Read The Best American Poetry 2014 Online
Authors: David Lehman
âwas that thought would
âhave
ânone of it. So much of
what they said they thought
âthought refuted, Mr. P's
âac-
complice, they complained . . .
âNo sooner that than the
skid they thought endless
âended. No sooner that
âas
though complaint made it
âso . . . An increased im-
munity came over them, what-
âsaid cover, thought's
qualm
âand rebuff, cover's what-
said complaint . . . Cover's
âwhatsaid compliance it was,
ââwhat-
âever worked worked out ad
hoc . . . The tale's torn cloth
âwhat all there was of it,
the tale the tale's rending,
ânot
âenough. They awoke some
âother morning on some
other side of morning, happy
ââto
âawake but happy-sad to be
awake, unsure they were awake,
âsurprised . . . They were get-
ting to be chagrined again. No
âââone
âcould say what they made
of it, road gone from as it
âwas, awoke from what . . .
Sprawled in what was known
ââas
âaftermath, light's disguised
âarrival, light's abject ad-
dress . . . Light looking into
ââwhich
they could only squint, go
âoff the road where the
âhighway bent . . . That was
ââthe
âway the story
went
from
Poet Lore
I don't know
if I wore glasses
when I met you
but I know
the last time
I saw you you
drank a drink
I bought you
with another
woman who
was far uglier
than I have
ever been. I have brown eyes, did I ever tell you?
Your eyes are too too blue, tell-all awful, and too
too pretty; you make all the girls swoon, and then
lament how harpies pound on your door, plucking
the very shingles off your roof, conducting through
their unanimous will a plot to kill your hive's queen,
fix a hose from the car's tailpipe to pump barnyard
dread straight into your ken, therefore you demand
I ought never wish to lie in your bed. I have black eyes,
did I tell you? But your eyes are damp blue, fingers in
winter blue, worrying about a prom date blue, never
washed a dish blue. Have I mentioned my eyes are
dead brown, dirt brown, stone brown, done with you
brown, screaming out in the streets I'm so drunk brown,
I'm just ignoring the noise rising up from streets asleep
brown? As in, as brown as dead leaves because my love's
eyes were dead brown and when he shouted down at
that drunk on the street that New Year's Eve from
my third floor window that drunk man called him
Whiskey Whore Boy. And his eyes were not wish-
wash blue, his eyes were mostly moss and trees,
not mojitos in a barroom, no, his eyes all gin-lit in
a hotel room on our last night were ice-cold, even
in his farewell he was bold, his eyes anyone might
have called plain, but they could at least cry. I am
sick to death of your blue eyes, fabric eyes, flower
eyes. I have brown eyes, plain and saying eyes behind
thick frames, glassy eyes handing themselves over
to you in buckets eyes, dig your hands into my black
soil eyes, my ugly eyes reaching into your eyes for
my twin eyes, look back at me eyes while your eyes
crawl the walls, cloud-blue, wandering off as milky
bosomed maids will look away from the eyes that
seek the crevices deep between their heavy breasts
that sway beneath the cows they bend to milk eyes.
Won't you have another drink from my silty yonder
eyes? I may look
plain but I've got
roses in my blood,
can bloom right
out the soil of these
here brackish eyes,
wander a limb across
the chest of your
country, unlock
the footlocker of your
desire with the tip
of my vine eyes.
from
Willow Springs
In a waiting room at the Kresge Eye Center
my fingers trace the outline of folded money
and I know the two hundred fifty dollars there
is made up of two hundred forty-five I can't afford to spend
but will spend on a calm voice that can explain
how I can be repaired. Instead, the words
legally blind
and
nothing can be done
mean I'll spend
the rest of the week closing an eye to the world,
watching how easily this becomes that.
The lampposts lining the walk home
are the thinnest spears I've ever seen, a row of trash cans
becomes discarded war drums, and teeth
in the mouth of an oncoming truck
want to tear through me. Some of me
always wants to be swallowed.
â¢â¢
The last thing my doctor said before I lost
my insurance was to see a vision specialist
about the way light struggles and bends
through my deformed cornea.
Before the exam I never closed my right eye
and watched the world become a melting watercolor
with the left. Before a doctor shot light
into the twitching thing, before I realized
how little light I could handle, I never
thought much of the boy who clawed up at me
from beneath my punches, how a fingernail scraped
the eye, or how it closed shut
like a door to a room I could never leave.
â¢â¢
I could see the reflective mesh of his shoes,
the liquor bottle tossed in an arc
even before it shattered at my feet, and I am embarrassed
at how sharp my eyes were, how deft my body,
my limbs closing the distanceâhow easily
I owned his face, its fear, and fought back tearsâ
all of it mine. I don't want to remember the eyes
that glanced over shoulder just before
I dragged him like a gazelle into the grass
that was a stretch of gravel and glass
outside a liquor store. How easily this becomes that.
â¢â¢
On a suspension bridge I close my bad eye
and it's like aiming through a gunsight;
even the good eye is only as good as whatever glass
an optometrist can shape. I watch sundown
become a mouth. Broad and black-throated,
it devours the skyline and every reflection.
Horns sprout from the head of my silhouette
rippling
dark, dark, dark
against the haze of water
and I try to squint that monster
into the shape of a man.
from
Ploughshares
You could still become a queen.
When, a slip of a girl,
you directed trees
to lower their limbs,
neither fire ants nor sap
could stop your climb,
nor rain that lightly fell,
misting leaves.
Inside a story's spell,
you find your way back,
where a stone on a path waits
for you to stumble.
Like the kaleidoscope's contents,
time is jumbled, opening at will.
Now: a too-bright sun and you,
teetering on a wall,
parasol clutched tight as you tumble.
This parasol is, for a moment,
everything you've lost
and all that can console.
from
The Southern Review
the frog ready for inspection, skin flaps
opened and pinned back, organs
arrayed for the takingâthis is how
I approach you. and you. here, my spleen
for the squeezing. my intestine
to be strung out, perhaps wrapped
around the neck like a lariat. not
for the squeamish, my heart thudding
to be plucked out with a delicate thumb
and forefinger, dinner for the willing,
and beautiful, and broken. I am not smart
about love, is what I'm saying. not even
smart about whose face I will take
in my hands and press against my face
until we are a single organism. the mouth
is not an organ but I give it to you
anyway, I give it all away is what
I'm saying. I'm easy to adore. my torso
a life raft strung with Christmas lights
and full of all your favorite things, beer
and expensive cheese and songs
about leaving. I'm so beautiful
splayed out on this tray full of tar
and entrails. I'm so useful
I could be a meal for an army
of traumatized surgeons, I'm full-time
at this job of bleeding, my esophagus
a stripper pole or cocaine straw.
when I say
eat me
I mean
suck the bones clean, leave nothing
for the waiting, nothing for the vultures
or the travelers to come.
from
The Carolina Quarterly