teach
us kids to pray was to comment
on all the beauty we could touch
or see in our environment.
My hand was always in the air
to volunteer my sentiment.
Since other kids considered prayer
a chore, the floor was usually mine.
My list of joys left out her hair
but blessed the red hibiscus seen
through the windows while others bowed
their heads. Her heart I schemed to win
with purple prose on meringue clouds.
—For who was Adán, anyway,
I thought, but nada spelled backward?
While hers, reversed, called out, Ave! Ave! The lyric of a bird
born and airborne on the same day.
But it was night when I saw her
outside the church for the last time:
yellow light, mosquitoes, summer.
I shaped a barking dog, a fine
but disembodied pair of wings
with my hands. She spoke in hushed tones
to my parents. The next day I would find
myself up north, in a strange house,
without my tongue and almost blind,
there was so much to see. This caused
Cuba, my past, to be eclipsed
in time, but Eva stayed, a loss.
Ave, I learned, meant also this:Farewell! I haven’t seen her since.
| Aleida Rodríguez | Living,Coming of Age,Youth,Activities,School & Learning,Religion,Christianity |
127 |
History
|
In art, politics, school, church, business, love
or marriage—in a piece of work or in a career—
strongly spent is synonymous with kept.
—Robert Frost
She taught me the names of flowers: calendula, ranunculus, Iceland
poppy. And the medicinal uses of herbs: Fenugreek opens up a
stuffy head; goldenseal lubricates the cracked mucous membranes.
Over a circa 1820 American dropleaf table, she told me asparagus
was the broom of the kidneys. I hadn't understood at first and
thought she'd used a German word I pictured as brüm and not as the
little stalks standing on their heads, sweeping out the impurities. I
learned to make the perfect roux for soufflé and became her
efficient assistant in the kitchen—dicing and chopping, she once
told me, with unparalleled patience. Then one day she began to
accidentally break my Depression glassware, and I recalled how
she'd giggled when she told me that in two years of marriage she
had single-handedly decimated her husband's glass collection
dating from 1790 to 1810, including a rare wedding goblet. In the
doorway to the back porch she stated simply that my presence
made her feel strangled, it was nothing I was doing or could do. We
saw a therapist for six years, while my collection dwindled then
became memory. With unparalleled patience I jumped through
hoop after burning hoop, the therapist pointed out, but I heard that
as praise for my prowess and continued to balance Bauer plates on
my nose on command; hold growling tigers off with Windsor dining
room chairs; juggle career, job, hope, and nightly tempests with
unparalleled dexterity. I could reassemble anything: shattered pictures
of us crossing the street with canes in the future, my hand under her
elbow. My heart. But what I lacked, I can see now, was the ability
to dissemble. Finally, she brought home a Cuisinart food processor,
and I started hearing the minutes slicing away with ferocious velocity,
time doing its soft-shoe faster and faster like Fred Astaire on
amphetamines. Memories of flowers and herbs were sacrificed to
the angry god of its vortex. Your voice is like acid on my skin, she
said after twelve years, then grabbed her Cuisinart and left me
behind like so much history.
| Aleida Rodríguez | Living,Marriage & Companionship,Separation & Divorce,Love,Heartache & Loss,Realistic & Complicated |
128 |
Little Cuba Stories/Cuentos de Cuba
|
V.
A.
There are no doors between the rooms. The archways bore
through the house like a tunnel through a mountain. The room
one falls into after my parents’ is the largest and serves as two
bedrooms divided by an invisible wall. Half of it is my brother’s
and the other half my sister and I share, but not at first.
Earlier, I have a bed to myself on the side of the room nearest the
kitchen. My bed is low and on one side a wooden rail can be
dragged up noisily and clicked into place.
It is here my little goat wakes me, grabbing the covers off
me with her teeth. We play in the empty pig shelter at the
far end of the patio while my mother washes clothes in a
palangana and throws the soapy water across the concrete,
where it steams.
But my father is a butcher by profession, and my family
has other plans for my goat: a Sunday picnic at the zoo in
Havana. The day is huge and blue and breezy. My sister
teases me for not eating and says my goat is delicious. I
stray away to watch the monkeys.
I give one of the monkeys near the fence my banana. As it
finishes peeling it meticulously, another monkey appears
behind it and shoves the banana into its own mouth. The
first monkey turns around, slaps it in the face with the
empty peel, but that monkey isn’t sorry and starts jumping
and screeching and showing its yellow teeth.
For many years, those monkeys are all I can remember
about the picnic at the zoo.
B.
Later, when my sister and I share a bed on the other side of the room,
I can see the tall narrow cabinet right inside my parents’ room. My
father always puts his hat on top of it as he walks in. And at night,
through the mosquito netting, it is a tall thin man wearing a straw
hat, lurking just outside the door, watching me in a sinister way. The
dead weight of my sister’s habitual leg thrown across my body is no
talisman. I have to keep waking myself up, sweaty and tense, to
make sure he hasn’t moved any closer.
| Aleida Rodríguez | Living,Youth,Nature,Animals |
129 |
The Invisible Body
|
Regla lesbia: Flexible rule that may be adjusted to any
body to be measured. Compare regla fija: standard.
—The Velázquez Dictionary
I.
In the garden, it’s there. Even when you’re inside you feel it,
as though it were you standing naked among the weeds,
the tips of the bougainvillea bursting into flame, your nipples
ruffled like the skin of a lake by a breeze.
You worship the invisible body like an old-fashioned lover, from afar,
loving the specificity of space between you.
Sometimes at night it stretches out on the empty side
of the bed, stares at you with the length of its invisible surface.
Every contour of your body not filled by you is molded
by the attentiveness of the invisible body, whose breath surrounds
you.
It’s more than prayer it wants—more than language, with its
conditions.
The invisible body demands you invent new senses to receive it,
new places on your body to marvel at its subtlety,
like the eyes of the deaf percussionist that perceive sound.
II.
The invisible body wants you to become a satellite dish,
tuned to what exists only because your body calls to it.
Like the woman who had her kitchen remodeled to make room
for the microwave she’d entered a contest for. Then won.
III.
When asked whether falling in love was about acquisitiveness,
about the ego, the seventy-five-year-old poet
responded that the ego had nothing to do with it;
it was the need for union with the beloved.
Rumi asks, Who is it we spend our entire lives loving?
IV.
How, then, do you measure the invisible body,
which resists commitment but is faithful?
Is it clear who the beloved is, when no clear
body exists that can be measured against a standard?
V.
The invisible body sometimes acquires a body—it’s so convincing,
it takes you a while to figure out it’s really the invisible body.
Like someone who has been reading your journal,
it has decoded from your petty, daily complaints the open sesame
that slides the stone from the hidden cave’s opening
and cleans you out while you sleep, leaving a sarcastic note.
It wants you to know it was doing you a favor, besides,
how else did you think you’d discover the cave’s precise location?
When Aphrodite sharpens you, you sacrifice a little of yourself,
willingly, as a knife does, so that you may become better at it.
VI.
This is the point at which the invisible body speaks
in italics, the Ouija board of poetry.
In my mind, says the invisible body, that time capsule shuttlingthrough space, I hold, in all the languages of the world,
your love, rushed like holographic platters to a table,steaming into the future long after you’ve ceased to shine,
the silver faces of your beloved bobbing out of the darkness,the black velvet pillow of your life on which you offer them for view.
VII.
The invisible body is created out of your longing, your longing
compressing invisible molecules together into an absence you
recognize.
That is the way one blind man sees the world—after the fact,
in photographs he took, once he had passed through it.
| Aleida Rodríguez | Living,The Body,Love,Desire |
130 |
Trying to See Auras at the Airport
|
Recycled over and over
people born look like parents,
grandparents, sister or brother,
or perhaps a throwback
from an earlier ancestor,
the hawk nose, a hard ridged forehead,
the cleft in the chin or a blue birthmark
on the arm, the stomach,
the dainty fresh bum of a newborn
each unique like a snowflake never
can you guess what’s on their mind
sometimes I can feel what they’re feeling
detect it like hairs on the back of my arms,
together we live, talk, walk the same sidewalks,
to die buried in a foreign cemetery
for others to sit upon ponder their
own light, why am I free, what must I do,
does someone love me like I do,
new skin gives way to wrinkles,
hair fades to gray, bones grow strong
then decay, strength seeps every time
one pees, sleeps, ages, loves,
muscles grow then shrink the body
a temporary vessel destination unknown.
April 28, 2002
| Angela C. Trudell Vasquez | Living,Growing Old,The Body,Time & Brevity,Relationships,Family & Ancestors |
131 |
Mark Twain
|
If the ashes of Mark Twain
lie in the Mississippi River
then I’m sure he does rise up some days
emerge from dark polluted depths
to walk over water to land
and scans the horizon for change
being a curious sort,
he sees the crisis rise again
another war on the horizon
and shakes his craggy head to say no not again
he hopes truth-sayers still exist
who don’t have to wait until their dead.
December 2002
| Angela C. Trudell Vasquez | Mythology & Folklore,Ghosts & the Supernatural |
132 |
[A blue anchor grains of grit in a tall sky sewing]
|
A blue anchor grains of grit in a tall sky sewing
I inch and only sometimes as far as the twisted pole gone in spare colors
Too late the last express passes through the dust of gardens
| John Ashbery | null |
133 |
Ilulissat
|
Outside
outside myself
there is a world,
he rumbled, subject to my incursions
—William Carlos Williams, Paterson
i.
impossible.
sterile extrusion
the rigour of its beauty
its crumpled geometry
worked to defeat.
light, stopped.
locked in its form
shuttered and windless
in dry rifts,
split, furrowed, mottled, creased.
ii.
trundling
bulging from behind,
its too heavy body
its natural carapace
shelving green,
sinking the sea beneath it
the difficulty piling up,
rising to the surface.
iii.
swirling backward
on blue flowering currents
rolling up
sudden, in spray and mist
—like the turning of a page
that leaves us blinded for a second—
unlocked in a milky scum
half hid, long on its axis
growing open wounds
of violet, emerald, silver.
a point of astonishment.
lapses of silence. air.
| Lesley Harrison | Nature,Landscapes & Pastorals,Seas, Rivers, & Streams |
134 |
Nude
|
from Pia Arke's exhibition Arctic Hysteria at Greenland's
National Museum & Archives, Nuuk, 2010
i.
I am in my body. I am here, in front of you. I am the temperature in this room. I am undressed in my nudity; I am the light and shade you feel. I am more like other people than like you. I have before and after. I am my self, entirely and only. My outside and inside are continuous. I am muscle, organ, fluid, bone. I am monumental. You are the only one who sees me. ii.
I am not naked as I am; I am naked as you see me. I am transparent, almost visible. I have a time and a place. I am tribal and exotic. I must always carry objects. You are heroic. I am a complete museum, the story of my own making. I am a mirror to you; you are reflected in the looking at me. At best, I mimic you. You write me. When you leave, I will no longer exist. iii.
I am a single conscious point. I am indifferent. I am unself, like a photogram. I am prehistoric, before definition. Your body falls over me. I have depth and luminescence. I am neither here nor there; I have infinite extension. I live inside the lived world, the light and dark inside my head like dream substance. I am camera obscura, the room itself. I both adore and resist.
| Lesley Harrison | Desire,Social Commentaries,Gender & Sexuality |
135 |
Eday, North Isles
|
GUITH
a greylag morning,
the sea a conscious blue.
CALF SOUND
orca
in a sea blue room,
breathing pearls that rise to the surface.
GROATHA
the plenum of the shed:
every part infilled with flutter,
glass, sheep turd, gusts of damp.
GREENTOFT
gunshot punctures a field
of geese, their clackety rise
a flock of helicopters.
THE SETTER STONE
an old man steps out of the ground
all lines and angles,
sun snagged in his beard.
MILLCROFT
a tree softened house:
red willow, alder, pine,
eucalyptus rooting.
WARNESS
a stream hole
a pure, dense fall;
one ocean falling into another.
PLANTATION
wren, silver lark, crow
woody snipe, curlew, hen hawk
day owl, starling.
SOUTH END
the Varagen, beaded with spotlights
curves through the dark
round great holes in the sea
WARD HILL
climbing with the moon,
the wind blowing round my mouth—
a low note, like an owl.
| Lesley Harrison | Nature,Seas, Rivers, & Streams |
136 |
In an Artist's Studio
|
One face looks out from all his canvases,
One selfsame figure sits or walks or leans:
We found her hidden just behind those screens,
That mirror gave back all her loveliness.
A queen in opal or in ruby dress,
A nameless girl in freshest summer-greens,
A saint, an angel — every canvas means
The same one meaning, neither more or less.
He feeds upon her face by day and night,
And she with true kind eyes looks back on him,
Fair as the moon and joyful as the light:
Not wan with waiting, not with sorrow dim;
Not as she is, but was when hope shone bright;
Not as she is, but as she fills his dream.
| Christina Rossetti | null |
137 |
A Triad
|
Three sang of love together: one with lips
Crimson, with cheeks and bosom in a glow,
Flushed to the yellow hair and finger tips;
And one there sang who soft and smooth as snow
Bloomed like a tinted hyacinth at a show;
And one was blue with famine after love,
Who like a harpstring snapped rang harsh and low
The burden of what those were singing of.
One shamed herself in love; one temperately
Grew gross in soulless love, a sluggish wife;
One famished died for love. Thus two of three
Took death for love and won him after strife;
One droned in sweetness like a fattened bee:
All on the threshold, yet all short of life.
| Christina Rossetti | null |
138 |
From the Antique
|
It's a weary life, it is, she said:
Doubly blank in a woman's lot:
I wish and I wish I were a man:
Or, better then any being, were not:
Were nothing at all in all the world,
Not a body and not a soul:
Not so much as a grain of dust
Or a drop of water from pole to pole.
Still the world would wag on the same,
Still the seasons go and come:
Blossoms bloom as in days of old,
Cherries ripen and wild bees hum.
None would miss me in all the world,
How much less would care or weep:
I should be nothing, while all the rest
Would wake and weary and fall asleep.
| Christina Rossetti | null |
139 |
Winter: My Secret
|
I tell my secret? No indeed, not I;
Perhaps some day, who knows?
But not today; it froze, and blows and snows,
And you’re too curious: fie!
You want to hear it? well:
Only, my secret’s mine, and I won’t tell.
Or, after all, perhaps there’s none:
Suppose there is no secret after all,
But only just my fun.
Today’s a nipping day, a biting day;
In which one wants a shawl,
A veil, a cloak, and other wraps:
I cannot ope to everyone who taps,
And let the draughts come whistling thro’ my hall;
Come bounding and surrounding me,
Come buffeting, astounding me,
Nipping and clipping thro’ my wraps and all.
I wear my mask for warmth: who ever shows
His nose to Russian snows
To be pecked at by every wind that blows?
You would not peck? I thank you for good will,
Believe, but leave the truth untested still.
Spring’s an expansive time: yet I don’t trust
March with its peck of dust,
Nor April with its rainbow-crowned brief showers,
Nor even May, whose flowers
One frost may wither thro’ the sunless hours.
Perhaps some languid summer day,
When drowsy birds sing less and less,
And golden fruit is ripening to excess,
If there’s not too much sun nor too much cloud,
And the warm wind is neither still nor loud,
Perhaps my secret I may say,
Or you may guess.
| Christina Rossetti | null |
140 |
No, Thank You, John
|
I never said I loved you, John:
Why will you tease me, day by day,
And wax a weariness to think upon
With always "do" and "pray"?
You know I never loved you, John;
No fault of mine made me your toast:
Why will you haunt me with a face as wan
As shows an hour-old ghost?
I dare say Meg or Moll would take
Pity upon you, if you'd ask:
And pray don't remain single for my sake
Who can't perform that task.
I have no heart?—Perhaps I have not;
But then you're mad to take offence
That I don't give you what I have not got:
Use your common sense.
Let bygones be bygones:
Don't call me false, who owed not to be true:
I'd rather answer "No" to fifty Johns
Than answer "Yes" to you.
Let's mar our pleasant days no more,
Song-birds of passage, days of youth:
Catch at to-day, forget the days before:
I'll wink at your untruth.
Let us strike hands as hearty friends;
No more, no less: and friendship's good:
Only don't keep in view ulterior ends,
And points not understood
In open treaty. Rise above
Quibbles and shuffling off and on:
Here's friendship for you if you like; but love,—
No, thank you, John.
| Christina Rossetti | null |
141 |
A Study (A Soul)
|
She stands as pale as Parian statues stand;
Like Cleopatra when she turned at bay,
And felt her strength above the Roman sway,
And felt the aspic writhing in her hand.
Her face is steadfast toward the shadowy land,
For dim beyond it looms the light of day;
Her feet are steadfast; all the arduous way
That foot-track hath not wavered on the sand.
She stands there like a beacon thro' the night,
A pale clear beacon where the storm-drift is;
She stands alone, a wonder deathly white;
She stands there patient, nerved with inner might,
Indomitable in her feebleness,
Her face and will athirst against the light.
| Christina Rossetti | null |
142 |
Negative Space
|
1.
I was born on a Tuesday in April.
I didn't cry. Not because I was stunned. I wasn't even mad.
I was the lucky egg, trained for gratitude
inside the belly for nine months straight.
Two workers welded bunk beds at the end
of the delivery room. One on top of the other.
My universe might have been the white lime ceiling,
or the embodiment of Einstein's bent space
in the aluminum springs of the bed above
that curved toward the center.
Neither cold, nor warm.
"It was a clear day," my mother told me.
It's hard to believe
there were a few romantic evenings
when I was conceived, a buzz in the retina
and red-laced magma
decadently peeling off
a silver candlestick.
Infants' cries and milk fever
turned to salt from the stench of bleach—
abrasive, unequivocal.
With a piece of cloth wrapped on the end of a stick,
the janitor casually extends the negative space
of the black-and-white tiled floor
like a mouth of broken teeth, a baleen of darkness
sieving out new human destinies.
2.
1968. At the dock, ships arriving from the East
dumped punctured rice bags, mice
and the delirium of the Cultural Revolution.
A couple of men in uniform
cleared out the church
in the middle of the night.
The locals saw the priest in the yard
wearing only his underwear, shivering from the cold.
Their eyes, disillusioned, questioned one another:
"Wasn't he the one who pardoned our sins?"
Icons burned in front of their eyes,
icons and the holy scriptures.
Witnesses stepped farther back,
as if looking at love letters
nobody dared to claim.
Crosses were plucked from graves. And from each mouth
spilled irreversible promises:
mounds of dirt the rains would smooth down
sooner or later.
Children dragged church bells by the tongue.
(Why didn’t they think of this before?)
