Read The Best American Poetry 2014 Online
Authors: David Lehman
âââstory) sin is cast on those most sinned
against; their coffins covered with a flag:
âââstripes like the backs of slaves back when,
and starsâperhaps the last thing that you see
âââwhen the landmine takes youâlife and
limb, as the saying goes. My God. I knew a man,
âââhardly more than a boy, though the word's
forbidden when the young man's black,
âââas if you meant him disrespect. But he wasn't yet
out of his teens, a sweet kid name of Turnipseed,
âââCarl as I recall, and I've always wondered how
the war turned out for him. Afraid, in fact, to know.
Showed up in class one day in uniform, but not
âââto stayâto say goodbyeâresigned, a fatalist.
Why struggle in a net that tightens
âââwhen you fight its hold? Just say
so long
, and go.
All I could find to say was, please, take care
âââof yourself. I mean, what good are words.
A little
bit of hardly anything.
And seeds?
What good, as they said in 'Nam, when you
âââbought the farmâthe field plowed with dragonseed,
from which those fratricidal armies sprang
âââand fell upon each other's throats, and fell like dominoes
to join the ranks of headstones,
row on row on row . . .
âââAnd Turnipseed? That seed was meant to grow.
from
The Hampden-Sydney Poetry Review
Little soul, charismatic vagabond,
Honored guest, comrade of the body.
Now you shall depart into those regions
Fogbound, anesthetized, and barren.
Here your laughter served you well.
There, everlasting, your mouth's stitched shut.
âHadrian, “Animula”
Assume, dear vagabond, you are permitted
ââOne last survey. Your 21 grams of sentience,
âââLittle soulâthe weight exactly
Of a ruby-throated hummerâshall hover
ââThe foliated stamens of your
âââEarthly measure. How you dart & pivot,
Honored guest, your thirst unquenchable.
âHere is Milbank, South Dakota,
âââThe saffron dustbowl where your father,
Dear comrade, raises his belt to crisscross your back:
ââThe five & twenty lesions. Here the state hospital,
âââYour mother ballooning with insulin
To induce the coma meant to cure the demons
ââMarauding the precincts of her abject brain.
âââNow you shall depart: a milk run in Duluth,
A quart bottle bursting on a frozen stoop, then
ââA troop ship bound for Tunis, & into those regions
âââOf desert where you wander your forty days.
You rifle the pockets of a dead Wehrmacht corporal:
ââLuger & a snakebite kit. & now you lean
âââFrom a baggage car door, hefting a postal sack
As the train slows for a stationâBreckinridge
ââOr Sleepy Eyeâslows but will not stop
âââFor twenty-seven years. The railroad men's
Hotels along the tracks, pulls of bourbon
ââFrom a dented flask. The white Dakota plainsâ
âââFogbound, anesthetized & barren.
Montage of seven Chevy Biscaynes, the songbook
ââOf Ernest Tubb. A shingled ranch, deriving from
âââThe GI Bill. GARDEN SIX TWO FOUR
SEVEN SEVEN, the receiver lifted from its cradle
ââAs you weep to a stranger who's purloined
âââYour pension. Pulls of bourbon
From a highball glass, from a coffee cup, the thrall
ââ& ratchet of ECT, your dress rehearsal
âââFor oblivion. What I remember: your laughter
Did not serve you well. Honored guest, comrade
ââOf the body, your farewell is complete.
âââBlessèd the descent which beckons.
There, everlasting, your mouth's stitched shut.
from
AGNI
In the undisclosed desert facility, they strapped me to a steel table and told me to recite the poem that would save the world.
(I had arrived there in a windowless, automated van driven inside the hollow mountainâ
through the forest they had chased me to exhaustion.)
They polished metal tools I'd never seen before.
To break me down, at first one of them kept tapping on my nose and whispering lyrics, access codes, rapid sequences of Greek letters and English surnames.
One tried to interface with my brain, injecting a sort of horned electrode into Wernicke's, then Broca's. My larynx in spasm. My hands were hooves, then nightingale beaks, the fluorescent tubes above me were my white bones.
I chanted baby names during sensations of drowning, overwhelming nausea. Back and forth from ice-cold water, mock burials. They crowned me with electrified laurels.
They touched me, laughing.
They touched me and I sang and for what?
from
Cream City Review
You, faithful ravens, staying on and saying
through the songbirdless winter
the biblical syntax of your declarations.
It is with great fascination I watch you excise,
with inordinate patience, the upward eye
of the fallen deer below the house.
I confess the sight through my binoculars
puts me eye-to-eye with both you
and the eye you eat and squabble over,
gustatory, opening now and then your great wings
in contretemps corvidae vexations,
like a scrum of omnivorous umbrellas.
Further plunder will require your partners, the coyotes,
slinking even now your way and awaiting
the night your plumage exemplifies
and under which they will open the carcass
for your further delectation and caws
the dozen mornings I imagine it will take.
Then the snows will bury it, and many mice
will gnaw its bones until it emerges yet again
from the melts of spring, a blessing for the blowflies
and the seethe of their maggots, until the vault
the empty brain occupied is emptied itself,
and I retrieve the skull and hang it on my shack.
There it will be filled with the thoughts of yellow jackets,
there it will grin its grim, unmandibled
half-smile out over the distances swallows
troll for the yellow jackets themselves,
and one of you will perch yourself upon a bare rib then,
to recite, for the world, your ravenous beatitudes.
from
Southern Indiana Review
One day you wake and they're there, flecks of mud
weed-eaters throw against the window, moths
in their dark migrations, salmon that taste like dust.
All month long, they fall from the laundry, dead
receipts for burritos, coffees, books. They've lotused
toilet water, drinks left out from the night before.
They rifle into floodlights, their exit wounds
so much skin, so much powdered glue. April's cruelty
is, isn't it, just a rumor floated by May and June
while everyone fans the rice pages of their Bibles
in sermons' hot wind. It's the dry air makes them rise.
In these parts now they say
sirocco
, entirely
out of place. They say
monsoon
, which is a way
of not saying fire, virga,
haboob
. I'd like to feel
the milt wind off Erie or Ontario, fresh strawberries
and airlift oysters to chew, but I've got to rise again
to pull the locust beans from the choking gutters,
which I explain as a prayer for rain. Tomorrow's
my birthday day in another month, a twelfth
of a reminder of something I can't remember,
though they say I was there, Polaroid, Panavision
images dreamed or dreamed for me, half-holy
half-haunted, like the streets of Jackson slowly going
Kodachrome, gelatin silver, dim,
my father's menthol still reporting in the tray.
You have to look away so the smoke's cursive's
written clear, my grandmother's card, her best
farmer's Palmer method,
Our pride & joy
,
flutter of money, even after all these years,
take the day off.
But there are bills to pay,
even without stamps, days in advance
so they'll post on time, someone born or someone
dying so near midnight, one day's clocked,
the next not yet in. It takes a while to sort it out.
You may already be a winner. I check, of course,
the numbers each day, though I've often forgotten
to buy a ticket, as my father reads the obits to see
if he's still alive. It would be a great excuse,
he says, call in dead for work. In the joke, God says
give me a chance. You should know, he says,
the trade-in on your car in case you want to ditch
it in a quarry, set it on fire, though the heat's never
hot enough to melt it back to stone. The fireflies
rise from the evening grass, whispering in a language
I mistake for fire, into the boughs, a few
floating higher than hunger, toward the stars.
There, the bears move slow as days,
so slow sometimes I forget what day it is.
And sometimes, thank God, they go on forever.
from
The Missouri Review