Authors: Bob Hicok
Here is where spiders set up shop
during the night, here is where a crow
decided to perch. Then it got up
and perched over there, beside
where another crow perched last week.
It would be peaceful to be a sail
except during the storm.
During the storm, I would like to be
the storm. If you're the storm,
there's nothing frightening
about the storm except when it stops,
then you're dead and the maps
are drowned. Within my heart
is another heart, within that heart,
a man at war writes home:
this is like digging a hole in the rain.
Jesus with amnesia walks
among the dead and wonders
why they don't rise, at least
one of them, as he seems
to recall someone did, and missing
their eyes, kneels and opens them
for hours, until his fingers hurt
and he's tired of the consistency
of how what isn't there
isn't there, like death
has no imagination, and hears
this name being called,
Jesus,
from every direction and begins
calling too, to join
how this valley clearly wants
or needs to sound, that's
an interesting question, the difference
between need and want, he thinks
and thinks it will be dark soon
and where do I live
and is someone
waiting there with water
and to ask
with kisses, where have you been?
The twig in. I'll put the twig in that I carry in my pocket
and my pocket and my eye, my left eye. A cup
of the Ganges and the bacteria from shit
in the Ganges and the anyway ablutions of rainbow-
robed Hindus in the Ganges. The dawnline of the mountain
with contrail above like an accent in a language
too large for my mouth. A mirror
so whoever opens the past will see themselves
in the past and fall back from their face
speaking to them across centuries or hours
or the nearnevers it'll take mirrored someone
to unearth these scraps, these bones.
The word
terror.
I'll bury the word
terror
to be free of the terror of the word
terror.
I'll bury the word
terror
so it will scream
at mirrored someone as he or she falls back. Screams
how afraid we were that we were not afraid
enough. It's the morning of September 11th.
I'll be told all day how to feel about the morning
of September 11th. Told how to mourn the morning
of September 11th. If
terror
is said
seven times in a row, it loses meaning, becomes
humdrum, a mere timpani of ear.
If
terror
is said seven hundred
thousand million trillion times, I am being raped
by a word. I feel it was clever
to fly planes into buildings, that evil
is clever in the way rust is clever, eating itself
as it goes, that peace is clever in the way a stone
is clever, and I'll tuck a stone
from my garden inside a bell
wrapped in a poem about a bell, the poem
wrapped in the makings of a slingshot, the makings
wrapped in the afterbirth of a fox, the afterbirth
wrapped in the budget for the Defense Department.
So mirrored someone will face the question
of what weapons to make and what forgiveness
to perfect and what to honor in nature
and what to abhor in the nature
of what we do. These
are our complicated times
so far, my complicated time capsule
so far. My lament so far, my praise
so far as it takes me: to a hole
it takes me, to a shovel, to putting wind
in, the keen, the mean, but also
the hush, the blush, the dream
of getting along free of froth
and din. Clearly I need, I need, I need
a bigger box.
It's shoot-an-arrow
into-your-ceiling day, I'm out of arrows,
I go to the neighbors
to borrow a cup of arrows, they're making love
on the floor doggy style, in that
she barks then he barks
at her barking, then it's over
and they circle in front of the door
to be let out,
We're trapped,
I tell my lover later
on the phone,
Do you mean us,
she asks, I lie
and tell her
No, I mean every other person
but us, we are free, we
are entirely wings and little bits
of fog and the open windows
of speeding cars and
Carmen
at the end, when the performers
take their bows to the rush of air
from between our palms,
forgetting
she is deaf, that she's heard nothing
I've said, that this is a poem,
that I am out of arrows and more
importantly out of bows
I feel obligated to get a tattoo.
It's how the skin of the species
is evolving. If I continue
living without plumage,
it will be impossible to mate
or hold a conversation
with a banker. My favorite
is strawberry ice cream. Not
average-size scoops, Baskin-
Robbins-size scoops
but three and tiny
I discovered one night
tattooed to a thigh.
It was the possibility
of kissing a private dessert
I so admired. I've decided
to get tattoos of my eyes
on the inside of my eyelids
so I can stare at the oceans
of my dreams. I'll have
muscles tattooed to my chest,
money to my palms, the smell
of honeysuckle to my breath. I want
BREAK GLASS IN CASE OF FIRE
tattooed to my brain, mouths
to the bottom of my feet, you
to me. There is not
enough art in this life.
Tattoo my front door
to my tombstone and place
a key on my tongue
like a mint. It's not for me
to decide whether my return
will be called
breaking out or breaking in.
Rest with me under the linden tree.
I do not have a linden tree.
Come with me to buy a linden tree, stopping first
at the bank, for I need a loan to buy a linden tree.
Stay with me while the linden tree grows.
We can have babies while the linden tree grows,
colorectal cancer while the linden tree grows,
an infestation of ladybugs while the linden tree grows.
Babies sleep on blue blankets in July,
shadows of heart-shaped leaves
brushing their new faces as the linden tree grows.