Overnight, the dome was demolished, instantly revealing
a myriad of nameless stars that chased the crowd
like flies on a dead horse.
And what could replace Sunday mass now?
Women brought cauldrons into the yard.
Men filled up their pipes; smoke rose
into the air, against gravity's pull.
Nails in worn out shoes exposed stigmata
that bled in the wrong places—
a new code of sanctification,
of man, by man.
3.
"Read!"—I was told. Who said that?
Angel Gabriel, or my first-grade teacher
who had dark roots underneath her bleached curls?
Language arrived fragmentary
split in syllables, spasmodic
like code in times of war.
"Continue where your classmate left off!"
A long sentence tied us to one another
without connotation as if inside an idiom.
Someone would get to read the noun, another the verb,
a third one a pronoun. . .
I always got the exclamation mark at the end—
a mere grimace, a small curse.
A tall cast-iron stove below the portrait of the dictator,
puffing smoke from its temples, enough heat for everyone.
On the blackboard,
leftover diphthongs from yesterday or the day before
rubbed against one another like kittens.
After dusk, I looked for another language outside the window,
my eyes glued to a constellation
(they call these types "dreamers")
my discovery possibly a journey into the past,
toward a galaxy already dead, nonexistent,
the kind of news that needs millions of years
to reach me.
"Read!"—the angel shook me for a third time
her finger pointing to an arbitrary word
a million light years apart from its object. (It didn't matter who
was first).
Negative space sketched my onomatopoeic profile
of body and shadow in an accidental encounter.
4.
Language is erosive.
It makes us recluses,
a wind through the canyons
carving our paleontological eras
for everyone to read.
Under the revised testament of my skin
bellows a gold-cast bull, an alluring object,
a need for attention.
Then comes the unleavened bread and a last supper,
which, remarkably, is repeated several times
between ice ages.
Lower yet, Sodom.
I recognize it from the stench of sulfur.
I hold my nose. Freud would have done the same.
And then Cain,
a crow taught him how to bury his own brother. . .
And at the bottom,
Adam’s gentlemanlike sin
under which scientists
discover earlier epochs of famine.
Between unidentified layers,
wanderings in the sand, the search for a new prophet. . .
I try to understand my people.
Their language is plain. Some words,
were actually never uttered, like pages stuck together
in a book fresh off the press
and long after it sits on a shelf.
This, too, lives inside me
within insidious bubbles of air, negative
spaces where I can find little historical rest,
but also where utter ruin may originate.
5.
Little left of the snow three days ago.
Its blanket ripped away, exposing
dog shit and the bruises of routine.
Negative space gives form to the woods
and to the mad woman—a silhouette
of the goddess Athena
wearing a pair of flip flops,
an owl on her shoulder.
It’s minus zero. The factory’s gate gnashes its teeth
behind the back of the last worker. Blowing noses, shivering,
mucus. . .
A virus circulates through the workplace,
secretly, intimately touching one person after another,
a current of sensuality.
It softens the tone.
But nothing unites them more than their frailty,
The one-sizes-fits-all shoes you must grow accustomed to
By filling the extra space with cotton,
Or curling your ill-fitting toes.
6.
In Halil’s yard,
rules were sacrilege.
His eight children entertained themselves
by carrying famine on their shoulders,
recalling St. Bartholomew’s flayed skin.
Starving, filthy, hazel-eyed—
three qualities that unexpectedly coalesce
in the bright light, strung together like sneezes.
One’s famine was another’s consolation.
“Look at them! It’s a sin for us to complain.
They’re even worse off than us!”
But even Halil found his own consolation
in the old woman Zyra, “barren and paralyzed,”
the root origin of despair.
This was our highlands landscape,
hierarchical, where each family
would make out a different expiration date
on the roof below their own.
Schadenfreude was the only river
that could turn mills.
But if this hierarchy shifted,
and our roof gave signs of ruin,
my mother would plant tulips in the garden,
white tulips, our false image,
a scarecrow to keep predators away.
7.
Nearly nothing was mentioned in the letters he sent from prison,
just two lines, on top of the page:
“I am well. . .” and “If you can,
please send me a pair of woolen socks.”
From them, I learned to read between the lines:
negative spaces, the unsaid, gestures,
insomnia that like a hat’s shadow
fails to shade your chin and ears.
And in the photographs’ white background,
acrophobia adds to the color of their eyes: blue,
green, gray, and ultimately, chesnut brown,
as, earthward, we lower our gaze.
I learned to read the empty spaces the dead left
behind—a pair of folded glasses
after the reading’s done and discourse commences.
Or the musical chairs game called "love,"
where there are less empty seats than people.
If you don’t want to be the last one standing
you must predict when the music will stop.
(Who, though, has really succeeded?)
Perhaps a little practice can be useful in this case.
I don’t mean squatting, jumping, stretching,
but listening to the same music every day from the start,
the same miserable vinyl record
so that you’ll recognize its cracks
before it recognizes yours.
8.
Midnight. Snoring,
meaningless sounds that stain the side of the wall
that belongs to no one.
So where are we? What dimension?
Who foots the bill at a time like this
without lambs or sinners,
when even angels record nothing?
The street’s clearly visible
under the neon 24-hour-service sign
above the funeral home.
There was a music shop next to it
that closed down a few months ago;
the shop shared a wall with the funeral home,
shared the same water pipes and the same gate to heaven.
But the coffins won,
the wide-shouldered coffins that narrow down
in the shape of a mummy, not a human.
Wood of the highest quality, swears the owner,
and pure silk inside, pleated like a stomach
that can digest even a bulldozer.
When asleep we're simply five limbs. Starfish.
If you cut one limb, it will grow back.
Even a single limb could recreate us from the beginning,
a single hope.
Negative space is always fertile.
9.
No one knows if it was simply a matter of mixed
or some other reason why I used to see
what I wasn't supposed to see—
the ending of things.
It wasn’t a mystical gift, but like a blood clot
in the darkness of a vein, I held on to reason,
as it circulated from the bottom up
and not the other way around as we were told.
I used to start from the edges
and with my left hand or a croupier’s stick
gather the balls and dice from the corners
and then watch the bettors
as neither a winner nor a loser.
There's nothing sillier
than watching a film in reverse
where after the climax, the protagonists
are replaced by circumstances,
and circumstances replaced by minor characters,
their tongues plastered behind a single, fatal smirk
Life and my short lunar calendar slipped away
like carbon paper sending off as much light as necessary,
skipping the details, the contrast and sharp colors.
Lunar time is short. Until the actual end,
there are years enough, the negative spaces.
What to do with them when the verb
has already been uttered, a conclusive sentence
with Latin syntax, or more than that:
didactic.
| Luljeta Lleshanaku | Living,Coming of Age,Religion,Faith & Doubt,Arts & Sciences,Language & Linguistics,Social Commentaries,History & Politics |
143 |
Via Politica
|
I grew up in a big house
where weakness and expressions of joy
deserved punishment.
And I was raised on the via politica
with the grease of yesterday’s glories,
a thick grease collected under arctic skies.
I was lit up. My notebooks, my hair, my heart reeked of
smoke.
That’s when we saw each other clearly.
Or rather, what remained of us.
Damaged like lottery numbers
scratched away with a blade.
How different we were!
Those with round faces were righteous;
those with narrow faces were cautious.
One listened secretly to Puccini,
another to silence, the music’s music.
The oldest one declaimed monologues
inside a ten-by-ten-foot cell
he had built for himself.
And the mysterious one
simply had diabetes.
But how similar we were in severe circumstances!
Alarmed like a flock of magpies
that the smallest stone sends into the sky
toward the mouth of the abyss.
Then it became obvious there wasn’t enough space for everyone.
We separated. Some went on living in via verbum,
telling of what they knew, what they witnessed,
and so, through their narrative,
creating their own grease.
The others crossed over the ocean.
And those in particular who went farthest away
never speak of their annoying history
of wretched survival, burying it
in the darkest crevices on their being.
Unfortunately, as with perfume, its scent
lingers there for much, much longer.
| Luljeta Lleshanaku | Social Commentaries,History & Politics |
144 |
Acupuncture
|
Among the personal objects inside a 2100-year-old Chinese tomb,
archaeologists found nine acupuncture needles,
four gold and five silver.
Long before knowing why,
ancient doctors knew that pain
must be fought with pain.
It’s quite simple: an array of needles pricking your arm
for a properly functioning heart and lungs.
Needles in the feet to ease insomnia and stress.
Needles between your eyes to fight infertility.
A little pain here,
and the effect is felt elsewhere
Once, a group of explorers set out to plant a flag on the South
Pole,
a needle at the heel of the globe, in the middle of nowhere.
But before the mission was completed
a new world war had begun.
The impact of the needle was felt in the world’s brain,
in the lobe responsible for short-term memory.
When Russia used ideology as acupuncture—a needle over the
Urals—
it impacted the pancreas and the control of blood sugar:
America paid tenfold for whiskey during Prohibition,
and at post offices, copies of Joyce’s
“immoral” Ulysses were stored for burning.
The universe functions as a single body. Stars form lines of
needles
carefully pinned to a broad hairy back.
Their impact is felt in the digestive tract, each day
a new beginning. How can you begin a new day
not having fully absorbed yesterday’s protein?
I was a child when my first teacher
mispronounced my last name twice. That pricked me
like a needle.
A small needle in the earlobe. And suddenly,
my vision cleared—
I saw poetry,
the perfect disguise.
| Luljeta Lleshanaku | Social Commentaries,History & Politics |
145 |
Homo Antarcticus
|
"The wild will keep calling and calling forever in your ears. You
cannot escape the 'little voices.'"
—Frank Wild
1.
Here I rest, in South Georgia.
A few feet of evolution away
lie the graves of whale hunters, pointing north.
A white fence shields them from elephant seals
and their apocalyptic screams that each day warn
of the end of the world, or maybe the beginning. . .
I survived five expeditions to the Pole.
The one before last, “Imperial Trans-Antarctica,” nearly killed me.
For two years I put up with the ice—no man can reap or sow
these fields.
And, unlike farmers, I didn’t even need to ask God for rain,
because ice is sated
and more desolate than the Sahara.
I survived distance. Wrote one message after another
beginning with a capital letter and a "PS." at the end.
My own personal post office under my pillow
closed for two years already, on holiday.
I survived six month-long polar days and nights;
to this day, I don't know which one was worse.
My epitaph is simple. Carved in granite:
FRANK WILD
18 April 1873
19 August 1939
“Shackleton’s
Right Hand Man”
From those cast away here
by a defect in the engine of the ship
or nostalgia of the womb.
2.
Ah yes. . . in the beginning was the ship. The ship stuck in ice.
Endurance.
Ships are women. They prefer soft seas.
In the best-case scenario, she’s called La Santa Maria
and she throws you, like Columbus, on some foreign shore.
But if you get too close to her. . .
The very day after
we washed her deck with warm water and soap,
warmed her arteries with gin,
stroked her lower back with our surrogate songs,
shaved our beards and exposed the illiterate lines on our faces,
she took off.
And from the shore,
we saw how she broke her ribs, sinking,
aft first, so fast we didn’t even have time to pray,
leaving behind her ash-tree fragrance
and faux pearls on the water.
“Such a woman!” someone laughed bitterly,
“She knows when to leave so as not to be forgotten.”
3.
A woman, naturally, has no business there.
Antarctica is a masculine continent—
male penguins keep the eggs warm,
the moon stands up on the street to urinate
after being kicked out of the tavern,
the cold like a cut-throat razor, dulled for three thousand years,
and the sled dogs, the Huskies,
we kill with a single bullet
so they won’t starve to death. In this way
we instill a little character into the new land
before the arrival of Conquistadors, thieves,
assassins, missionaries, prostitutes,
the first invading army of every continent.
Antarctica is a man’s continent,
because only a man chooses to break into the darkness of the mind
by conquering the body,
as Amundsen and Scott did, their glory
reaching to the apex of ecstasy.
Zero degree of geographical latitude,
utter collapse.
4.
Hunger is overestimated. The stomach functions much like the
brain:
when it has nothing to think about, it feeds off memories.
It can last three days just thinking of a single biscuit.
But those who have a better memory, meaning a much stronger
acidity,
can go on for months
remembering a slice of prosciutto, two fried eggs,
sweetly folding their eyelids like napkins after a meal.
Then hallucinations begin. Banquets. Easter supper.
Feet move impatiently under the table;
the scent of rosemary wafts from a platter
and two clean serving hands with burns here and there.
That's when you feel grief-stricken
and you attack the seals and penguins with your
alpine knives and shoes like a madman
in an empty amphitheater.
Or is this, too, a hallucination,
and in this case not ours
but Antarctica's?
And when clarity finally returns,
both stomach and brain
notice only their own deep wrinkles.
5.
Blubber, blubber, seal's blubber.
Blubber that keeps your spirits alive, rendering it for fuel, for light,
blubber to mask the body's foul odor,
—a mixture of doubt, hope, and ammonia.
And if you have nothing better to do,
think of a cow's thigh hanging at the butcher's,
its delicate streak of fat
like a silk ribbon.
I survived even this sarcasm.
And every night, before bed,
we read recipes to each other
one of a few things we secretly rescued
from the ship before she sank,
as if these items were her lingerie.
What a show it was!
What pathos in pronouncing prosciutto, sugar, omelet!
What sensuality in milk, parsley, cinnamon!
We made these words up ourselves.
Nothing exists until its moment of absence.
But first, in order to warm up our mouths
like actors before going on stage,
we'd repeat mechanically, palates dry,
"Bless us, O Lord,
and this food we've received through your mercy.”
6.
It was the Romans who spoiled the word
studying rhetoric
before anatomy and mathematics:Vir bonus dicendi peritus
“The good man skilled in speaking" (Marcus Porcius Cato)
But in Antarctica, words are measured differently: by calories!
With a simple greeting you lose five calories,
just as many to keep a fire burning for a full minute.
And a Ciceronian argument can consume a whole day’s
nutrition;
think carefully before you open your mouth.
The word is overestimated.
Sometimes it’s enough to avert your eyes from your shoes
to imply “gangrene”;
and a vague exchange of glances between men
is enough to understand that the ice is cracking beneath your feet
and death is closer than your fingers.
7.
Stretched smooth from end to end—such is Antarctica. In fact,
even a baby’s skin looks withered by comparison.
No emotions. No regrets. No warnings.
Either fight or die.
My father was like this more or less. A teacher at a village school.
In classrooms that smelled of sheep-wool pullovers
drying on the body. And eyes that moved freely
in their hollows, like toes
inside an older sibling’s shoes.
Unlike the Romans,
my father preached about justice and honor
his hands folded behind his back.
His shoulders seemed twice as wide
as his worn jacket.
I inherited his sharp, gray gaze
and his soft voice.
Eyes that say “Go” and a voice that says “Stay.”
You never know which one to trust.
8.
And mother? Oh, she was simply Captain Cook’s niece,
—the great James Cook—
from morning to night
when she washed, swept, dug potatoes from the garden,
fixed her husband’s tie on Sundays
even from her bed, while in labor.
She never spoke of this. As it wasn’t necessary.
People speak of what they have, not what they are.
She was a tailor. Measured everyone's perimeter with a glance;
erred only on the width of one’s neck, an unknown strength.
Her large scissors followed
the white chalk line on the cloth so precisely. "Snip!"
She said little. Her silence followed the white outlines
of another tailor,
over a fabric much older than she was.
But now that I think of it,
how did the poor woman respond to her friends asking,
"Where is your son?"
"He's exploring the world."
"And what does he bring back from there?"
"Himself, alive, I hope."
"What's the point of returning empty-handed after two years?”
Was she at least a little proud of me? Of her Frank?
Certainly not. She was Captain Cook's niece.
The past always conquers.
9.
I was the first of thirteen children.
And as a rule, each of them
eyed one of my belongings.
One eyed my bed near the window
that overlooked the water where frogs lived
and asparagus grew on the shore.
Another eyed my green jacket bought with borrowed money,
poker cards, a fishing net,
my wicker chair with the damaged back.
Another whistled my favorite tune:
"What Will We Do with a Drunken Sailor?”
without reaching the refrain.
And yet another envied the basement
—that place I occupied in my father’s heart—
with its elm door hanging by a single hinge.
But the time hasn't come to leave home just yet,
until your own brother begins to use your shaving kit
and dreams of the same girl.
10.
What shaving kit? Antarctica makes you grow a double-beard
as if you were a hundred-year-old grave.
And, while you remember wasting time waiting in line at
barber's
another beard grows, a red one.
Here, each body part works for itself:
the stomach, hands, intestines, eyes. . .
The unity of the body is overestimated, too.
Only skin pulls everything together like a sled.
The skin? Which skin? Man loses his first skin
to his first love, like the snake early in spring
on a thorn-apple bush that blocks the way.
From that point on he stops counting the rest.
11.
I don’t know why it was named “Elephant Island,”
when it answered the ocean with the cries of a she-wolf.
We could only make out her sly teats under her belly. After
some time,
if she didn’t kill us first, we’d begin to cry like wolves ourselves.
Twenty-two people. Packed next to one another under two
inverted boats
like notes in Bach’s “Come, Sweet Death, Come Blessed Rest,”
with more pauses, a dramatic suffocation between breaths.
A dry, calcic cough was a sign of life. Or the delirious mutterings
of someone
dreaming aloud of “ice” in the middle of ice,
after they had cut off his toes.
But the hardest moment arrives in the morning,
when, with shut eyes and plugged nostrils,
as if drinking your own urine
you recycle the same lie for four months straight:
“Men, pack up your stuff! The boss might arrive today!”
And they obeyed me. Packed carefully each day from the start,
leaving nothing shap in the folds of their bags,
nothing that would spoil the line between fact and fiction.
It was a time when
routine grew more powerful than hope.
12.
Fish in the ocean toyed with our citizenship.
On the seventh mile, we left our medals behind, class ranks,
along with the dogs, potatoes, and a camera.
We made fire out of money
and kept only a single metal coin each
so that archaeologists might trace us more easily centuries later.
On Elephant Island, we had to bid farewell even to tobacco,
tobacco which reminded us of village alleyways
and walks home after midnight.
Time glided above us without touching a single strand of our
hair—
nonexistent, as if gliding above ancient cities,
exposing the solemnity of our white bones
and crickets on absent walls.
That’s when the ten commandments deserted us:
“Do not steal,” “Do not lie,” “Do not covet,”
“Honor your parents”. . .
save one of them perhaps,
the one about the holiness of Sunday.
We already had nothing. We belonged to no one.
An entirely new species: HOMO ANTARCTICUS.
