Read The Best American Poetry 2014 Online
Authors: David Lehman
The text for today is early Miles, the Columbia years . . .
That tone pared down to essentials.
âSekou Sundiata
“Did Miles mute his horn, because
a breeze can carry kites a gust might mutilate?”
Call him poet, professor. Call me shaky grasper of the chisel,
caught in a run-on rush to hammer it all.
The memory rushes in, frothing like a wave,
but recedes slowly as a blue crab across wet sand,
bright bits clasped in its claws.
Finally, finally, I come to believe in loss as a way of knowing.
How long does it take to hear what silence can say?
I stand at a stoplight, waiting for the colors to change.
At forty-five one has to deal with eyesight fading.
Not fading like blue from the knees of your favorite jeans
or lights on a stage above a silenced microphone,
but like a goateed poet in a stingy brim hat
covering the bets of a hooded man with holes for eyes
and scythes where his fingernails should be.
Finally, finally, I come to believe in loss as a way of knowing.
If the Blues is a river, doesn't it carry in and wash away?
LEDs are replacing halogen and incandescent lamps,
so the headlights of some approaching cars are slightly blue
as his velvet tone joins the voices of my fallen fathers.
And I tremble ever so softly, like a kite in a breeze
or the reed in a Harmon mute during a note's last linger.
Finally, finally . . . I come to believe in loss as a way of knowing.
from
Brilliant Corners
Haven't they moved like riversâ
like Glory, like lightâ
over the seven days of your body?
And wasn't that good?
Them at your hipsâ
isn't this what God felt when he pressed together
the first Beloved:
Everything.
Fever. Vapor. Atman. Pulsus. Finally,
a sin worth hurting for. Finally, a sweet, a
You are mine.
It is hard not to have faith in this:
from the blue-brown clay of night
these two potters crushed and smoothed you
into beingâgrind, then curveâbuilt your form upâ
atlas of bone, fields of muscle,
one breast a fig tree, the other a nightingale,
both Morning and Evening.
O, the beautiful making they doâ
of trigger and carve, suffering and starsâ
Aren't they, too, the dark carpenters
of your small church? Have they not burned
on the altar of your belly, eaten the bread
of your thighs, broke you to wine, to ichor,
to nectareous feast?
Haven't they riveted your wrists, haven't they
had you at your knees?
And when these hands touched your throat,
showed you how to take the apple
and
the rib,
how to slip a thumb into your mouth and taste it all,
didn't you sing out their ninety-nine namesâ
Zahir, Aleph, Hands-time-seven,
Sphinx, Leonids, locomotura,
Rubidium, August, and Septemberâ
And when you cried out,
O, Prometheans
,
didn't they bring fire?
These hands, if not gods, then why
when you have come to me, and I have returned you
to that from which you cameâbright mud, mineral-saltâ
why then do you whisper,
O, my Hecatonchire. My Centimani.
My hundred-handed one
?
from
The Academy of American Poets Poem-a-Day
Ned scrawls his self-delighted wild-boy trace
over the slopes of grass while I rest on a bench in the cemetery,
but we can't stay long,
it's a day I need to go into the city,
and when I stand up suddenly
my left leg's half a foot lower than my right,
because I've stepped into the sunken,
newly filled grave
of one Herbert Meyer. I don't know it then,
but that's when the wind blows up from beneath,
I think I'm just off balance, and make a joke of it later,
telling people my day began with falling into a grave,
and where can you go from there?
A few nights after
a storm blows down the moraine,
crisp and depth-charged with ozone and exhilaration,
chills my arms and face with that wind I've already met,
winds up the lanes and rattles the rose canes,
bends the beauty bush and Joe Pye weed down,
beautiful supplication,
the maple and walnut sway in the highest regions
of themselves, leaves circling in air
like the great curtain of bubbles blown by the humpback
to encircle the delicious schoolsâ
Blows in my sleep
and blows while I'm cooking, blows while I read
and when I kiss does it ever blow then,
wind not particular to Mr. Meyer nor anyone else,
and thus the nervy thrill of its invitation: to be not at all
what you thought, unbound, to rush up
from the sinking earth on a gust of investigation:
now go be the crooked little house,
and the cracks in the shingles,
tunnel your hour as the mouse in the stale loaf,
fly back to the strong hands of the baker,
flour powdering a happy shroud
around the coursing veins in his forearms.
Spring backward into the wheat,
forward into the belly of the mouse-child
âwhat reason to ever end?
Well I know one:
if you don't hold still, you can have joy after joy,
but you can't stay anywhere to love.
That's the price, that rib-rattling wind
waiting to sweep you up,
that's the price the wind pays.
from
Ploughshares
Pray without speech. Bear witness walking
and dying slowly. In the whole universe
this one and only place which you have
made your very own. An instant of provocation
without the proper greeting. And down 6th street,
car alarms ululating. A fifth is your morning
medicine. A silhouette in chalk
on the sidewalk watches the children
run. Down and up Second Avenue
a red Monte Carlo, slows in an
old shark-skinned suit, the air
like furious birds. Someone leans against the brick wall
sharing a cigarette, blue-black under the fire escape.
Mrs. Janofsky's boy nods into his own hands.
The poor are many and so the women come
and go, bruises on their eyes like fake sapphires.
Men who never not hear the noise in their heads.
But not knowing the dead, roaming the streets
like feral cats, you hurl yourself into the oncoming traffic
of their eyes. Somewhere a search has been called off.
Whitecaps cover your mouth as you struggle
not to drown. You stick your fucking finger
in the socket. You cannot holler.
All the street assassins know you can break
a man's neck in a second flat; they grin
at their electronic palms. They enter and exit
through broken arteries. A razor left by the mirror.
The ghost lines of cocaine and tar,
along the boulevard beneath the diseased
elms. Someone wishes a lottery ticket with a nickel.
from
Spillway
Hell,
we just climbed. Reached the lip
and fell back, slipped
and started up againâ
climbed to be climbing, sang
to be singing. It's just what we do.
No one bothered to analyze our blues
until everybody involved
was strung out or dead; to solve
everything that was happening
while it was happening
would have taken some serious opium.
Seriously: All wisdom
is afterthought, a sort of helpless relief.
So don't go thinking none of this grief
belongs to you: Even if
you don't know how it
feels to fall, you can get my drift;
and I, who live it
daily, have heard
that perfect word
enough to know just when
to use itâas in:
Oh hell. Hell, no
.
Noâ
this is hell
.
from
Poet Lore
Last week, a woman smiled at my daughter and I wondered
if she might have been the sort of girl my mother says spat on my aunt
when they were children in Virginia all those acts and laws ago.
Half the time I can't tell my experiences apart from the ghosts'.