Read The Best American Poetry 2014 Online
Authors: David Lehman
latest progress toward a model's sashay on the catwalk.
And after that, when I'd come over, in those
outfits I wore then, Diana-ing
for a man, Stanley would be holding the stuffed
animal, and petting it,
nape to rump, nape to rump,
stub of the bob tailâ98,
99, 100, those huge old beautiful
hands, stroking the world, which hummed when Stanley stroked it.
from
The Harvard Review
Outside the Met a man walks up sun
tweaking the brim sticker on his Starter cap
and he says pardon me
Old School
he
says you know is this a wishing well?
Yeah
Son
I say sideways over my shrug
at the limpid smooth as spandex behind me.
âââThrow your bread on the water.
I tighten my chest wheezy as Rockaway beach
sand with a pull of faux smoke from my e-cig
to cozy the truculence I hotbox alone
and I am at the museum because it is not a bar.
Because he appears not to have changed
them in days I eye the heel-chewed hems
of his pants and think probably he will
ask me for fifty cents any minute now wait
for it. A smoke or something. Central Park exhibits
the frisking transparency of autumn. Tracing
paper sky, leaves like eraser crumbs gum
the pavement. As if deciphering celestial
script I squint and purse off toward the roof
line of the museum aloof as he fists two
pennies from his pockets mumbling and then
aloud my man he says hey my man I'm going
to make a wish for you too.
âââI am laughing now so what you want
me to sign a waiver? He laughs along ain't
say all that he says but you do have to
hold my hand.ââAnd close your eyes.
I make a sabbath of my face before
he asks are you ready. Yeah
dawg
I'm ready.
Sure? Sure let's do this his rough hand
in mine inflates like a blood pressure cuff and I
squeeze back as if we are about to step together
from the sill of all resentment and timeless
toward the dreamsource of un-needing the two
of us hurtle sharing the cosmic breast
of plenitude when I hear the coins blink against
the surface and I cough up daylight like I've just
been dragged ashore. See now
you'll never walk alone he jokes and is about
to hand me back to the day he found me in
like I was a rubber duck and he says you got to let
go but I feel bottomless and I know he means
well though I don't believe
âââand I feel myself shaking
my head no when he means let go his hand.
from
Painted Bride Quarterly
Suppose: a Device for measuring subdural space.
Let your Device be audible in all nightmares.
Suppose: all nightmares stick to the nerves & veins.
All veins get injured. Let that be true.
It's a great honor to get injured in a nightmare.
The honor is: you can activate your Skeleton-Gear.
Let
X
equal the force of your Skeleton-Gear striking a Life Token.
Let
M
equal the length of one nightmare.
Now multiply your Devices.
The shearing pain in your head comes from linear force.
You must have filled your head with Life Tokens.
Or: you've kicked a headful of Tokens with linear force.
Try to locate your Life Token without touching it.
Try to release your Life Token without locating it.
Then press
ESC
to affix your nightmare to a plane.
Your Device will jangle when it's ready to start affixing.
Let your nightmare expand along the inside of your Skeleton-Gear.
It's true that some nightmares have flags.
Indicate your readiness by smashing a handful of turf.
Collect: the Feelings Token.
Collect: the Flag Token.
You can step right out at any time.
from
The Baffler
The virus, your gentleman caller, pays his vulgar respects. We'll work from a composite sketch. Send out a dragnet.
The thing is, those creatures can hide. Oviparous inside your ear canal they hatch in your cochlea spiral & spiral.
How did he get inside?
Jimmy, oh Jimmy, oh Jimmy Mack, why don't you
cut the lock. Somebody's mocking me.
He's like yesterday's newspaper: Sure you'd pick him up in a bathroom. But you already know his type.
Hit the lights. Now who's at the door? It could be anybody. Let's call him Jimmy now for continuity's sake.
Jimmy's not going to give us his specimen without we got a warrant. You're going to have to catch him in the act.
from
The Iowa Review
It is customary to hold the dead in your mouth
Next to the other dead and their failing trophies:
Quetzal, starthroat, nightjar, grebe, and artic loon:
This ash for my daughter's tongue, I give without
Sackcloth or sugar: the museum closing,
The whale falling from heaven due
Upon our heads at any time: our haloes already
Flat as plates and broken about our ankles:
How often can you send a child to meet a ghost
At the river before the child comes back speaking
As the river, speaking as the pedal-less red
Bicycles half-buried in its bank, speaking bolt oil
Spilling down the legs of a thrice-trussed bridge
Just after a train lurches toward a coast covered in smog:
The river must be thick with this type of body:
A daughter bearing bird names on her lips, cutting
Her ankles on cans that resemble her mother's tongue.
from
The Cincinnati Review
He made a statue of the east wind
Reconciled never too late, in
Silhouette, never too late as these
First days of March turn backward,
Facing the full of winter in
Enduring love, full jollity
Of winter's face to reconcilement,
In silhouette.
He did not forget
Who lost his life to remember it.
Step down. Do not be proud.
There is a double heart behind
The breast bone. Bare it. Beat it.
Begin to eat it in full view,
Who loves you every inch of the wind.
First days of March, lords of jollity.
from
The Literary Review
And because you're not an antelope or a dog
you think you can't drop your other two limbs down
and charge toward the Eternal Heart. But
those are your legs too, the ones that have hauled
your strangest body through a city of millions
in less than a day, at its own pace, in its own pain,
and because you cannot make the pace of the one whom you love
your own, and because you cannot make the pain of the one you love
your own pain, your separate aches must meet somewhere
poised in the heaven between your bodies
âskylines turned on their sidesâreminders
of what once was, what every man and woman
must build upon, build from, the body, the miserable,
weeping body, the deep bony awkwardness of love
in the bed. If you've kissed bricks in secret
or fallen asleep where there was no bed or spent time
lighting a fire, then you know the beginning of love
and maybe you know the end of it too,
and maybe you know the far ends, the doors, where
loved ones enter to check on you. It's not someone else speaking