A scientific proof that “forgotten” and “free”
mean the same thing.
13.
Two years after returning from the world of the dead,
you find your house taken over by another tenant
and the rent tripled,
the commemorative plaque nailed to the gate:
“Here lived F.W.”
And your lover, or better, ex-lover,
for the same reason,
in the arms of another
three times more handsome.
You see your own image sold at an auction.
Artifact. Original. “Brrramp. Sold!” The price so high
you can’t afford it. But even if you could,
you're an illegal customer,
holding a death certificate in your hand.
And you find your parents turned into winter trees
their eyes fixed on a large cloud of plaster.
They don’t expect visitors. Best not disturb them.
Let their leaves fall quietly where they will
let the crow's nest remain in the armpit of a branch,
where it has always been.
Perhaps you should take a shortcut, start over.
Or you know what? There’s a war going on nearby, they say.
Go there instead!
But this time die better.
14.
War’s never satisfied with flesh;
Fresh, branded, smoked,
with or without blood
blue blood, dark, thick, whatever kind.
And frozen blood like yours
could store at minus 40 degrees Celsius,
viruses from 1914 unscathed,
and the map of the old Empire
and Scott's hurt ego
and old coins minted with the head of Edward VII,
and Browning’s poetry and the epic of the unknown,
like an envelope inside an envelope,
all making you the ideal candidate.
Back on the ship, ammunition everywhere,
sailing through the cold Northern seas
where you had to learn a new language.
A new language is like a fish:
first, you need to remove its spine
in order to chew it.
Unlike in Antarctica,
one’s purpose in war is clear: kill or be killed,
though sometimes it’s the same difference.
Baltic nights gave you what Antarctica refused you:
the other half of the celestial sphere.
You meet Vera, the widow of a tea plantation owner,
a character out of a Baroque novel, her pupils blurred with dusk,
and the ritual of mourning fitted perfectly to her body
like a final journey.
15.
A man charmed by a glacier,
who knows too well the flawless forms of her body,
feels her eavesdropping gaze even when asleep,
her clean and distant breath
and her heart, a piece of ice, that melts inside a cigarette case
heated for drinking water,
finds it difficult to marry a real woman,
to marry Vera.
And Africa.
I bought land. Barren. Hundreds of acres. In Zululand.
I didn’t fare well with tobacco. Planted cotton instead,
chose bodily peace rather than meditation.
My nearest neighbor lived 45 miles away. White, of course.
And my fate, never blended with the blacks,
those beautiful statues, wrapped in straw.
I heard them nod off during lunch break,
like the oars of a boat,
in complete sync.
They knew where they were heading.
But I didn’t.
And I was right. It didn’t take long
before drought, floods, worms
destroyed everything. The bank left me only my own beard
and the malarial shadow of a baobab. Apart from other things,
Vera filled out divorce papers. The woman in the yellow dress,
yellow as quinine, yellow as the sigh of a hinge at dusk,
the woman married to the hero
who now can’t even manage a small plot of land.
16.
The man in front of me
—my master I call "Boss"—
is newly shaved, and dressed in a striped tie and jacket
as if the Prince of Wales or Fred Astaire,
a style that arrives here two years late.
He asks me to serve whiskey to clients at the bar
and chat them up
using their jargon, gestures,
sentences uninterrupted by mosquitoes,
and the abstract rhetoric of the Depression years.
And, to be frank,
he pays me for the latter.
But what do I know,
what does a survivor know about the art of living,
for which new instincts are needed, new muscles
and other kinds of heart valves?
Furthermore,
how can I obey such a spick-and-span boss,
having known the smoky gods of Antarctica
who recognize each other solely by the nose
and can end rebellions with a glance
and count the deaths as members of the crew?
How can I take orders from a boss whose name isn't Shackleton?
17.
"Second in command,” “Lieutenant,” “Shackleton’s right hand”
What did she see so clearly in me,
my drama teacher in elementary school
when she'd always assign me the role of Father Joseph,
of Gaspar the Magi offering Jesus frankincense,
or of John the Baptist always there to clear the path?
What did she see in my metallic pupils, baritone voice,
infrequent speech
as if scissors, bandage, and iodine
inside a first aid kit?
Under Antarctica's naked sky, each of us followed his own star.
Even the carpenter, his own heraldic calling.
You didn’t need much to feed them;
just a few crusts of insomnia and the tents' punctured holes.
My star was weak; you could hardly see it
hidden behind another larger, troubled star
like a calm valley that appears behind jagged peaks
more attractive when absent.
18.
What happened afterward can be told in a few words:
I worked in a mine; earth’s warm heart,
happened to be crueler than her frozen brain.
I laid railroad tracks South, always toward the Unknown.
It was like playing only two strings on a violin: joy and sorrow,
fatefully blending at the horizon.
I repaired houses. Another waste of time.
I never understood their weak points,
just as you can't make out eyes from genitals or mouth
in some underwater creatures.
And when I was left penniless,
I gave lectures about Antarctica,
water gurgling in my gullet every five words, for those few
who listened patiently to an adventure of survival.
Then Bea arrived. Or sweet Beatrice.
It was easy to grant her what I had left in my heart
—that set of heavy museum keys—
with no fear she might lose them.
Tired lungs and liver
could barely follow my split image
of bust and bottle of booze.
Like a prophet in the last circle of Dante’s Inferno,
I carried my own decapitated head in hand.
My ashes were lost at the base of a church. No one
thought of them.
It was a time of war. Another world war. The second
one not knowing what to do with her own ashes either.
19.
Some of us died in the war. Others took to the sea again,
the gray, cracked waters of the South,
decks perspiring fuel and alcohol.
Our random itineraries. Full-time melancholics.
For months in Antarctica,
we waited for our shadow to return
and consumed that question you ask yourself only once in your
lifetime,
the way one consumes chickenpox.
And the rest of the time,
we counted the scars left on our faces,
with a gesture you could call indifferent and epic,
or childlike.
| Luljeta Lleshanaku | Living,Death,Nature,Landscapes & Pastorals,Mythology & Folklore,Heroes & Patriotism |
146 |
All the Dead Boys Look Like Me
|
Last time I saw myself die is when police killed Jessie Hernandez
A 17 year old brown queer // who was sleeping in their car
Yesterday I saw myself die again // Fifty times I died in Orlando // &
I remember reading // Dr. José Esteban Muñoz before he passed
I was studying at NYU // where he was teaching // where he wrote shit
That made me feel like a queer brown survival was possible // But he didn’t
Survive & now // on the dancefloor // in the restroom // on the news // in my chest
There are another fifty bodies that look like mine // & are
Dead // & I’ve been marching for Black Lives & talking about police brutality
Against Native communities too // for years now // but this morning
I feel it // I really feel it again // How can we imagine ourselves // We being black native
Today // Brown people // How can we imagine ourselves
When All the Dead Boys Look Like Us? // Once I asked my nephew where he wanted
To go to College // What career he would like // as if
The whole world was his for the choosing // Once he answered me without fearing
Tombstones or cages or the hands from a father // The hands of my lover
Yesterday praised my whole body // Made angels from my lips // Ave Maria
Full of Grace // He propped me up like the roof of a cathedral // in NYC
Before we opened the news & read // & read about people who think two brown queers
Can’t build cathedrals // only cemeteries // & each time we kiss
A funeral plot opens // In the bedroom I accept his kiss // & I lose my reflection
I’m tired of writing this poem // but I want to say one last word about
Yesterday // my father called // I heard him cry for only the second time in my life
He sounded like he loved me // it’s something I’m rarely able to hear
& I hope // if anything // his sound is what my body remembers first.
| Christopher Soto | Living,Death,Love,Desire,Relationships,Gay, Lesbian, Queer,Social Commentaries,Crime & Punishment |
147 |
Heartbeats
|
Work out. Ten laps.
Chin ups. Look good.
Steam room. Dress warm.
Call home. Fresh air.
Eat right. Rest well.
Sweetheart. Safe sex.
Sore throat. Long flu.
Hard nodes. Beware.
Test blood. Count cells.
Reds thin. Whites low.
Dress warm. Eat well.
Short breath. Fatigue.
Night sweats. Dry cough.
Loose stools. Weight loss.
Get mad. Fight back.
Call home. Rest well.
Don't cry. Take charge.
No sex. Eat right.
Call home. Talk slow.
Chin up. No air.
Arms wide. Nodes hard.
Cough dry. Hold on.
Mouth wide. Drink this.
Breathe in. Breathe out.
No air. Breathe in.
Breathe in. No air.
Black out. White rooms.
Head hot. Feet cold.
No work. Eat right.
CAT scan. Chin up.
Breathe in. Breathe out.
No air. No air.
Thin blood. Sore lungs.
Mouth dry. Mind gone.
Six months? Three weeks?
Can't eat. No air.
Today? Tonight?
It waits. For me.
Sweet heart. Don't stop.
Breathe in. Breathe out.
| Melvin Dixon | Living,Health & Illness |
148 |
The Lord's Prayer
|
You can't fake it. You know when I fail
to achieve the expected: palm the becoming-
comatose bullfrog, legs collapsing as they may,
and chuck it (we used to say) high as you can.
Let it fly stone-like to the skylight in the low
dome of fog—another requirement of the game:
a foggy day and a bullfrog and you, Vincent.
The old code goes back and forth between us
as we take our turns, childhood pals, engaged
by the game we once called Kamikaze—now,
a nameless ceremony. Nameless not because
a boy's play calcifies in a man's conviction;
not because, despite our promise, you've become
a mid-rank fighter pilot, and I a minor poet;
and not because it's too unpleasant to name
what brings to hand that astonished muscle
only to leave it, later, sprawled on the current.
The perfect toss sends the critter shattering
for an instant, beyond fog, into the invisible.
Disappearance is success. Once you said, "My insides
tickle whenever it happens," and so I know
you've been tickled five times, and I three.
That's the score; the score matters little.
The name is gone because we're from here,
and, being native, cannot visit how it is
that an urge to which we tend tends to us—
how we are cruel, inscrutable, indefensible,
yet holy. How we send up bodies of praise from
our right hand, only to gather eventual elegies—
flesh stunned still as words—in our left.
Once again the center of the heavens
is earth. We've thrown as high as we can
for as long as we can remember, only to await
some return: a revelation, plummet, explosive
splash. So it is that two grown men
may stand again in stillness, awaiting word,
friends who glimpse for seconds at a time
earth as it is in heaven, ankle-deep
in Rowan Creek with eyes uplifted,
reflecting the fog to the fog itself.
| Anthony Carelli | Living,Youth,Nature,Animals,Religion,Christianity,The Spiritual |
149 |
I Look for You
|
I look for you early,
my rock and my refuge,
offering you worship
morning and night;
before your vastness
I come confused
and afraid, for you see
the thoughts of my heart.
What could the heart
and tongue compose,
or spirit’s strength
within me to suit you?
But song soothes you
and so I’ll give praise
to your being as long
as your breath-in-me moves.
| Solomon Ibn Gabirol | Religion,God & the Divine,Judaism,Yom Kippur |
150 |
Send Your Spirit
|
Send your spirit
to revive our corpses,
and ripple the longed-for
land again.
The crops come from you;
you’re good to all—
and always return
to restore what has been.
| Solomon Ibn Gabirol | Nature,Landscapes & Pastorals,Religion,God & the Divine,Judaism,Passover |
151 |
Lord,
|
all my desire is here before you,
whether or not I speak of it:
I'd seek your favor, for an instant, then die—
if only you would grant my wish.
I'd place my spirit in your hand,
then sleep—and in that sleep find sweetness.
I wander from you—and die alive;
the closer I cling—I live to die.
How to approach I still don't know,
nor on what words I might rely.
Instruct me, Lord: advise and guide me.
Free me from my prison of lies.
Teach me while I can bear the affliction—
do not, Lord, despise my plea;
before I've become my own burden
and the little I am weighs on me,
and against my will, I give in
as worms eat bones that weary of me.
I'll come to the place my forefathers reached,
and by their place of rest find rest.
Earth's back to me is foreign;
my one true home is in its dust.
Till now my youth has done what it would:
When will I provide for myself?
The world He placed in my heart has kept me
from tending to my end and after.
How could I come to serve my Lord,
when I am still desire's prisoner?
How could I ask for a place on high,
when I know the worm will be my sister?
How at that end could my heart be glad,
when I do not know what death will bring?
Day after day and night after night
reduce the flesh upon me to nothing.
Into the winds they'll scatter my spirit.
To dust they'll return the little remaining.
What can I say—with desire my enemy,
from boyhood till now pursuing me:
What is Time to me but your Will?
If you're not with me, what will I be?
I stand bereft of any virtue:
only your justice and mercy shield me.
But why should I speak, or even aspire?
Lord, before you is all my desire.
| Yehudah Halevi | Living,Death,Religion,God & the Divine,Judaism,Yom Kippur |
152 |
At the Hour of Closing
|
Lord of wondrous workings,grant us understanding— now at the hour of closing.
A chosen few are called,
their eyes toward you lifting—
they stand exalted in their trembling now, at the hour of closing.
They pour forth their souls;
erase, then, their straying—
and grant them, Lord, your absolution now at the hour of closing.
Be a shelter for them
through all their suffering;
consign them only to rejoicing now, at the hour of closing.
Show them your compassion,
in your justice turning
on all who brought oppression to them— now at the hour of closing.
Recall their fathers’ merit
and count it as merit for them;
renew their days as once they were, now, at the hour of closing.
Call for the year of grace—
the remnant flock’s returning
to Oholìbah and Oholàh— now at the hour of closing.
| Moses ibn Ezra | Religion,Judaism |
153 |
Prayer
|
For all
the pain
passed down
the genes
or latent
in the very grain
of being;
for the lordless
mornings,
the smear
of spirit
words intuit
and inter;
for all
the nightfall
neverness
inking
into me
even now,
my prayer
is that a mind
blurred
by anxiety
or despair
might find
here
a trace
of peace.
| Christian Wiman | Living,The Mind,Religion,The Spiritual |
154 |
[the target is a record of the past history of the target]
|
the target is a record of the past history of the target
or forever hold your or told you so complacent
mention repeats numerous trills in memory
sugar and spice in the bag suppressed
supposedly on an axis allow for the idea to rest
| Jen Hofer | null |
155 |
[a bullet has passed through]
|
a bullet has passed through
spent the time elsewhere
to need, tenderly, potential
does not need to be bought, cannot
in fact refute the cause, rather catches
| Jen Hofer | null |
156 |
Waiting For a Poem
|
I’m waiting for a poem,
something rough, not elaborate or out of control,
something undisturbed by curses, a white raven
released from darkness.
Words that come naturally, without aiming at anything,
a bullet without a target,
warning shots to the sky
in newly occupied lands.
A poem that will well up in my chest
and until it arrives
I will listen to my children fighting in the next room
and cast my gaze down at the table
at an empty glass of milk
with a trace of white along its rim
my throat wrapped in silver
a napkin in a napkin ring
waiting for late guests to arrive. . . .
| Luljeta Lleshanaku | Arts & Sciences,Poetry & Poets,Social Commentaries,War & Conflict |
157 |
Prisoners
|
Prisoners
guilty or not
always look the same when they are released—
patriarchs dethroned.
This one just passed through the gate
head bowed despite not being tall
his gestures like a Bedouin’s
entering the tent
he carried on his back all day long.
Cotton curtains, stone walls, the smell of burnt lime
take him back to the moment
the cold war ended.
The other day his sheet was hung up in the courtyard
as if to flaunt the blood stain
after a wedding night.
Faces tarnished by sun
surround him, all eyes and ears:
“What did you dream of last night?”
A prisoner’s dreams
are parchment
made sacred by its missing passages.
His sister is still discovering his odd habits:
the bits of bread hidden in pockets and under his bed
the relentless chopping of wood for winter.
Why this fear?
What can be worse than life in prison?
Having choices
but being unable to choose.
| Luljeta Lleshanaku | Social Commentaries,Crime & Punishment |
158 |
We Lived
|
We lived in the long intolerable called God.
We seemed happy.
I don’t mean content I mean heroin happy,
donkey dentures,
I mean drycleaned deacons expunging suffering
from Calcutta with the cut of their jaws
I mean the always alto and surely anusless angels
divvying up the deviled eggs and jello salad in the after-rapture
I mean
to be mean.
Dear Lord forgive the love I have
for you and your fervent servants.
I have so long sojourned Lord
among the mild ironies and tolerable gods
that what comes first to mind
when I’m of a mind to witness
is muriatic acid
eating through the veins
of one whose pains were so great
she wanted only out, Lord, out.
She too worshipped you.
She too popped her little pill of soul.
Lord if I implore you please just please leave me alone
is that a prayer that’s every instance answered?
I remember one Wednesday witness told of a time
his smack-freaked friends lashed him
to the back of a Brahman bull that bucked and shook
until like great bleeding wings the man’s collarbones
exploded out of his skin.
Long pause.
“It was then,” the man said, “right then…”
Yes. And how long before that man-
turned-deacon-turned-scourge-of-sin
began his ruinous and (one would guess) Holy Spirit-less affair?
At what point did this poem abandon
even the pretense of prayer?
Imagine a man alive in the long intolerable time
made of nothing but rut and rot,
a wormward gaze
even to his days’ sudden heavens.
There is the suffering existence answers:
it carves from cheeks and choices the faces
we in fact are;
and there is the suffering of primal silence,
which seeps and drifts like a long fog
that when it lifts
leaves nothing
but the same poor sod.
Dear God—
| Christian Wiman | Religion,Faith & Doubt,God & the Divine |
159 |
The Second O of Sorrow
|
Somehow, I am still here, long after
transistor radios, the eight-tracks my father blared
driving from town to town across Ohio
selling things, the music where we danced
just to keep alive. I now understand I was not
supposed to leave so soon, half a century
a kind of boulder that I’ve pushed up the hill
& now for a moment, like Sisyphus
I watch it roll.
I walk through the snow.
I breathe the dirty East Side wind
pushing past the Russian church, the scent
of fish & freighters & the refinery
filling the hole in my chest—how many years
have piled since I last stumbled out onto the ice
& sat down to die.
Only to look up at the geometry
of sky—& stood
to face whoever might need me—
| Sean Thomas Dougherty | Living,Time & Brevity,Relationships,Family & Ancestors |
160 |
Biography of LeBron as Ohio
|
When is a poem one word? Even at 17 he was Baraka
on the court, Coltrane gold toned, a kind of running riff,
more than boy-child, man-child, he was one word like Prince.
How back in those drunken days when I still
ran in bars & played schoolyard ball
& wagered fives & tens, me & my colleague
the psych-prof drove across Eastern Ohio
just to see this kid from powerhouse St. Vincent,
grown out of rust-belt-bent-rims, tripped
with the hype & hope & hip hop
blaring from his headphones, all rubber soled
& grit as the city which birthed him.
We watched him rise that night scoring over 35,
drove back across the quiet cut cornfields
& small towns of Ohio, back to the places
where we slept knowing that Jesus had been reborn, black
& beautiful with a sweatband crown rimming his brow.
He was so much more than flipping burgers & fries,
more than 12-hour shifts at the steel plant in Cleveland.
More than the shut-down mill in Youngstown.
More than that kid selling meth in Ashtabula.
He was every kid, every street, every silo, he was white
& black & brown & migrant kids working farms.
He was the prince of stutter-step & pause. He was the new
King. We knew he was coming back the day after he left
his house in Bath Township. He never sold it.
Someone fed his fish for years. Perhaps our hope? Fuck Miami.
Leave Wade to wade through the Hurricane rain. LeBron is
remembering that woman washing the linoleum floor, that man
punching his punch card. He drives a Camaro, the cool kid
Ohio car driving through any Main Street. He is the toll-taker, &
he is the ticket out.
He keeps index cards documenting
his opponents’ moves. One leans forward before he drives.
One always swipes with his left hand. The details like a preacher
studying the gospel. He studies the game like a
mathematician conjugating equations, but when he moves he is a
choreography,
a conductor passing the ball like a baton. He is a burst of cinders
at the mill. He is a chorus of children calling his name.
The blistered hands of man stacking boxes
in Sandusky, the long wait for work in Lorain.
A sapling bends
& reaches in all directions
before it becomes a tree. A ball is a key to a lock.
A ball is the opposite of Glock.
America who sings your praises,
while tying the rope, everyone waiting for Caesar to fall,
back-stabbing media hype city betrayed
by white people with racist signs.
I watch the kids play ball
in the Heights, witness this they say. We will rise. I watched
LeBron arrive & leave, I walked, I gave up drinking
as he went off & won a ring. The children’s chorus calls out sing
brother, sing. Everything is black. Storm clouds gather
out on Lake Erie. But the old flower-hatted women
at the Baptist church are heading out praise cards,
registering teenagers to vote. To turn a few words into a sentence.
He is a glossary of jam, & yes he is corporate
chugging down green bubbly Sprite, running in Beats head
phones, he is Dunkin his donut, he is Nike, witness, ripped.
On a spring day in Akron a
chorus of children is chanting his name on the court by the
chain-link fence. He is forged steel, turning his skinny body into
muscle, years of nights lifting, chiseling, cutting, studying.
Watching the tape. To make a new kind of sentence. He is passing
out T-shirts, this long hot bloody summer he was returned
to the rusted rim along the big lake. He is stutter-step. He is
spinning wheel. He has a cool new hat. He is speaking of dead
black children. He is giving his time. To make the crowd
sway like wind through a field of corn.
Does LeBron think of dying?
Does the grape think of dying as it withers on the vine by
the lake? Or does it dream of the wine it will become?
He is wearing a shirt that says I Can’t Breathe.
They said he was arrogant. I said he was just Ohio.
He married his high school sweetheart. Bravado laid out
on the court. No back down, he is Biggie with a basketball inside
of a mic, no ballistics, just ballet. He is Miles Davis cool,
quietly cerebral, turning his back, tossing up
chalk like blue smoke, blue notes, blues. He is Akron,
Columbus, he is heart & Heat turned to lake effect blizzards,
freighters frozen in ice, looking for work & no money to eat.
He is Ashtabula & Toledo. He is carrying so many across the
river, up through Marietta.
The grapevines are ripe in Geneva.
He returns, Man-child, Man-strong, Man-smart, Man-
mountain, Mansfield to East Akron, minus into Man, or should we
say Mamma raised? Single mother fed, shy child, quiet child
who grew, who suffered & taught his body to sing, his
mother worked how many shifts, doing this, doing that,
never gave up for her son. He is third shift at the rubber
plant in winter, he is farm hands & auto parts piecework
& long nights the men at the bar, eyes on the television.
The lake tonight is black as newly laid asphalt.
There are no ellipses. He is turning paragraphs
into chapters. Long ago the hoop Gods made this deal
at the crossroads, Old Scratch is flipping the pages
of his program & waiting high in the stands—to belong to a
place most people would call
nowhere, to show the world how tough we truly are,
twelve-hour shifts at the Rubber plant in Akron. How he is, how
he is a part of this asphalt court we call Ohio, & how we
suffer, & how we shine.
| Sean Thomas Dougherty | Activities,Sports & Outdoor Activities,Social Commentaries,Money & Economics,Race & Ethnicity,Town & Country Life |
161 |
The Welty Tour
|
In the next room, Peter’s gloved hands crack
cordoned-off spines: he has been granted
permission, his agent’s call his pedigree.
So the tour itself is only the docent and me.
He is docile, eager to please, leads me
up the stairs and takes me to the bed.The coverlet is authentic, he says.
He lectures me on the heating system, offers
an anecdote of a broken casserole, recites
all of the Welty lore he has rehearsed.
She taught him when he was young, and now
he serves her legend, lets me lean in
toward the books—I cross the line
of what’s allowed, never touching.
He shows me photos—two loves lost, one
a married man—then on the way down,
pauses before a feather in a box,
reciting Yeats’s “Leda and the Swan.”
He begins to weep at Let her drop, adds,Like Welty’s loves! Now I stop—
is he comparing her to the god, or Leda?
He cannot bear her, her Unfulfilled Love.
I cannot bear this either—how dare he conjure up
for her such disappointment, such wasted longing?
I want to be the mirror of her photographs,
to be her figure of my own conjuring. I want
to believe I, too, could be happy here, in this
solitary house, in this small town, amidst
the rows and stacks of books. Untouched.
| Rebecca Morgan Frank | Love,Unrequited Love,Mythology & Folklore,Fairy-tales & Legends |
162 |
The Moon’s Magnetic Field Once Came from an Asteroid
|
When you walked in
it was like recognizing
the moon when he returns.
His lover bites his cheek; she
has no choice. All we see
is the dissolution, then await
the reconstruction.
Each time, the sky
yanks her into his orbit.
I want to say I’m sorry.
I want to sayYou win. Our bodies are like
the confessional booth these
poems are stuck in. Even
the priest can see that sin.
You’ll be all spit and honey—
or maybe I’m the poisoned
flower gnawing on its own
lip because it has no hands
to reach for you. Only words
that are as useless as the pollen
for saying anything. I continue
to serve them even with your hands
around my throat from across
the room. Your voice is home,
I answer it like a bat guided
across the atmosphere. This
is a narrative that cannot end
well but wants to, but must.
I’ll continue to go down kicking
and you’ll be sweet as anything
until you bite back. No, it can’t
end here—we won’t let it.
Billions of years have passed
since an asteroid last hit
the moon: clearly some
magnetic fields can be sustained.
| Rebecca Morgan Frank | Love,Break-ups & Vexed Love,Relationships,Men & Women,Nature,Stars, Planets, Heavens |
163 |
Postscript from Mississippi
|
When you asked if it rained bees or poison
you were asking the wrong question. Again.
You still didn’t understand the difference
between hurricanes and flooding. Thus between
gods and humans. Between your slum-
lordy digs and the shacks I pass that cling
to old boards and huddle around each family.
The yards marking the care of home.
Everywhere something is falling on
someone and I watch like an autumn
tourist tripping through the Berkshires.
I reach to catch a leaf. I try to straighten
a Pisa-like sapling. The wind wraps around
us both like a question mark and leaves
me standing, the sole witness on this end.
I’m telling you about a place of silence.
You want it all to be a metaphor. I’m watching
a front porch crumble. Still, someone sits there.
| Rebecca Morgan Frank | Social Commentaries,Town & Country Life |
164 |
Being Serious
|
I.
Serious smiles a lot.
At least that’s what they say,
His Mum and Pop
Trying to be proud
As all the nurses gather round
To squint into the cloud
Of little Serious on the ultrasound.It’s likely just the way he’s bent,
The head nurse finally thunders
Into the awe and argument
Swirling through the crowd
Where someone mutters half-aloudIn all my years…
Serious never hears.
Serious spins and spins
With his dumb dolphin grin
In the best bed there is,
Where there’s no guilt and no sin,
No child more inner than this;
Nothing to will
And nothing to want,
No body you both are and haunt;
No drug of disappointment
Or feeling that there’s never now
(Or do these seep in somehow?);
No suffering the world’s idiocy
Like a saint its pains;
No traffic and no planes;
No debts, no taxes,
No phones and no faxes;
No rockslide of information
Called the Internet.
Serious isn’t. Yet.
2.
Serious hears a sound.
Not unusual, in itself, nothing to be concerned about.
Here and there there’s been a shout,
A song he seemed to be inside,
The weird whale-calls of her gas.
This, too, shall pass.
Then it comes again,
And with a far-off force
Which a shrink less serious than he
Will have him dream is a drain
That all his impurity
Is slowly drifting toward(Down, Serious says, down!)
Beyond which he’ll be clean,
Feel no pain…
Then the dark erupts in a rain
Of blood and muck
He seems to mostly be,
Holding on for all he’s worth,
Which isn’t much, finally,
Little wizened thing
Plopping out to an earth
Where cries of agony
Dwindle to equivocal joy(It’s, it’s…is it a boy?)
And some clear world lies
Just beyond the eyes
You can’t quite open;
And everything is wet,
And loud, and broken;
And all of life is one huge tit
You’re meant to somehow suck.
Serious staggers to his feet,
Slaps himself harder than the doctor did
And says, I’m fucked.
3.
Serious is learning silence
In the way most children learn to speak.Poshlust!
He gasps after his first feeding,Götterdämmerung in his first dusk,
His whole body writhing with a kind of violence
As if the world had wounded him,
Words his bleeding.
Anomie, Deus absconditus
Drift into the air above his crib;Accursed progenitor, quintessence of dust
Dribble with the pap onto his bib;
As day by day, and week by week,
Serious wrestles with this difficult gift,
Forgetting, which, it seems, he is on this earth to do.
Boob, ass, oaf,
Riving out of him like greatness going off;Ninny, crackpate, clunkhead, gorm,
Leaving him gasping and bent;fragments, sheep, rabble,
All falling, falling from him
Backwards into babble...
Finally Serious lies there, spent,
Language like some immense ghostly mobile
Bobbing just above his bed,
All power of movement gone as well:
Useless little buglike arms, buglike little fingers,
This heavy, heavy head.
And now if there’s something Serious can’t quite taste,
Or if he feels too acutely his own waste,
Or knows too acutely what he can’t tell,
He screams and screams
Until the world knows what Serious means.
4.
Serious goes to school.Just try it, his Mum says
As she lets go his hand
And wipes a last glaze
Of doughnut from his nose,
And Serious, insofar as Serious can,
Does give it a good try,
Though it’s hard to understand
Why they keep taking a break
From taking breaks, or why
They can’t simply walk
In line down the hall,
Or what, finally, is at stake
In a game of kickball.
It’s time to draw a tree.
What a relief to work alone,
Serious thinks, as he picks a scab
For just the right tinge of sky,
Breaks his sugar cookie
To make a place of stone,
And fashions out of bread
A man with a huge head
And huge, ruined wings,
Gasping at all the ruined things
To which he’s tumbled.
And calls it: Cookie, Crumbled.
Oh my, the teacher says
When she walks by,Those are interesting trees.
Serious closes his eyes and sees
As in a vision of doom
Himself drowning in schools,
A whole ocean of fools
Nipping, nipping at him
With their tiny, tiny teeth.
And Serious sighs
With a prophet’s wisdom
As he climbs up into his seat,
Stares out across the room
And like a prophet cries:You’re all going to die!
The class is a tomb.
Serious, rigid, waits.
A girl in pigtails giggles,
Then another near the back.
And as if along a fuse
The giggling goes
Up and down the rows
Till someone makes a crack
About his coat and tie
And the laughter detonates.
Serious climbs slowly down
Into that inferno of sound
Which the teacher’s shouts
Are only driving higher,
Packs up his lunchbox, his dignity,
And his copy of Sartre,
And strides with a prophet’s gaze
Through all that derisive fire.
Only once does he turn,
Briefly, to look back through the blaze
At the iron fact of his art,
Smaller from here, but unburned.
5.
Serious loves his Mum.
And then he doesn’t, quite.
It’s that way with everything—
Baths and plums,
The blessèd silence of night.
Would you like to help with this?
His mother asks
As she rolls out biscuit dough
And cuts it with a glass
Or folds the clothes
Still warm from the sun.
But Serious knows
He was born with a task,
And though he touches the clothes
And tastes the dough,
Serious says, No.
Serious stays in the bath
Until his skin is shriveled and cold,
Eats himself sick on plums,
Feels in the dark
The dark he becomes,
And cries out in the night for his Mum.
6.
Serious is older now.
He just is.Thank God, Serious says,
For whom childhood, that stupid carousel that never stops,
Always had an element of disingenuousness:
The tristesse of lollipops,
The sham of naps;
Fools dandling you on their laps
So you can play horsey, which damn sure isn’t serious;
And all that endless business
Of pretending to be curious
About the most obvious things:
What’s night? Where’s Mama-Cat?
What’s wrong with Pop? Can God die?
Why, why, why?
To hell with that,
Serious thinks, as he sits incinerating memories
One by one,
Saying their names as he feeds them
Like photographs to a fire:
Here he is in a baseball uniform
Squinting back the sun;
Here in a blue tuxedo with a ruffled front;
And here, Lord, with pimples.
He pauses a moment.
Do memories have names?
And what, exactly, are these flames?
To hell with that!
Done.
Serious owns a car, pays taxes,
Contemplates a pension,
Has a crease of gray along his temples,
But he is young, young.
He develops headaches, begins sleeping badly, and relaxes,
You might say, into the constant tension
That he really always was,
With far, far too much to do
To look anywhere but onward,
Or to answer the questions of a child
With anything true.
7.
Serious isn’t Stupid,
Though they go to the same gym.
Serious sees him dropping weights
Or picking his butt and thinks,
At least I’m not him.
Nor is he Mean or Vain,
Those chiseled twins
With matching boots and belts,
Nor Smug who notes their sins,
Nor Shallow noting something else;
He isn’t useless Timid
Who no matter what won’t complain,
Nor fat-assed Nice sweating honey
On all the machines,
Nor Self-Loathing who smudges mirrors,
Nor Whacked who licks them clean.
Serious isn’t Funny.
Serious spreads his towel on the bench,
Sits down in front of his own image,
And Serious strains at a serious weight.
And never, not once, when he’s seen
In myriad mirrors around the room
That everyone else is straining too,
Has he caught himself too late
And finished with a roar
And more strength
Than he’s ever had before:I AM NOT YOU!
8.
Serious has a date with Doom.
It’s not the first, and seems unlikely to be the last,
For they get on quite well, Doom and he,
Share similar pasts
And similar ideas about what life should be.
It seems, in fact, that this might just bloom.
And what a relief.
After Morose and Mad and Neurotic;
After almost falling for Grief,
Who was so exotic
She made all the others seem tame.
Then to discover she even lied about her name.
And to sleep with another Serious! That was odd,
Like wrestling with an angel,
Though it was hard to tell from that rough unsated tangle
Which one was Serious, and which one God.
But how easy it is to be himself with Doom,
Serious thinks, as he puts the wine in to chill
And sets two glasses on a tray,
Who always wants whatever Serious wants
And always agrees with what he has to say;
Who doesn’t need to hear that whole spiel
About “going too fast” or “needing more room”;
And who doesn’t probe and pry that long needle into his brain
—What do you feel? What do you feel?—
Until it’s all Serious can do not to stand up and scream: Pain!
Lucky to be alive.
And if he still has no clear idea where she lives,
And never knows quite when she’ll arrive,
Still, something about Doom feels right
To Serious, and he looks forward to their dates.
He checks himself in the mirror, dims the light,
And waits.
9.
Serious is a traveler.
“Traveling broadens the mind,”
The man beside him says,
His tray table down and seat reclined
Even as they're taking off,
And Serious, who has his eyes closed
So he can do what Serious does,
Begins to cough.
What do they say, what do they fear,
Is this song joy or grief?
This is a man, this is a god.
Who are you and why are you here?
To leave, to leave.
The meal is over,
Which Serious declined.
In the shell-roar of the cabin
He eases somewhat, is surprised to find
He could almost drift away.
“What line of work are you in?”
He hears the man beside him say,
And Serious begins coughing wildly again.
What is that smell, what was that sound,
Isn’t that ice on the wings?
This is the air, there is the water,
But what do you do on the way down?
You scream, you scream.
How far they must have gone by now,
That old familiar world miles behind,
The man eats an orange,
And now he eats the rind.
He eats his plate, his plastic fork, chews
With animal relish his Styrofoam cup,
Leans over to eat bittersweet Serious too,
Who startles and wakes up.
Look at the desert, look at the green,
Is there an end to that ice?
Here is a place, and here is a place,
But what is the space between?
It’s life, it’s life.
10.
Serious is married.
What a weird wind this is,
He thinks, so still at times,
Then stinging the eyes to tears.
And how he seems both more and less
Himself, and how it seems at once all of loneliness
And something he can hold.
Or is it he who's being carried?
He shivers, and reaches out for her again.
Or is it she who reaches, she who's cold?
What is this wind?
Where are these years?
11.
Serious experiences loss.
Just like that.
Flat.
Serious experiences loss,
As if he’d come to some sheer cliff
There was no way around,
No way to cross,
And found,
On the other side
Of a deep canyon, himself,
Experiencing loss.
Serious, when the man is gone,
Tells himself that he tried,
Tells himself that he cried and cried
For all he was worth
To the man sitting on the other side
Experiencing loss,
Who one day simply vanished, or moved on,
Or slipped off the edge of the earth
And died.
12.
Serious doesn’t speak French.
This embarrasses Serious,
Because insofar as he lives anywhere,
Serious lives in Paris.
He feels the city stare,
Feels himself sweat, and shake, as he tries to wrench
The little that he’s gleaned
Into the lot that he desires;
Feels shopkeepers look at him as if he were a liar,
Waiters as if he were unclean;
And feels, in truth, not at all serious,
As if he had a huge balloon for a head
And helium squeaks for a voice,
As if gravity could be merely a choice
He were making, and he might instead
Simply stop, let go, and drift away.
Finally Serious, opposed to epiphanies,
Has one he can’t resist.
He is Serious, and to be Serious
Is to know something utterly or not at all,
And to know, moreover,
That as you let your half-knowledge fall
From you, it does not exist.
Just like that Serious is himself again,
Saying weighty things
About the flowers in the stalls,
Pondering a splendid mirage
Called the Seine.
And if he wakes saying fromage,
Or in some shop feels
Right on the verge of translating please,
Serious knows it’s a dream,
And knows from childhood what to do.
Point and scream
Until the damn fools give you cheese.
13.
Serious has some culture.
He knows some things.
And if, as he begins to speak,
He should feel the immense wings
Of ignorance shadowing him, that dirty vulture
That squawks in drawl and drips tobacco juice,
Serious knows what shelter to seek.
Pick a name and Bach is better.
Modernism was powerful but diffuse.
Life’s drained out of pictures since the Renaissance.
Technique! Technique! Technique!
And about all that spastic flatulence
Called contemporary art,
Well, Serious hardly knows where to start.
Serious sits through opera without a yawn,
Chews up books on which weaker teeth would shatter;
He can tell you where one brushstroke lies,
List the reasons courtly love is gone,
Pluck the speck of subject matter
From Henry James.
Serious knows some things.
He thinks and thinks and thinks
Until his ignorance shrinks
To the tiniest of flies
Alighting somewhere in the Louvre.
Carefully, carefully, Serious creeps
With his massive swatter,
Saying, Don’t move. Don’t move.
14.
Serious believes in nothing.
It’s a nice day, what should we do?
What are you thinking?
What’s been bothering you?
What’s that you’re drinking?
Serious spreads the paper on his lap
To confirm what’s new under the sun,
Hears a tap, tap, tap
Against the windowpane.
Nothing ventured, nothing gained,
Floats up from childhood like a bit of ash,
And Serious, pausing, can almost see
His old preacher, that atom bomb of idiocy
Who every Sunday would explode.
Still, Serious thinks, there’s a truth to set you free.
But who could survive the blast?
Tap, tap, tap.
Serious skims the sports pages,
Reads about a storm that rages
Far out at sea.
Some talking dog is taking office,
Some country wiping out monuments, expunging its past.
Tap, tap, tap.
Goddammit, Serious says, midway through a war,
And thinks again of that old bore
Who talked and talked and talked
Until you felt your head loll and sway
Like some huge flower on a tiny stalk
That one good breeze would break;
And how you’d see him afterwards eating chicken fried steak,
Chicken fried man,
With a tiny transistor radio in his hand
So he could listen to the football game;
And how his face seethed and writhed with what seemed pain
If he saw you coming to his booth,
And he stared off as if some great truth
Were finally, finally coming clear in that chicken fried brain
And like a prophet he was going to stand up and shout—
Until what plopped innocuously out
Was your own name.
Tap, tap, tap.
Serious puts aside the news of the day
And walks to the only window there is.
But there’s no wind, not even the grass stirs.
And anyway, there’s no tree.
Serious shrugs and turns away.
Must just be me.
13.
Serious sees a child
In the playground across the street,
Sees his huge stupid head and huge stupid feet
As he tries to keep up with the games,
And hears his sonar screams
Of delight amid the other children's screams,
And hears his timid weeping when they call him names.
Serious sees the child standing apart sometimes
Driveling to himself in silly rhymes,
And sees him pretend to look intently at the sky
If Serious walks by,
Or sees him simply stop and stare.
Gradually Serious starts seeing the child everywhere,
In a store standing in an aisle,
In the subway while
Serious is trying to work on the way home,
Or laughing with his family in a restaurant
Where Serious eats alone.
Serious knows the truth.
This child wants something, his whole nature is want.
And it begins to be annoying,
This novice cringing, all the imbecilic and cloying
Tactics of being cute,
The whole hangdog way he has of panhandling pity
With his freckles and his missing tooth,
Sitting all fidgety in his Sunday suit
Or babbling happily as he’s leaking snot;
And then the air he suddenly puts on of being serious
When it’s so obvious he’s not.
Serious sees the child in the playground
Standing to the side,
Sees his face whiten and his eyes go wide
As Serious crosses the street and strides
Until his shadow swallows the child
And leans down close enough for them to kiss.I don’t have time for this,
Serious says,I’ve got too much to do.
And the child says, Who are you?
16.
Serious kills himself.No, no,
Shivering out of a dream,
Starlight and the hard glitter
Under the bridge’s beam,
Serious, Serious,
Don’t go.
Serious crawls out of bed,
Feels the cold in the floor
And thinks, suddenly, of lovely Mad
(Where can she be?)
Who’d bolt out of sleep and screamFarmers get up at four!
It’s three.
Serious makes himself a cup of coffee,
Which he doesn’t drink;
Tries and fails to read,
Tries and fails to think.
Serious sits, and holds himself still,
Minute by minute;
Until the dawn finally comes
And he is in it.
17.
Serious lives alone.
It’s better this way, he tells himself,
As he takes a pan from the pan shelf,
A spatula from the spatula drawer,
And fries two eggs the way he likes them:
Yolks of stone.
No more gnats of chatter over breakfast.
No more breakfast. It’s noon.
No one prancing by with only panties on
When he’s almost, almost broken through,
Or singsonging outside his doorSerious, O Serious, where are you?
No more!
But what, finally, does Serious do?
He sits, ignores the ringing phone,
Looks at a wall
On one of the last warm days of the year,
And settles back into the lifelong call
Of being serious,
Which is to see, within that whiteness,
Leaves being gently blown,
And to feel their colors as they fall.
18.
Serious gives a speech.
He sets his papers on the podium,
His glass within easy reach,Tap, tap, taps the microphone.
How vast this venue is.
How absolute this darkness.
To be serious is to be alone!
Serious cries out with a triumphant look on his face,
Waiting for the echoes to end
Out there in all that space,
Which the words at once define and extend.
It takes a while, but they do die.
The spotlight lasers in.
He blinks hard, starts again.
To know in every hand another’s touch, To hear a silence words only intensify, To feel not too little but too much This attenuated world—
Serious begins to sweat,
Feels the back of his shirt grow wet;
Looks down to see his papers swirled
And scattered, the glass on the floor, broken.
What’s with this fucking light, he thinks,
Or was it spoken?
He glares out at the dark, impassive crowd
And as if by force he could make them wake
Hears his voice growing loud:
Whatever you most treasure you will break, Whatever you hold closest you will let go, There is no place that you will not leave! But to be serious—
Serious says,
Quietly now, because he has them, they are his—
To be serious, to be truly serious, is to know That what you call your losses you cannot grieve, For it was never quite these things that you wanted—This treasure, this touch, this one place—But by such life to be haunted.
Brilliant!
No notes, no flaws.
Serious stands back and waits for applause.
The hall is silent, utterly silent,
The heat tropic.
Serious looks around, confused,
Turns to the man who introduced him
Then can’t remember being introduced;
And even given his credentials,
This suddenly seems a most unlikely topic.
Serious tries to get out of the light,
But the light goes where Serious goes.
He blunders to the edge of the stage,
A cliff
Breaking off into a dark
in which there's no movement, no voices, not one sigh.
Serious feels the rage
Draining out of him, and feels a chill, and whispers,Where am I?
19.
Serious nears an end.
It’s cold and getting colder,
And Serious, older,
Sits outside thinking of his good friend,
Who like so much of Serious is gone,
And thinking of that godforsaken dawn
After the one night of his life he spent outdoors.
Tell me,
His good friend said
When Serious staggered out to the fire,Which form would you say is higher,Tragedy or comedy?
And Serious, who had stumbled full-bladdered
In the night from a dream of bears,
Then dreamed himself the object
Of a dozen hungry stares,
Who had swiveled, pissed into the tent,
And sworn such things it would take a life to repent,
Serious, exhausted Serious,
Was silent.
Because it’s been troubling me,Serious, that the answer can only be tragedy.To be conscious is to be conscious ofLosing whatever it is that you most love,And thus an art that's truly greatWill always have one deepest truth to tell,Which is, my friend, this life is hell.
Serious looks at the sky. It’s late.
A small wind blows
The trees, and Serious, shivering, knows
He should head inside,
That he is not well.
But sitting here, letting his eyes close,
Serious can almost see that lake
Aflame with the early sun, and smell
The sweet burn of that wood,
And feel the way it seemed his heart would surely break
Were it not for the strange lightness in his head
As his friend smiled and said,But maybe earth is the heaven of the good.
20.
Serious talks to God.
There’s no one else left.
His mind is mash,
His world is ash,
And Serious occasionally forgets himself,
Though he is not, not Bereft,
That sniveling idiot two doors down
Who sits up late
With only ashes in the grate
And talks to God.
See? Serious says. See?Nothing.
Serious spreads his arms magnanimously
As if to give God the floor.
God declines.Thou know’st the first time that we smell the airWe wawl and cry,
Serious says, louder than before.And then we wawl and cry some more,And then we die,And then we rot!
Again he waits in case
There’s disagreement. There’s not.
Serious scoffs, goes to brush his teeth,
Forgets briefly to avert his eye
From the mirror’s glare
And finds his father there,
That gentle baffled man
Who, when there was no hope,
When he couldn’t even stand,
Carved from a piece of soap
A silly yellow duck
And set it in a little yellow dish.
Serious feels a tingling in his hair
And mutters something close to a prayer,I wish, I wish...
The lights go out.Goddammit, Serious shouts
As he trips and falls
To his knees on the floor,
Banging his head on the door
As he tries to rise.GodDAMMIT! Serious cries.
The lights come on.
His father’s gone,
But there, at the edge of the sink,
Balances the little duck in the little dish
No serious person would ever keep.
Serious tries to think,
Steadies himself as if at some brink,
Decides he needs sleep,
That’s what he needs,
Crawling fully clothed into his bed
And pulling the covers to his chin
Because, it seems, there’s some strange wind
That’s somehow gotten inside.
So unlike Serious,
To leave a door unclosed.
Yet here it is, gathering strength
As it blows his books
On the floor and it blows
Right through his body and it blows
Behind and below and above
And out of the whirlwind a voice cries
Love
What? Serious says, as he tries
To sit upright and looks
Wildly around him,
Raising his fist in the air.The things...I have lost—
Immediately he is tossed
Back against the wall
By the force of a storm
That has no source, no form,
And hears again the call
Out of nowhere:
Love
My God! Serious screams,
Unable to help himself,What maundering politician,What decerebrated pop star, What stupid puling poet Couldn’t tell me that?
Struggling to get out of bed
He starts to cough, then choke,
A riot in his heart,
A riot in his head
As he falls off the edge to the floor.Who do you think you are,
He gasps. Is this... Is this some sort of JOKE?
Suddenly the strange wind is quiet,
But no less strange the calm that comes after.
I’m serious, the voice says.
And Serious dies of laughter.
EPILOGUE
The dead man’s famous.
No one now remembers him alive,
Or knows his name, or anything he did.
Still, a few stories survive
After all this while
Of a weird-looking man
With a weird-looking smile
That had, it’s said,
Almost a kind of life to it,
Though the man was seriously dead.
And some remember how all the flies
Vanished for miles;
And some say no, no, but the buzzards had weird smiles
As if they knew something.
And some tell of an old woman
Who would come and whisper in the dead man’s ear,
And smooth the dead man’s hair,
And if the door opened, disappear.
There are even stories of that grim mortician
Who thought the smile undignified
And tugged and tugged so hard
He slipped and fell inside
Right on top of the dead man,
Whose lips, he swore, seemed to soften,
Seemed to somehow kiss.
And some remember this:
Before the lid was sealed on that coffin
And the nails driven,
There were on that face real tears.
And some say he smiled like a man forgiven.
The dead man never hears.
The dead man spins and spins
With his dumb dolphin grin
Through all the places where he is
When people talk of him again:
In classrooms or in planes,
In boredom or in pain;
In front of screens
Or in the spotlight’s glare;
In days too mild to bear
And in the long nights where
The dark grows steep,
The wind wild,
And a mother rises from her sleep
To calm her serious child.
| Christian Wiman | Living,Life Choices,Love,Religion,Faith & Doubt,God & the Divine |
165 |
Decline
|
It is not pain that holds me back, but time
With its sad prefigurations and smell,
Its flowers and echoes, rivers and crime.
Even now, without a future, I tell
Myself lies in future tense. As my hair
Thins, I collect combs. When clocks chime, I groan.
The falling world finds pleasure in despair
Because to suffer means to be alone,
And I suffer through all the accidents
Of change as though I were settling a score,
As if to disinvent what death invents.
I once built a castle, now I do chores.
To pass the time I rearrange my things.
To fall asleep I recite names of kings.
| Joshua Edwards | Living,Growing Old |
166 |
Leviathan
|
Love of air and water
Joined in apprehension,
Perhaps you know what's there
By way of fear, for while
Living in pursuit of
And going always forth
Toward something that trembles.
Its knowledge is your mind.
What do you think about
The great ocean's sullen
Aristocrats—these small
Headaches and dark affairs
That bathe themselves in your
Staging grounds, where you go
To contemplate how what
You want became your mind?
The black oblivion
Offers no reprieve for
You, hunter—in its keep
Your ears have grown too sharp,
So sharp you almost hear
Your own heartbeat over
The subtle whispers of
Water’s dismal gardens.
Everything about you
Is overblown, even
Your mouth is uniquely
Talented at its tasks,
Gathering for slaughter
Animals in their sleep,
Speaking without a sound.
Noah had seven laws,
You have only one—eat
To build life out of death,
Survive above all things.
The fatalistic moon
Filtered down upon you
Seems an imitation
Of lives you will not live.
Would you be its hero?
Would you call out against
The morning’s weaving light
That shames the night before
The passing of its cool?
Would you be at the beach
When the invisible
Becomes a glow, to surprise?
Inland, workers dreaming
Of unitarian
Proposals lose no sleep
To fear about your mouth.
It is their wayward friends,
Who wandered too far west
Into fevered chaos,
That wake up with your name
As screams exploding dreams.
The inland ether holds
Clouds in your dismal shape.
Lucky are those who know
Nothing, who cannot see
Hell outlined in vapor.
Somewhere a piano
Plays a sorrowful song
Half-written by the hate
That a grieving loved one
Would stick into your heart.
Such are the arts of men.
Beware. Your time is near.
Someone has learned lessons
You didn’t mean to teach.
A crowd is gathering.
Your skull is their kingdom.
| Joshua Edwards | Nature,Animals,Seas, Rivers, & Streams,Mythology & Folklore,Fairy-tales & Legends |
167 |
Dissimilations
|
You hold onto life like a hostage. You're deeply embedded.
You're an actor slipping into a new script. You're a comma
Whose purpose is to mark the moment when prose is suspended,
Where begins a poem's pensive silence or some dark drama.
You're a Charles Dickens character in the opium den
Of a long life. All you want is to sleep through the nights after
Satisfying intercourse, but your mimesis may have been
Caught by sexually transmitted diseases. Disaster
Is an evening when you're so hungry every apple core
Evokes grocery stores. Being the only one and only,
They can't clone or disown you. The only thing you lack is your
Adult teeth, beneath the rotten teeth of what makes you lonely.
And the truth is that devolution concurs with disposal
Till it emerges, when entourage lobbies for Decalogue,
And hype is the new preparation before its proposal,
Calling for the removal of all shoes, shirts, and demagogues,
And the zealous anti-Orientalists who refuse to
Use anyone's last names first when denying them service at
The sperm bank, where the preferred euphemism is "super glue."
Remember the joke about the butcher who couldn't get fat?
Rejuvenated vaginas and enhanced penises squeak
Thanks to Puritanism gone gaga vis-à-vis bling-bling
À la bada bing. People piled up form a sexual peak.
Two condoms put up their dukes inside a contraceptive ring.
Champagne is the new organizer for your political
Campaign to conceive something tantamount to FASD
Of the spirit. Were you surprised or did you wax critical
When you emerged from the driveway to your domesticity
Without any disease but your family's questionable
Cultural history? Is it such a mystery that your
Mediocrity's latently poised to emerge? That you're full
Of traditional vulnerability? You'll pace the floor
Until you face (at a number of paces proportional
To the gravity of the insults that have been thrown your way)
Yourself dressed like a clown. Your brain will halt to urbanely sprawl
And then catapult your past beyond your future like a clay
Pigeon across a clear blue sky, toward a lemonade stand
At which the theory of other minds attempts to explain
Why petroleum prices fluctuate with body count and
Meaningful relationships end in kaleidoscopic pain.
| Joshua Edwards | Living,The Body,Time & Brevity,Social Commentaries,Gender & Sexuality |
168 |
What Space Faith Can Occupy
|
I believe that witness is a magnitude of vulnerability.
That when I say love what I mean is not a feeling
nor promise of a feeling. I believe in attention.
My love for you is a monolith of try.
The woman I love pays an inordinate amount
of attention to large and small objects. She is not
described by anything. Because I could not mean anything else,
she knows exactly what I mean.
Once upon a time a line saw itself
clear to its end. I have seen the shape
of happiness. (y=mx+b)
I am holding it. It is your hand.
| TC Tolbert | Love,Romantic Love,Religion,Faith & Doubt |
169 |
Thaw
|
You said I will pull you out of my body in 237
ways. What you wanted was beautifully to
sever things. Here love: the same things. changed.
Finally: a taxonomy of afterthoughts. As though
you were the one who was
sleeping. Breathing in the marrow of would.
You, who are a valley of no, I hear the music leaking. (How she.
How she. How I.) You say low key and I do not believe you.
I forgive everything: the perseveration of skin.
My hands that are a chopping block and I
cannot touch him. I cannot touch him
without not touching me.
Because if you leave, and you are already leaving, there are three.
But you say less than three. And the couch, in your absence,
is crenellated. And who is going to watch us as we leave.
To add to the list of changing things: life preservers are no longer
about preservation. They have become less holy. P F D =
personal flotation device. Endlessly possible. Unlike wood.
Stacey May Fowles wants a lover who will hit her.
(I do not believe in submission.) I want you to erase me.
This is a kindness. A kindness you tell me. A kindness I do not deserve.
On the floor. By the bed. Hotel Congress. March 19, 2005.
Room #23. We are a long way from disintegrated. You said Now. Look at me. And I did. And you bloomed.
(When my mother died, I will say.
Many years after my mother has died.
But I will not believe her. I'll be like my grandmother who
despite my parade of girlfriends and her profession
that nobody should be mean to them, stilldoesn't believe in being queer.
I don't believe in being dead,
I'll tell my dead mother. And just like you
she'll repeat herself. Happy New Year. Happy New Year. Happy New.)
I expect there will be a morning when you walk up to this very gate
while I am sitting here. I know this. I know you less each time I see you.
I know this like I know you are more lonely than glass.
To your languishing. To your bubbly.
To your recent. To your hologram. To your desperately.
To your seeking. To your dictaphone. To your you.
Neuromuscular facilitation is just another way of saying
Vancouver. Always is yet a matter of roller derby. Just
in love with you. You, more than sleep.
In the top drawer is a photograph of them touching.
It is not so much that it is a photograph.
It is that it is a depiction of what. not could.
I want to tell you about my body. About testosterone
as unwitting art historian. About recovery. Me(n). What it feels like
underneath there. The part you cannot know. but should.
Either way. It's a house. It's a house
like everyone else has. I take things away.
I don't take them for good.
How delirious must we sound when we are falling.I miss you, you can't even imagine. And how bad
at math. Less than three. Less than three. Less than three.
And what if. I completely remember
it wrong. What if I remember there were two
of us. And then what if. there was only one death.
I do not believe in the existence of holes
that lead to nowhere. Muscle memory remains an enigma. Still, you can
touch her. You cannot touch her without not touching me.
(And still) you are not not a part of me. The world is
uncharacteristically unresponsive.
I could thank you. You stay with me. like grass.
| TC Tolbert | Living,The Body,Love,Realistic & Complicated,Relationships,Gay, Lesbian, Queer |
170 |
Beg Approval
|
Because the only view we have is the one
that looks down on the knees. Praise perspective.
Praise shared disdain. Praise space made by connective
tissue; the synaptic cleft; elbowroom
at the dinner table; polite conversation;
lies you push through your teeth. Because dissecting
a dog's heart won't change the way it thinks. Praise redirected
traffic. Praise the gnarled lip that defends
the gentle bones. Because your mother was
a seahorse. And to think of her thin is
to empty all the ice from the tea glasses;
to strain the soup by driving it through your hand.
Praise tablecloths; sway-back chairs; the plastic
folds that protect slice after slice of cheese.
| TC Tolbert | Religion,Faith & Doubt |
171 |
Into the Racism Workshop
|
For Alma Banda Goddard
my cynical feet ambled
prepared for indigestion
& blank faces of outrageous innocence
knowing I'd have to walk over years of media
declaring we're vanished or savage or pitiful or noble
My toes twitched when I saw so few brown faces
but really when one eats racism every time one goes out one’s door
the appeal of talking about it is minuscule
I sat with my back to the wall facing the door
after I changed the chairs to a circle
This doesn't really protect me
but I con myself into believing it does
One of the first speakers piped upI'm only here because my friend is Black & wantedme to do this with herI've already done300 too many racism workshops
Let it be entered into the Book of Stars
that I did not kill her or shoot a scathing reply from the hip
I let it pass because I could tell she was very interested in taking
up all the space with herself & would do it if I said a word
They all said something that I could turn into a poem
but I got tired & went to sleep behind my interested eyes
I've learned that the most important part of these tortures
is for them to speak about racism at all
Even showing up is heresy
because as we all know racism is some vague thing that really doesn't
exist or is only the skinheads on a bad day or isn't really a crucial problem
not as important certainly as queers being able to marry
or get insurance for each other
When they turned to me as resident expert on the subject
which quite honestly I can't for the life of me understand
or make any sense out of
I spoke from my feet
things I didn't know I knew
of our connections
of the deadly poison that racism is for all of us
Maybe some of them were touched
but my bitch voice jumps in to sayNOT MUCH!
I heard back that someone thought I was brilliant
Does that mean that I speak well
Or that she was changed
It's only her change
I need
| Chrystos | Social Commentaries,Race & Ethnicity |
172 |
Sometimes I Feel Like All Indians
|
For Kelly Morgan
ever do is die
Her brother was thrown out the window
by Black men he was drinking with
His cousin was stabbed near the store
She got shot
Nobody knows where he ended up
She hasn’t heard from her brother in 17 years
He killed himself when his wife left
Her son was hit by a car of drunk whites
Her uncle went off a cliff in the dark
Her grandmother died in the hospital
because they gave her the wrong medicine
Her baby was born addicted & died
My brother died as a baby
Her mother died of an overdose
She doesn’t know how her mother died
but no one has seen her for a long time
She was put in foster care because her parents died in a car wreck
I close my eyes & keep praying
sometimes there’s nothing to do
but brush back the tears
& keep on folding the laundry
| Chrystos | Living,Death,Relationships,Family & Ancestors,Social Commentaries,History & Politics,Race & Ethnicity |
173 |
Sweet Scent
|
I can smell the sweet scent of my own sweat
as I blow high with the breeze and swing,
I pump my legs like a child again my skinny kid’s butt
holds me down, keeps me grounded
when adults threaten to pull me off.
My chain breaks as I tempt to kiss the sun,
my knees have a life of their own bending
as if my very existence depended on it,
and it does, for I’d rather be a nut flying high
over people’s heads than on the ground dying
touching the earth, staining the water
with my unclean mind, my hands washing red
off the money so I can sleep off my power trip
and back stabbing toys.
I was an old soul at five spouting off
about the filth of my generation.
I knew greed was the root of all evil,
competition in close cousin.
I had my doubts about civilization as I found it
and convinced my sister Tricia to wear
flannel jammies zipped to the throat in the summer
to protect us from the babysitter’s bloodsucking
husband while our parents went out for supper.
July 2, 1998
| Angela C. Trudell Vasquez | Living,Coming of Age,Youth |
174 |
Identity
|
White-Mexican looks like a Latina,
not my label
a question
from a Guatemalan student
who's come undone
in my ESL class,
doesn't get my kind
I try to describe
how I grew up
in Caucasian corn country
surrounded by houses
on cul-de-sacs
that all looked the same,
how we were alone
in a town of 5000,
one black family,
one Indian family,
one Asian family,
and one household of Mexicans,
no two, us and the Renterias
to whom we were related by marriage
before and after my divorce,
and they were mixed;
still, it was a good living,
happy in our cocooness,
our oneness,
separated by money
one direction
color on the other:
classes, classes, classes,
day and night
we took lessons:
piano, jazz, tap, ballet,
the dance team, trumpet,
trombone, tennis, Finishing School,
and one awful summer golf;
Christened, Confirmed, Cathechismized;
it all cut me in several places,
molding of head and heart
making me ultrasensitive,
then and now,
an observer of the outside,
an outsider among my own kind,
my very shade,
mysterious aloof
black haired beauty
who can't speak Spanish,
living among blue eyed dyed blond bombshells,
who held up her head higher
because she's shy not stuck-up,
understood, undenied, sacrificed to at any price
by my beloved little brown parents
who taught me well
gave up so much
so their daughters could shine
and they'd swell with pride
at the life they had given us,
on Sundays we basked
in mutual admiration after mass
singing our church songs while making breakfast,
according to the unspoken doctrine in our house of:
fast first eat later after communion,
we intruded with our Mexican music
bellowing out the open windows
the smell of bacon frying,
pancakes baking, coffee
and eggs scrambled to order
it wafted out on beautiful summer mornings
out of our house in Pleasant Hill, Iowa,
perched on the highest spot
one could reach on the East Side of the street
for first and second generation immigrants.
January 25, 2001
| Angela C. Trudell Vasquez | Relationships,Family & Ancestors,Social Commentaries,Race & Ethnicity |
175 |
Something is Coming Toward Us
|
Flaunting in the atrium, ostentatious at the gates
I saw a shooting star thru a window on Alcatraz Ave
& cladding struck up against those who demand
We stomach the stick and tend the commode
They're selling trees in the paint store! trees in the paint store
Datebook chips in the soft skin of our wrists
On NBC, CNN, and NPR broken windows are weeping
We'll have 35 apples and shrieking in the thickets
Aloft in the air golden and golden the dial among the mounds
So much is stunted in understanding of what a light can be
They storm the scrimmage line and clear-cut bran and germ
We want the petal unto itself, the unalterable vessel
The arc end of the precipice grows 1.9% annually
What was popular music like before the crisis?
| Alli Warren | Social Commentaries,Money & Economics |
176 |
A Better Way to Zone
|
Habits accrue
in circular pattern
and living occasion
swollen among what
the dead have to teach us
So, ear, be an instrument for thought
Tide, bring some
little green thing to dust
behind my eyes
Touch the hotpoint
and drag the tongue
over the fat belly
of a flapping fish
Sticker book
of farm animals
Sticker book of ole timey cats
What is life and how shall it be governed?
With blind devotion
and endurance in the impossible
for guts in everything for roots
in plain sight
Share a lung
Accumulate none
Say hello to the crow
There are certain chord progressions
one should avoid
| Alli Warren | Living,Life Choices,The Mind |
177 |
I Want to Thank the Wind Blows
|
Sound of the rain so I know
there's constraint
sound of the train
so I know commerce
has not come to a standstill
now they raise the barrier
now they set it back in place
What coats the bottom
of the surface of the sound
when the swifts come in
when the clerks come home
who will bathe the children
who will bake the bread
when the luff is tight
when the mainsheet
starts the boat underway
whatever you do don't
let the tongue slip
from its moorings
what's that song?
love lift us up where we belong
I ate the pill
and the pill was real
| Alli Warren | Social Commentaries,Money & Economics |
178 |
Whole 30
|
After a winter of gluttony & grief
I'm back on plan for good this time.
I’ve ballooned to a specific kind of ugly
the kind you hope to hide
with body spray. But it gets worse
after a winter of gluttony & grief.
I’ve shown up for meatballs. For lemons
whipped to weeping. Now I land my balloon
for the specific kind of ugly
salad oil is. Happy date night, darling.
Happy coconut water + nutritional yeast.
After this winter of gluttony & grief
spring comes, stabbing her hard stem
of anger in the throat. Even garlic scapes
are flat balloons, their ugliness specific
as my penmanship: green tubes of spice
& hate. My body speaks the ugly testament
that took all winter. It says: Gluttony & grief balloon, darling. Only kindness is specific.
| Kiki Petrosino | Living,The Body,Activities,Eating & Drinking |
179 |
Thigh Gap
|
It's true: I have it
though I hardly approve
of anything it does.
Supposed bend of light
or smudge where two odd
angles cross. I hardly see—
can hardly do a thing
with it. White zone of
no flesh pressing
into no. So low, I can’t
scale or measure it. I used
to think: OK! A clean sharp place
to keep. Or: I'll growa thing! to keep, for me! But
no. It's just a ward
to mark & mount, a loop
I lope around with, so
I count
myself a realm
of realms. I vote & vote.
Turns out, we agree
with everything we
do, almost. We sweep
the precincts
of ourselves: the rooms
between each rib
& under them
till we reach the fat
red condo where
our blood leans in.
We live here now. Half
heart, half townhouse.
Come on down.
Turn on that sweet TV.
Our mise en place, our rugs
& nooks: we’re full
of stuff. We paint
the furniture we couldn’t
live without. It’s true
at last: we have it all
though we hardly know
what any of it does.
| Kiki Petrosino | Living,The Body |
180 |
Witch Wife
|
I’ll conjure the perfect Easter
& we’ll plant mini spruces in the yard—
my pink gloves & your green gloves
like parrots from an opera over the earth—
We’ll chatter about our enemies’ spectacular deaths.
I’ll conjure the perfect Easter
dark pesto sauce sealed with lemon
long cords of fusilli to remind you of my hair
& my pink gloves. Your gloves are green
& transparent like the skin of Christ
when He returned, filmed over with moss roses—
I’ll conjure as perfect an Easter:
provolone cut from the whole ball
woody herbs burning our tongues—it’s a holiday
I conjure with my pink-and-green gloves
wrangling life from the dirt. It all turns out
as I’d hoped. The warlocks of winter are dead
& it’s Easter. I dig up body after body after body
with my pink gloves, my green gloves.
| Kiki Petrosino | Activities,Eating & Drinking,Gardening,Nature,Spring,Trees & Flowers,Religion,Christianity,Easter |
181 |
Wheels
|
how can I tell you
baby, oh honey, you'll
never know the ride
the ride of a lowered chevy
slithering through the
blue dotted night along
Riverside Drive Española
poetry rides the wings
of a ’59 Impala
yes, it does
and it points
chrome antennae towards
’Burque stations rocking
oldies Van Morrison
brown eyed girls
Creedence and a
bad moon rising
over Chimayo
and I guess
it also rides
on muddy Subarus
tuned into new-age radio
on the frigid road
to Taos on weekend
ski trips
yes, baby
you and I are two
kinds of wheels
on the same road
listen, listen
to the lonesome humming
of the tracks we leave
behind
| Levi Romero | Love,Romantic Love,Activities,Travels & Journeys |
182 |
Woodstove of My Childhood
|
woodstove of my childhood
where potatoes cut like triangle chips were fried
in manteca de marrano
woodstove of lazy autumn smoke swirling away
to nowhere
woodstove of December
evacuating the cold chill at sunrise
woodstove of celebration and mourning
of post-World War II Korea y Vietnam
woodstove corner that kept vigil over
drunken nodding remembrance
woodstove corner where uncles primos compadres
gathered on visits from Califas
woodstove corner with a warm ear for nostalgia
where Mama Ane stirred the atole and wrung her hands
thumb over thumb praying for her children's children's children
woodstove that witnessed six decades washing its face at the vandeja
that saw western swing dancing in dim lantern flame
that watched Elvis come in from across the llano strumming
a mail-order Stella and singing in Spanish
woodstove
of the feast lamb tied up under the crabapple tree
of early sour cherries ripening above the cornstalk horizon
of neighbors bartering a cup of sugar
in exchange for mitote and conversation
woodstove of rain tenderly pouring into the afternoon
and salt sprinkling onto the patio from the mouth of the porch
woodstove of the nighttime crackling softly
of harmonious harmonica medleys
blowing before bedtime prayer
woodstove facing John F. Kennedy's
picture on the wall
woodstove of Protestant Sundays
ringing without bells
woodstove of dark earth
fat worms and acequias
woodstove of 1960s propaganda
and all the rich hippies knocking poorly at the screen door
woodstove of private crazy laughter
of woodpeckers pecking through rough-hewn
barn timbers only to meet the sky
of rabbits nervously nibbling evening away
in the arroyo
of the water bucket banging and splashing
all the way home
woodstove of the water drop sizzle
of buñuelos and biscochitos and flour on the chin
of chokecherry jam dropping out
from the end of a tortilla
woodstove
that heard Mentorcito's violin bringing in the new year
that saw Tío Eliseo bring in an armload of wood
that heard Tío Antonio coming down the road
whistling a corrido and swinging his cane
woodstove of the blessed noontime
and Grandma Juanita heating up the caldito
woodstove of the sanctified and untamed holy spirit
of the dream awake dreamers
prophesizing in the beginning how the end would come
of creaking trochil gates left open forever
of twisted caved-in gallineros rocking
in weeping April wind
of abandoned orchards waist deep
in desánimo
of teardrops that held back the laughter
of the penitente procession moving through the hills
for the soul of the village
woodstove of the wounded faithful proudly
concealing their scars
woodstove of armpit farts and bedtime giggles
of pitchforks and axes under the bed in case of intruders
of coffee cans filled with everything but coffee
of ten cents for a cream soda at Corrina's
of strawberry Nehis and a bag of chili chips at Medina's
of a handful of bubble gum acá Santos's
woodstove of genius wisdom dressed up as the village idiot
of hand-me-down stories locked away
in the dispensa
of bien loco local heroes cracking homeruns
Saturday afternoons en la cañada
woodstove
of all that and more of all that disappearing
as children played hide 'n' seek in that abandoned goodtime feeling
while stumbling on the footsteps of tradition
woodstove that heard the fall of a people rising in silence
that died of a loneliness without cure
that cured itself in the company
of the so many more lonely
woodstove of my childhood
| Levi Romero | Living,Youth,Activities,Eating & Drinking,Relationships,Family & Ancestors,Home Life |
183 |
The Composing Room
|
I still see those men haphazardly standing
around the comps’ floor, mostly silent,
lost in their latest urgent jobs,
looking up and down as if nodding yes
from what they call their composers’ sticks
as they set inverse words and lines
of each page that could be taken for
Greek scripture, declaring:
In the beginning was the Word and the Word
was made cold type and the Word was
coldness, darkness, shiny greyness
and light—and the Word dwelt amongst us.
*
Oh, I know these men would laugh this off.
They’d say, if they simply didn’t throw
their eyes to heaven, that they were just ordinary
characters trying to keep the devil from the door,
and with luck have enough left over each week
to back a few nags, and go for a few jars.
But they can’t say anything or set anything now.
They are scattered from that place that’s not
the same any more and many have left
any place we know of in this life,
calling to mind the old names for printing:The Mysterious Craft or simply The Mystery.
*
I set them up in another city, another country
that’s as far away in distance
from that city as it’s far in time.
But they are still composing,
cracking the odd joke above
their sticks and galleys on some floor
of some building that is eternally busy
inside me even when I’ve forgotten
that I’ve forgotten them; forgetting
the world behind the word—
every time I read the word world I wonder
is it a typo and should I delete the l.
*
Now again I hanker to know the quality
of each letter: the weight, the texture, the smell,
the shiny new type, the ink-dark shades of old,
the different types of type, the various sizes
within the same font, the measures in ems,
picas, points and units. I’d set the words up,
making something out of all this
that stays standing—all set as masterly
as the words those men set that reveal
something of the mystery behind
and within these letters and the wonder and
the darkness, but with the lightest touch.
*
And the umpteen ways things can foul up
are beyond telling. Maybe the type is off,
or the typesetter may not be up
to the work, if only out of a hangover
setting an ! where there should be a ?
or a b where there should be a d,
or miss aspace or a line or dingbat.
And the proofreaders don't catch the error,
passing the copy on as clean, or the make-up man
fouls the assembly page, or the stoneman errs
as he fastens the page of cold type and furniture
with the chase, turning the quoin’s key.
*
Not to speak of the evil eye cast by
fellow composers ready
to knock the words of others, or the bosses
writing on the composition: Kill.
Old Shades, keep my words from such eyes
and fretting about that pied world and let me go
on regardless. And even if I foul up and the stewards
are right to set Kill on my last page and my words
are distributed and thrown in the hellbox,
the real achievement will be that I tried to set
the words right; that I did it with much labor
and not without a font of love. But that said,
*
grant me the skill to free the leaden words
from the words I set, undo their awkwardness,
the weight of each letter of each word
so that the words disappear, fall away
or are forgotten and what remains is the metal
of feeling and thought behind
and beyond the cast of words
dissolving in their own ink wash.
Within this solution we find ourselves,
meeting only here, through The Mystery,
but relieved nonetheless to meet, if only
behind the characters of one fly-boy’s words.
| Greg Delanty | Arts & Sciences,Language & Linguistics,Poetry & Poets |
184 |
The Alien
|
I’m back again scrutinizing the Milky Way
of your ultrasound, scanning the dark
matter, the nothingness, that now the heads say
is chockablock with quarks and squarks,
gravitons and gravatini, photons and photinos. Our sprout,
who art there inside the spacecraft
of your Ma, the time capsule of this printout,
hurling and whirling towards us, it’s all daft
on this earth. Our alien who art in the heavens,
our Martian, our little green man, we’re anxious
to make contact, to ask divers questions
about the heavendom you hail from, to discuss
the whole shebang of the beginning and end,
the pre-big bang untime before you forget the why
and lie of thy first place. And, our friend,
to say Welcome, that we mean no harm, we’d die
for you even, that we pray you’re not here
to subdue us, that we’d put away
our ray guns, missiles, attitude and share
our world with you, little big head, if only you stay.
| Greg Delanty | Living,Birth & Birthdays,Parenthood,Relationships,Family & Ancestors,Arts & Sciences,Sciences |
185 |
My Last Résumé
|
When I was a troubadour
When I was an astronaut
When I was a pirate
You should have seen my closet
You would have loved my shoes.
Kindly consider my application
Even though your position is filled.
This is my stash of snow globes
This is my favorite whip
This is a picture of me with a macaw
This is a song I almost could sing.
When I was a freight train
When I was a satellite
When I was a campfire
You should have seen the starburst
You should have tasted my tomato.
I feel sorry for you I’m unqualified
This is my finest tube of toothpaste
This is when I rode like the raj on a yak
This is the gasoline this is the match.
When I was Hegel’s dialectic
When I was something Rothko forgot
When I was moonlight paving the street
You should have seen the roiling shore
You should have heard the swarm of bees.
| Joseph Di Prisco | Activities,Jobs & Working |
186 |
Reasons Nobody Ever Called a Good Book of Poems a Page-Turner
|
Your first dog is ever your one dog
And no story has a happy ending anymore.
We have all wasted lives, sometimes we waste
Our own. Some nights are long ones, some
Never end at all. I don’t know how we canfall in love, which implies landing,
Whereas love promises everything but.
That’s why I like to listen to birds call
At dusk to each other from the acacias
But then I recall it’s still daylight and I
Hear them in the absence of the trees.
When I am traveling by train over mountains
All I think of is the sea. My father was
Never quite so alive until he died and now
He’s immortal. Somebody must do the calculus,
Somebody must work out the logic of the logic
Of this spectacle because spectacle’s the last
Word anyone would use for dreams that don’t cease,
For the sound of weeping coming from the next room,
Only there’s no next room and we’re the only ones
There, though just for a moment and a lifetime more.
Listen, I will tell you a secret, the secret you told
Me once on the train into the mountains
On the journey to the shore, a time long ago when
We spoke and never met. That secret, which is ours.
Some nights are so long the old dog comes home
To us who remain there waiting and waiting
Even if we’ve never been here before, where we are.
| Joseph Di Prisco | Living,Time & Brevity,Arts & Sciences,Poetry & Poets |
187 |
Emperor with No Clothes
|
If you care about yourself at all, come to your own aid while
there's still time.
Marcus Aurelius 3.14
Citizen of Rome, you are the center of the universe.
Problem is, circumference is—take a guess—me.
“Some things are impatient to be born
While others are impatient to die.” Don’t say
I did not warn you. Next time they swear
Shit happens, pop them square in the nose.
This will not help anybody, but helping is
The farthest thing from my imperial mind.
If you keep your spirit blameless and pure
People will drape you with laurels but
No one will have sex with you in backseats
Or marble mausoleums or anywhere else,
A small price to pay for honor and respect
Though not for me, being an emperor with no clothes.
Just pretend today is the last day of your life
And act accordingly—not that such strictures
Apply to Yours Truly, sports fans.
The forces of evil march on the fortress
Of your self. I wish I could explain why.
But what if evil did not exist and what if
Your self was no fortress, see what I mean?
Stoics get a bad name. Not in touch with feelings.
Too rigid. Know-it-all cocksure mothers.
So the Stoics retain PR firms, don’t tell a soul.
If you really knew what was good for you,
And you do, why do you care I’ll flail you alive?
True, pissing off your emperor is a poor plan,
Even one like me mounted bare-assed on a steed.
Once upon a time, children…The story peters out.
Circus revels and gladiatorial raves—
Seen one, seem them all. Life is tiresome,
When will it end and will we ever notice?
I wish I knew. Really, I wish I cared.
My pal, Marcus Aurelius, natters day and night:
“Living is more like wrestling than dancing.”
Guess he never saw me take Molly at the club.
And he says we always have the option of
Having no opinion. Right. Like he knows.
OK, then, where did I put my pants?
| Joseph Di Prisco | Arts & Sciences,Philosophy,Mythology & Folklore,Fairy-tales & Legends |
0 |
from From "Brief Biography of an Imaginary Daughter"
|
#1 [COLLEGE]
We packed your satchel with sweatshirts,
Soccer equipment, and The Elements of Style,
Loaded up the Hum Vee, a sad drive to JFK
And the cross-country flight to starting college,
where fortunately due to Advanced Placement
Courses you’ve already been awarded your MFA
And published your first book.
As we pulled out of the driveway, I slammed
On the brakes, and not on account of Jubilation,
The neighbor’s cat. “Stacey,” I said, “we have jumped the gun.”
“I didn’t know we had a gun, Pops,” you said.
“This is a figure of speech, a melonaphore.
But you can’t go to college yet,
Stacey, you’re barely by my count five years old.”
“That’s all right, Daddy-O, nice try.
But my name’s not Stacey.”
#2 [PUPPY]
Love this puppy and your love will be repaid.
I can’t stress how little this will teach you about life.
Which it will. Which is a lot.
Sometimes, when you’re sad, I won’t know what to say.
Desire will cut into the bone.
So much we need to cover before you’re on your own.
This is a tea kettle, where goldfish won’t feel at home.
When I was your age, before you were born,
A war was almost certainly about to break out.
The Russians turned out to be just like us,
Only worse drivers, which is a lot like us, too.
I had a pet once, too, you know. An accordion.
Very tough to train, stained with fluids as it was
About which nothing further need be said.
Your questions matter. No, they really do.
I have no clue as to the white carnations,
No reason to suppose the stars were not meant for you.
#3 [FISH]
“Do fish sleep?” I am so glad you asked. Once
Upon a time fish did not even catnap.
Childhood has reached a certain point.
More specific than that, I cannot be,
Or less. When you drive to Chartres
You can see it coming at you far away.
Never pass up a cathedral if you can.
Drink lots of water with the strawberries.
Leap before you look too hard, which makes
Things swim in your head, like fish that never sleep.
#4 [BIRDS…]
“Time’s come to talk to you about the birds.”
“And the bees?”
“What do you know about the bees?”
“Was just asking.”
“A falcon is one bird you can’t keep in a cage,
I can’t explain why, though I might point
To history for many instructive precedents.”
“You have trouble explaining, Dad.”
“Anyway, what I like about birds is, they’re much
Like dreams—they fly in through a window
Where you didn’t know there was a window before.”
“I get it. We open to the known and discover
Mysteries left in their place, like putting under the pillow
A tooth that fell out and you come up with the cash
When you need it in the morning, for school.”
“Let’s stay focussed, Amy.” “Sure, Reginald.”
“I mind it that you call me Reginald, who’s he?”
“Someday, Dad, I may fall in love.”
“Let’s go back to the birds. I don’t want to say
Love is for the ornithologists, though such thoughts occur.
Maybe the real topic is experience.”
“I knew that.” “When?” “You told me.” “I never.”
“Didn’t have to.” “That’s how, you just know?”
“Life’s a vale of tears, Pops, except when it’s not.”
“Hence, sweetheart, some birds thrive in cages.”
“Name three.” “I want you to try on some wings.
I want you to take flight. Like the day I gave birth…”
“What?” “The day I gave birth to you was the day of days.”
“You feeling OK?” “The epidural worked like a charm,
I felt like I was swimming in air.” “I think you’re confused.”
“I wouldn’t be the first, but when they handed you to me
You nursed till you fell asleep.” “You’re talking about love.”
“And some bees sting.”
#5 [BOND]
Once we had a bond, a sacred trust.
I carried you on my shoulders, we watched
The finches dart and feed, I read The Odyssey
To you, which OK was a stretch, but who cared
You did not exist? Certainly, not me.
But take the example of Homer.
Would you just give me a chance?
There’s an old dog called Argus
Who waits for the hero to show before he dies.
I’m getting to the point. If we never had a dog
I would wait for you to arrive from a journey
Forced upon you by chance and fate.
You see, the whole thing’s about waiting.
There you are off-stage readying yourself
For a grand entrance into a life none of us
Heretofore presumed. I myself ache
Barometrically in concert with the coming storms.
If you never are, I have something left over
Even if it’s only me, watching you wade in, as if
You were a great swimmer and this world another shore.
| Joseph Di Prisco | Living,Life Choices,Parenthood,Relationships,Family & Ancestors,Nature,Animals |
1 |
Care Package, With Riddle As Missive
|
I found my father’s favorite Swiss army knife
in a box he sent me with no note,
just James Bond videos,
nothing else.
What was the message?
The message was there wasn’t one.
This world violent, full of sex,
the movie’s zeitgeist, era after era, a new Bond
double-o-seven-ing in.
Divorced dad Sundays
at The Greenwich watching
the British Secret Service save the world.
I thought he sent the knife inadvertently,
but now I see it was code—
he was boxed in
without a knife
to cut himself out.
| Elizabeth A.I. Powell | Relationships,Family & Ancestors |
2 |
from From "Living Truthfully Under Imaginary Circumstances"
|
The goal of the Meisner acting technique has often been described
as getting actors to "live truthfully under imaginary circumstances."
Here are some acting games we have found useful.
I.
THE REPETITION GAME:
The Moment is a Tricky Fucker | Elizabeth A.I. Powell | Arts & Sciences,Philosophy,Theater & Dance |
3 |
from From "Willy Loman's Reckless Daughter"
|
Prologue Willy Loman’s reckless daughter flies quietly,fluttering like a silk-moth behind me
blocking my life, my scenesin whichever stage direction she wants.
Sometimes at night I can feel her dialing into me,her ringing calls like an imperial decree.
When she sleeps she crashes, like a carinto the guardrail of my ambition.
Her curse like a poison I cannot smell,an asphyxiation of the self by the self, that hell and hard sell.
Split personalities, we dream through the night,of our merger and acquisition, in her half-moon light,
Not even my husband can feelher there between us—a secret contract under seal.
When I awaken, her irises touch mine;an awful, indecipherable fault line.
She’s a character in search of an author, a devotee,trying to recount her history through me,
until I channel her. She’s like a phantom limb,hymn to the invisible. Her shameless whims,
the subtext of my lies. Under her tinted hairthe forest murmurs, becomes a thought, or prayer.
Until her thoughts tumble into mine;colors bleed. In the morning, I’m overwrought—
My patrilineal kin, she begins to wear thin,when she undoes hospital corners I’ve tucked so gently in.
Her cool white rising is meringue completing—the high-pitched silence of our congealing.
She was always ceremonially unfoldinghis white shirts, unpressing the folds
in my circumstance. I did and didn’t want her. I kepttrying to catch her, then let her slip. Any intent
to have her near made her more invisible. Her electricbreasts overfilled my brassieres. An interaction, our dialectic—
She never removes her hat upon entering the doorto my personality. Ma semblable, ma soeur!
| Elizabeth A.I. Powell | null |
4 |
Luna
|
lunatuna
fluttering
below belly
pasiones swooping
down deep
gathering storms
treasuring
rainergías pacíficas
marítimas, montañescas
abotona tu vientre, maja
easles b ready
to capture flight
entre tus aguas claras
allow flow
…reflect…
clama la milpa
eye your center
cherish thigh
hug torso
b one
with duende within
discover
sun risa raza roja
| Alurista | Living,The Body,Social Commentaries,Race & Ethnicity |
5 |
Pa' Césary Corky
|
what for the rush and bloody pain
what for the blooming and the rain
what for the quest and odyssey
what for the swimming and the sea, see
there b no shore or beach that anyone
can reach
and breathe, inhale, exhale, and love
all seems to ooze the stress that greed has carved in us
surely our species should be meek
before our motherearth’s volcanoes
storms and huracanes
tornadoes, floods and tremors
and there we b secreting poisons for all leggeds, wingeds,
fish and even trees
what for the rush and bloody pain
we’ll surely die, but then
we dig deeper in our heartmindspiritbody
and nurture glow and warmth
and light and peace and patience
and gladness and gardens
and gather all in oneness
and end the pain and bloody rush
desiring naught
expecting naught
missing naught
simply being being
we truly have no choice…though
we imagine, dream, hope, want
being all that we are we are all that is
and that is all there b
césar and corky
this b my writ to chávez y gonzález
carnales de las sonrisas grandes
de las carcajadas llenas
de murales
de cuadros, ensayos
matadors de pendejadas
terminators of guandajos and juanabees
hermanos, jefes
your “death” is but our “birth”
porque amasteis
entregasteis
y hoy, como siempre,
sois imprescindibles
| Alurista | Activities,Jobs & Working,Social Commentaries,History & Politics,Race & Ethnicity,Mythology & Folklore,Heroes & Patriotism |
6 |
The Unfastening
|
As the father turns away from the thought
of his failure, the hands remove
his glasses and rub his eyes over
and over, drying the nonexistent tears.
Unknown to the one who is troubled
about losing his hair, his fingers stroke
his baldness as he speaks. The body,
our constant companion, understands
the loneliness of the hostess in her dark
driveway, embracing herself after the guests
who promised more and soon have gone,
and even visits the old schoolteacher
who reads the same happy ending to each
new class, working her toes in her shoes.
How could the people of the kingdom
not have known the curse of sorrow
was nothing more than a long sleep
they had only to wake from? In dreams
the body, which longs for transformation
too, suddenly lifts us above the dark
roofs of our houses, and far above
the streets of the town, until they seem
like any other small things fastened to earth.
| Wesley McNair | Living,Disappointment & Failure,Growing Old,Life Choices,The Body |
7 |
The Poem
|
In the apparent
vacancy beyond
each line, you might
sense the poem
waiting to think
itself. Imagine
the surface of a twilight
pond in wind,
shifting and changing
the sky, then
going still
as a concentrating mind,
the far trees
deepening
in its reflection.
Like the poem
the pond’s alive—
its beauty (the sudden
scintillation of a hundred
thousand wavelets)
and music (the percussion
of a beaver’s tail)
arising from what is.
And when the pond
accumulates
the darkness,
which it loves,
it challenges your eyes
to find the light
that without darkness
you could not see.
Wild campsites
you never noticed
now appear
along the far shore.
It’s not only itself
the poem waits for
moving line by line
into its own dark.
It waits for you.
| Wesley McNair | Arts & Sciences,Poetry & Poets |
8 |
Losses
|
It must be difficult for God, listening
to our voices come up through his floor
of cloud to tell Him what’s been taken away:
Lord, I’ve lost my dog, my period, my hair,
all my money. What can He say, given
we’re so incomplete we can’t stop being
surprised by our condition, while He
is completeness itself? Or is God more
like us, made in His image—shaking His head
because He can’t be expected to keep track
of which voice goes with what name and address,
He being just one God. Either way, we seem
to be left here to discover our losses, everything
from car keys to larger items we can’t search
our pockets for, destined to face them
on our own. Even though the dentist gives us
music to listen to and the assistant looks down
with her lovely smile, it’s still our tooth
he yanks out, leaving a soft spot we ponder
with our tongue for days. Left to ourselves,
we always go over and over what’s missing—
tooth, dog, money, self-control, and even losses
as troubling as the absence the widower can’t stop
reaching for on the other side of his bed a year
later. Then one odd afternoon, watching something
as common as the way light from the window
lingers over a vase on the table, or how the leaves
on his backyard tree change colors all at once
in a quick wind, he begins to feel a lightness,
as if all his loss has led to finding just this.
Only God knows where the feeling came from,
or maybe God’s not some knower off on a cloud,
but there in the eye, which tears up now
at the strangest moments, over the smallest things.
| Wesley McNair | Living,Growing Old,Sorrow & Grieving,The Body,Religion,God & the Divine |
9 |
Parse
|
Dawn marks the wall
a thin flange of
off-blue
An imagined
silence
Always an imagined
silence
The speed
at which sleep’s
fogged dialogue withers
into the present
noun-scape
This rift valley
A volley of
seasonal beacons
Window
where mind
finds orbit
+
All a world can do
is appear
The window
intones
A room
whose walls
warp with sun
What’s seen
is dreamed
We think
ourselves here
| Joseph Massey | Living,The Mind |
10 |
A Title for the Haze
|
In a patch of sunlight
a decapitated grasshopper
twitches. The sunlight twitches.
Sky the size of a sky imagined.
Squint to see the quarter moon
—shallow gash on blue horizon.
Squint to hear beyond windows
wafting muzak. I’m half-awake
in this field of turned-on particulars.
A wreck of yellow blossoms
under a barn-door window.
A barn door without the barn.
| Joseph Massey | Nature,Landscapes & Pastorals |
11 |
Illocality
|
To imagine a morning
the first
sounds from the street
and the house, its halls
scarifying
consciousness
Antique glass
smudges limbs
(more blue
than green)
flared out
over a roof
To imagine
the raw circumference
of a field
as it wakes
what we make of it
where our senses
send us
Gray oscillates gray
and the mountain
a line
lodged within it
gone slack at the end
No need
to mention
weather
The yard—
the measure
An unkempt
garden bed
convulses
synchronous
with traffic
flashing through
the fence
Stone bench
in a ring of weeds
Shadows ring—
a sound
Bees doused in
viscous sun,
erased
| Joseph Massey | null |
12 |
What I've Come to Discuss
|
What I’ve come to discuss is mostly about shadows
and the airs left behind in caring, discarding,
the long inhibitions of whereso and when.
Alabaster, a dark quire, in its many pages and premises
the maze, from which move
tendrilled purples and contusions, magnificent
fuchsia receivers of false content,
the splayed flower, arterial, like the premise of a door
is where it leads to or from. Communication
of vessel, vial, capsule, hull, a tiniest nil
fires the neurons from their swooning stall,
is not a healing but adaptation to same
a quickening in deleting of sensation
a prior sizing. Stacked leaves (green shadows)
are givens in the columned garden, what work is needed
to determine that shape? Some hysteric
trope of repetition, rage for accretion,
dazed by its own mute replication,
like the minute lines of a hand. They are
its cries (writes Ponge, among others),
the tongue inseparable from its utterance (langue).
We weep to hear it, a language forgot.
I was saying I keep speaking
from some chamber sound deleted, which is why
I never call or write. In that theatre are many eclipses
and moons refracted in pinholes and wheels
wherein revolve astonished birds, and the Queen of Night
sleeps a rest restorative and profitable, and
andante allegro, the dead ships never sail.
| Karen Volkman | Nature,Trees & Flowers,Arts & Sciences,Language & Linguistics |
13 |
Bridge
|
1.
Bridge’s absence gave the creek a new aspect.
Uncrossable, irascible. Crosser stems
on the bank with her will and form,
extension “Phantom of incapacity
which is me.” Bright roar of water,
x of indomitability.
2.
The bridge is not an x. It bridges nothing.
The turmoil is only a portion.
3.
Bridge on the grass is brideless.
Tufts of terra like a bloom in air.
Rational slats, a surface’s accretion,
slat system. Grass tints it, heliotropic
emanation, sharp, up, or complex
occupation in shiving rain.
4.
Creek’s uncrossability, a new beauty.
“It looked like the process of a thinking,
deep run.” It became the suffering of form
and mute suggestion. The syllables
were not perennial. They broke and grew.
5.
The blue pants of the crosser were neither sky
nor water. They orient to the body
as form and boundary. The crosser’s green shirt
neither grass nor leaf-thought.
Desire to not get wet, another hurt.
6.
“Glamour of limit, where the rocks just slant”
down the bank, in a wet
stratification, and the creek
spills blows and goings
and is omniform leaving, a prime of seem.
7.
High water as a contour of relation
swells, hurls. The creek which was other
but not antipodal, or refusal. “The wish
to touch it with my phenomenal hand”
loves it as material.
8.
The bridge made the force containable.
Bridgeless the crosser sits, and very still.
“My phenomenal body crosses and longs.”
Ceaseless body of the audible.
| Karen Volkman | Activities,Travels & Journeys,Nature,Seas, Rivers, & Streams |
14 |
Washing the World
|
with a mournful but driving feel, in Bm, 2/2 time
in the dark, in the bitter wind
listen to a dream
grandmothers stand
shoulder to shoulder, on the rim of a hill
bend as one, and grasp one thing together
ask them, in the dream world, why
do they cry? they will show you in reply
their shawls of many colours, spread these wings
sweep you in, teach you how
once a year, in the dark of the year we wash
the whole world in a day—for one day, we cry until they're home, until they all are home
from one dawn to the next mourning
for the broken wailing for regrets
love lost, wrong words, wrong actions
unbalanced moments and all the cracks between heart
and heart, parent and child
lover and beloved friend, nation and nation
creature, and creature of another kind
for what we choose and what we neglect to choose
for what we wish we'd known
for each hand unclasped tongue unbridled
one whisper falling short of hearduntil they're home, until they are all home
the bread far from the hunger the apology
the confusion the broken road
these things we gather in this blanket
bone and sand and sage
we wash the world, between us
hold this blanket, fill it with our tears
and when we have cried
from one dawn to the next
then we will rise, and we will dance until they're home, until they all are home
lay your hands upon the truth of beauty's loss
heavy, soft as moss, this blanket
full of tears and dust and dying
becomes ocean cradle, healing, dark
the promise, washed clean by our sorrow
today crying out, as we're birthing tomorrow
not so much redemption
as the law of moon and season
calls for justice
one day, the lawmakers must
exit their echoing halls, fall in
with the grandmothers dancing
carry it cry it clean until they're home, until they are all home
until light through their bodies
translates to rainbows hung over the land
until light through their bodies
translates to rainbows strung over this land
until light through our bodies
translates to rainbows shining over our land until we're home, until we all are home
| Anna Marie Sewell | Living,Sorrow & Grieving,Relationships,Family & Ancestors,Social Commentaries,Crime & Punishment,Gender & Sexuality |
15 |
from The Splinters
|
(Skellig Michael) does not belong to any world that you and I have lived and worked in: it is part of our dream world…then (heading back) we were pursued by terrors, ghost from Michael…
George Bernard Shaw
I
The ferry furrows
the foam,
leaving a wake
that quickly settles
and forgets us,
as it has forgotten
all those
who’ve opened these waters:
fisherman, monk, pilgrim and pagan,
some foundering here.
Our mainland
world diminishes.
There is respite.
A cloud engulfs us
out of nowhere
as if the miraculous
were about to appear.
The veil lifts
to reveal the small Skellig
and Skellig Michael
rising like chapel and cathedral.
II
We forget speech, hypnotized by the climb,
concentrating on narrow, rock-hewn steps
that spiral up like the gyres
of the Book of Kells, whirling in labyrinths
of knowledge, turmoil and eternity.
They lead to the beehive huts and oratories
packed with a congregation of sightseers
who whisper in disbelief and reverence
at how those sometime monks lived
in this wind-tugged cloister of shells.
We browse in each dome’s live absence
and picnic above the graveyard
that’s no bigger than a currach
with a crucifix for helmsman
navigating his crew to the island of the dead.
We’re eyed by the staunch, monkish puffins.
Our tongues loosen, but, in keeping
with the somberness of this sun-haloed place,
we chat about the world with an earnestness
that would embarrass us on the mainland.
You tell of medieval monks charting world maps
with countries drawn as humans gorging upon
each other’s entangled bodies. We go on to
the lands and demons of the world of poetry.
I’m flummoxed when you ask what poetry is.
I recall how the earliest musical instruments
were hewn out of bones, and that poets
carve their words out of those gone before.
They are the primitive musicians who beat
and blow words back to life. More than that I don’t know.
III
[…]
That dusk at Dún an Óir we slaughtered even
the pregnant, whimpering women methodically
while a bloodstained sun drowned in the ocean.
Each fetus struggled in the belly
of each slain mother as desperately
as a lobster dropped in a boiling pot.
Had shed blood been ink, I could still be
quilling The Faerie Queene, but I did not
allow a drop to blot a mere sonnet
that you, trapped in complicity, can never
quite break free of. Admit it, hypocrite!
In your time few are not guilty of slaughter.
Even the page you’ll pen this upon is of pine
that Amazonians were shot for. I could go on.
(Edmund Spenser)
I lifted the pitch of my grief
above the storm-lashing waves
for my world breaking on the reefs
of foreign, land-grabbing knaves,
who ignore dependence upon
the lowliest plants and creatures
as the hermit crab and cloak anemone
depend on one another.
But no matter what, you must
keen for the world’s theft
as I keened mine, despite knowing
soon no one may be left.
(Aodhagán Ó Rathaille)
Lend an ear to one of your own kind
and do not let yourself be caught
by the winds of lust, like Dante’s starlings
blown this way and that by every gust.
I myself was borne on this wind
as I rode across country,
always wary that around the next bend
my life would catch up with me.
My rakish ways squandered energy
that I should have instilled in song,
more worthy of the muse-gift given to me
than my odd aisling,
Pay particular heed to me, especially
since your word-talent is less than mine.
I’m still too bushed to eke out a last line.
(Eoghan Rua Ó Súilleabháin)
Sing up front,
cold-shouldering
the fashionable
low key of your time,
closed, cautious and crabbit
as a farmer.
Sing as open-throated
as my curlew keen.
I supped the red wine
of Art’s blood
as he lay slain,
already becoming Cork mud.
Sing as full-throated
as my unmatched plaint;
matching my words
to his cold body
that would never again
rouse to my touch.
My hands wept
that day’s icy rain
as I swore to undo
that kowtowing
dribble of a man
who slew my Art
of the winged white horse.
The spirit of that mare
I rode fleeter than any hare,
fleeter than any deer,
fleeter than the wind
through Munster’s open country.
Sing your provenance,
our elder province.
(Eibhlín Dubh Ní Chonaill)
I sang not for my own or for beauty's sake
as much as to keep our spirits fired,
knowing as long as we sang we'd not break,
refusing to allow the country be shired.
But it was too much when even our lands
turned hostile and drove us like lapwings
in the hard winter, together in dying bands,
our swollen bellies pregnant with nothing.
Even the birds seemed to give up singing.
So I lay down and relinquished song.
But I should have kept up my amhrán-ing,
adapting and transmuting their tongue.
Transform the spirit of where you belong,
make something right out of what's wrong.
(Tomás Rua Ó Súilleabháin)
Tell of those weather-sketched
Attic islanders
who half-tamed their school
of rocky Blaskets,
water spouting from the blowholes
of cliffs.
Tell how they were forced
from their Ithaca,
still dreaming in the surf-rush
of Irish,
the inland longing for the lilt
of the sea.
In them uncover the destiny
of everyone,
for all are exiled and in search
of a home,
as you settle the eroding
island of each poem.
(Robin Flower)
[…]
The islands' standing army
of gannets fiercely snap,
stab and peck one another.
Few could match
the spite I unleashed
on any who encroached
into my territory. I spat
with petrel accuracy.
I should have had the wisdom
of the sad-eyed puffins
who let everyone come close,
sensing few mean hurt,
though when forced to tussle
they'll show their worth.
So learn from me.
When I come to mind
don't recall how, feisty,
I knocked nests of words
over the edge,
splattering on the rocks
the crude squwaks of other
ravaging, wing-elbowing birds;
rather think of the winged poems
I hatched, seen,
regardless of time and place,
gliding and gyring
with their own grace.
(Patrick Kavanagh)
Life when it is gone is like a woman
you were glad to be quit of only to find
yourself years later longing for her,
catching her scent on a crowded street.
Tell us of the seagull plundering your picnic
before it wakes you. Tell us of the rain
tapping a pane while you're ensconced
by the fire cradling a pregnant brandy glass.
(Louis MacNeice)
Can you still hear a distant train whistle blow?
Wet my whistle with a slug of Guinness.
What is the texture of fresh-fallen snow?
Do girls still wear their hair in braid?
What's tea? What's the smell of the sea?
Tell me. Tell me. I am beginning to fade.
(Dylan Thomas)
IV
The alarming, silhouetted bird
has a preternatural quality
as it flutters about
my head, drawing me
from sleep's underworld.
I resist its pull.
Everything turns
into dream's usual montage.
Another figure emerges
but says nothing,
as if that's what he came to say.
His face merges into
one of a gagged female.
She shimmers and vanishes.
Dolphins break
beyond Blind Man's Cove,
returning the dead
to Bull Island, transmitting
their encrypted, underwater Morse.
The savant local ferryman
informs us that Skellig Michael
was once a druidic site.
His oil-wrinkled hands tug
the engine cord,
coaxing our boat
out of the cliff-shaded cove.
We withdraw
into the distance,
leaving a disgruntling sense
that we've only touched the tip
of these dark icebergs.
| Greg Delanty | Living,Sorrow & Grieving,Activities,Travels & Journeys,Nature,Seas, Rivers, & Streams,Arts & Sciences,Poetry & Poets,Social Commentaries,History & Politics |
16 |
In the Next Next World
|
That sound Arvo Pärt does with one piano note
stars split, fade, wander
in cosmic expansion—
First responder’s genesis and torch of
metadatacrunch tumbling in a
burnt and weedy churchyard
equal parts Lethe and lithe—
Grass, is it hollow, hallow
to wake no longer among
mortals? The woman her dress flowered
from a blown ceiling silver-rosed—
Flat plasm’s
archangel coming clear out
of sheetrock and screen
shield and spear in hand
let us do all the cooking
if she will lead the pack, remember the route, read the waters—
After the great fire we
tread river’s late cream and flare.
We woke in a city.
Where who slew us into portions
on a block out of earth
gathered our limbs
and we were allowed to continue
unhunted. If “if” is the one word one is given with God
to explain how one survived.
Oh. Ah. Siren,
white cockatoo
meets deep
blue.
Fog. Pour ammonia
on coyote
scat.
| Gillian Conoley | Living,Sorrow & Grieving,Time & Brevity,Nature,Landscapes & Pastorals,Social Commentaries,History & Politics |
17 |
The Present
|
It was a vertical time. It was the expression, a spirit giving way onto an electric barren. We
circled and were encircled and had no cause. It was a time of the self come on in a field of
apparatuses. It was vignetted by sleep, and the sleep was in its center breached. Cold moving
through the smell of gas. The big-leafed enclosure. It was a time that clattered at the horizons,
whose recounting was already foreclosed, as in a numeral smudged in powder, as in a thin water
making of the atmosphere a disc. It was a time of guzzling. A time amid what has been kept, a
time of calendered trust, repeated appeal, erasures of flight. We begin with a weedy stem drawn
against the winter sky. Dear hierophant, our decision initialed. The muffled sound of the closet
and the machine.
| Ryo Yamaguchi | Living,Time & Brevity,Social Commentaries,History & Politics,Money & Economics |
18 |
The bottoms of my shoes
|
The bottoms of my shoes
are clean
From walking in the rain
| Jack Kerouac | Nature,Weather |
19 |
In my medicine cabinet
|
In my medicine cabinet
the winter fly
Has died of old age
| Jack Kerouac | Living,Death,Time & Brevity,Nature,Animals |
20 |
Useless! Useless!
|
Useless! Useless!
—heavy rain driving
into the sea
| Jack Kerouac | Living,Disappointment & Failure,Nature,Seas, Rivers, & Streams,Weather |
21 |
Answer
|
I broke at last
the terror-fringed fascination
that bound my ancient gaze
to those crowding faces
of plunder and seized my
remnant life in a miracle
of decision between white-
collar hands and shook it
like a cheap watch in
my ear and threw it down
beside me on the earth floor
and rose to my feet. I
made of their shoulders
and heads bobbing up and down
a new ladder and leaned
it on their sweating flanks
and ascended till midair
my hands so new to harshness
could grapple the roughness of a prickly
day and quench the source
that fed turbulence to their
feet. I made a dramatic
descent that day landing
backways into crouching shadows
into potsherds of broken trance. I
flung open long-disused windows
and doors and saw my hut
new-swept by rainbow brooms
of sunlight become my home again
on whose trysting floor waited
my proud vibrant life.
| Chinua Achebe | Living,Life Choices,Relationships,Home Life,Social Commentaries,Money & Economics |
22 |
NON-commitment
|
Hurrah! to them who do nothing
see nothing feel nothing whose
hearts are fitted with prudence
like a diaphragm across
womb’s beckoning doorway to bar
the scandal of seminal rage. I’m
told the owl too wears wisdom
in a ring of defense round
each vulnerable eye securing it fast
against the darts of sight. Long ago
in the Middle East Pontius Pilate
openly washed involvement off his
white hands and became famous. (Of all
the Roman officials before him and after
who else is talked about
every Sunday in the Apostles’ Creed?) And
talking of apostles that other fellow
Judas wasn’t such a fool
either; though much maligned by
succeeding generations the fact remains
he alone in that motley crowd
had sense enough to tell a doomed
movement when he saw one
and get out quick, a nice little
packet bulging his coat pocket
into the bargain—sensible fellow.
September 1970
| Chinua Achebe | Religion,Christianity,Social Commentaries,History & Politics |
23 |
Flying
|
(for Niyi Osundare)
Something in altitude kindles power-thirst
Mere horse-height suffices the emir
Bestowing from rich folds of prodigious turban
Upon crawling peasants in the dust
Rare imperceptible nods enwrapped
In princely boredom.
I too have known
A parching of that primordial palate,
A quickening to manifest life
Of a long recessive appetite.
Though strapped and manacled
That day I commanded from the pinnacle
Of a three-tiered world a bridge befitting
The proud deranged deity I had become.
A magic rug of rushing clouds
Billowed and rubbed its white softness
Like practiced houri fingers on my sole
And through filters of its gauzy fabric
Revealed wonders of a metropolis
Magic-struck to fairyland proportions.
By different adjustments of vision
I caused the clouds to float
Over a stilled landscape, over towers
And masts and smoke-plumed chimneys;
Or turned the very earth, unleashed
From itself, a roaming fugitive
Beneath a constant sky. Then came
A sudden brightness over the world,
A rare winter’s smile it was, and printed
On my cloud carpet a black cross
Set in an orb of rainbows. To which
Splendid nativity came–who else would come
But gray unsporting Reason, faithless
Pedant offering a bald refractory annunciation?
But oh what beauty! What speed!
A chariot of night in panic flight
From Our Royal Proclamation of the rites
Of day! And riding out Our procession
Of fantasy We slaked an ancient
Vestigial greed shriveled by ages of dormancy
Till the eyes exhausted by glorious pageantries
Returned to rest on that puny
Legend of the life jacket stowed away
Of all places under my seat.
Now I think I know why gods
Are so partial to heights—to mountain
Tops and spires, to proud iroko trees
And thorn-guarded holy bombax,
Why petty household divinities
Will sooner perch on a rude board
Strung precariously from brittle rafters
Of a thatched roof than sit squarely
On safe earth.
| Chinua Achebe | Religion,Other Religions,Mythology & Folklore,Fairy-tales & Legends |
24 |
Itinerary
|
I don’t mind the ring roads
or the strange intersections,
filled in with radio music tarmac
skirting streetlight and the dissolving moon.
Wing mirrors tell
of running trees.
My heart races
in the heave of the wind.
In the pivot of glass everything
is so small and manageable.
I think of an old song,
of purple cows in far fields,
I wonder what it’d take
to cover miles and miles
with no maps or destination.
It is not easy anymore
to forget or be free of the bear
that roams the place where I come from.
| Jennifer Wong | Activities,Travels & Journeys |
25 |
Koi
|
Among heart-shaped leaves
the white fish gleams, red tail.
Soft lotuses sleep.
| Jennifer Wong | Nature,Animals |
26 |
Gift
|
''At one time, I dreaded everything I was making.'
Yayoi Kusama (Winter 1999)
First it is just a measling of the tablecloth
but soon it spills
in all colours, all gaiety:
desk floor lamp flowers
tatami, my underwear
then dares to paw across
Mother’s face, so
smilingdelirious.
Twenty years
in a twelve square metre room
with the thuds of tennis balls
the only music
tells me
that suffering
is necessary
and more powerful
than healing
and I wish
to cover all territory
for once—hospital beds, chinaware,
bed linen, your bland skin
with the pattern and fear of all my dots—
by the old wharf on Naoshima
I make my yellow wartime pumpkins.
I know my home is not a country anymore,
just a festering colony of the mind:
these shuddering trees
that come and talk to me each night,
the whispers of the white nurses
and the star-dances
of my Japanese kaleidoscope.
Come haunt me still. Do what you may.
I won’t return. I’m not afraid.
| Jennifer Wong | Living,Health & Illness,Sorrow & Grieving,Relationships,Home Life |
Subsets and Splits