Let us warn others of the hard work of the linden tree.
Then rest with me beside the knocked-down shed and dream
of the cherry tree.
O pie in the sky.
There was confusion on my end.
I thought Jesus was bringing the five-bean salad.
I thought the war had ended.
I thought I limped on the left side.
I thought the cloud a Lamborghini and got in.
I thought the zoo deserved a hacksaw.
I thought the tree had climbed the boy.
I thought the grenade a potato and ate it.
I thought Francis Bacon was painting my heart.
I thought bears would stop us
from killing the oceans.
I thought pole dancing had made a comeback.
I thought the Decency Party
would offer a full slate of candidates.
I thought the snow fort
a metaphor for the womb
of public housing.
I thought Zen Buddhism
would beat the New York football Giants.
I thought San Francisco
a roller coaster and screamed
whee
into the ear of noon.
I thought you were alive
when I packed an extra pair of socks.
I thought you were alive
when I realized “manumit” was two down
on the plane.
I thought you were alive
when I asked a mutual bartender
how you were.
I thought you were alive
even when I peed Sam Adams a first time
after being told you were dead.
But I thought the war had ended.
I thought the half-moon was winking at me.
I thought cabernet on the roof
with two of your ex-wives a lovely funeral
ten years too late with jumping
at the end into the pool the only way
to prove I'd paid attention
to the jump shot with a second left
you'd always tried to be.
I thought a good, steady rain
would bring us to our senses.
But five thousand years
into the flood, I just don't know.
Thank you Marianne Boruch
When, with the cadaver's skinned face
beside its open skull,
one of the other students
held up a stray left hemisphere
and spoke to this bit of brain
as to a phone, “She's not in
right now, can I take a message,”
I wanted there to be a story
our incursion had to tell
about the woman â that she “liked words â
Aesop's
Fables,
Housman. Frost by heart...
Not Jane Austen, she lied” â or to take
part of her home, nick spleen
or knuckle, and last night
reading your poem
in the almost-dark, with three deaths
on my mind, of who
who cares, the only difference
between my dead and yours
is everything, I got to this
and regretted I didn't â
“That
nothing
on and on, huge
and years, weighs
about nothing like
a whistle's sweet because
it's distant” â
and consider all the jars
I wasted, holding then and still
screws and jams
and more thorough nothings,
when of whomever she gray
and gutted was, there could still
be a smidge in the fridge, in my life, sick
but so are language and memory, which never
let the living let the dead die
I owe the crow, I know. Owe the watch,
the wrist, the swatch, the fist,
the sock, the crow, I know. Without clouds
I'd stand alone, without house
and switch and bomb and lock
and pick, there'd be no boom, no breaking in
to song for the crow, I know.
Owe every needle said
no
to my arm, every leaf said
yes
to the wind in my ear, owe wind
again, wind again
in this poem for the crow, I know.
When I'm dead, I want my head
to be an ashtray
in a bus station, tagged
at will by slugs and mugs
bound for Poughkeepsie and Kankakee,
my hips plunked into your garden
in lieu of my lips, after my kiss
is flown away by the hunger
of the crow, go crow. Owe maggots
for flies, flies for buzz, buzz
for saw, saw for seen, scene for action,
action for cut, cut for cure, cure
for sure, sure for shore, shore
for more, more for moon, moon
for flashlighting the night,
which falls softly
as the word
softly
falls, and is wall-to-wall
crow, you know.
People are having babies. Hoisting their children
to tree limbs on their backs and tying their shoes.
Telling them what the numerator is and why not
to eat one's boogers or not publicly
pee if at all possible to pee in private.
People are mixing their genes after wine
in romantic alleys and London hotels after crossing
a famous bridge. Trying to save for college
and not hit their children like they were hit
and not hit their children differently
than they were hit and failing and succeeding.
People are singing to wombs and playing the Goldberg
variations to fetuses who'll love Glenn Gould
without knowing who Glenn Gould is. I'm driving
along or painting a board or wondering
if we love animals because we can't talk with them
more intimately than we can't talk with God
and the whole time there's this background hum
of sex and devotion and fear, people telling
good-night stories or leaving their babies
in dumpsters but mostly working hard
to feed the future what it needs to grow strong
and prefer sweet over sour, consonance
to dissonance, to be the only creatures who notice
the stars or at least use them metaphorically
to go on and on about the longing we harbor
in such tiny spaces relative to the extent
of our dread that we're in this alone.
Had I only dipped you in amber, only built an ark
and filled it with one of your kind, only been God
or a surgeon who was God or raised an army
of fire ants and bulldozers at the door
against what was coming, they say goldfish
forget immediately the circled bowl, they say elephants
come back to the bones of their dead and lift them
with their trunks, I did none of these things, forget
or lift your bones with my trunk, I like it here
in the fog, being touched by the cool washcloth
of the sky, had I only folded you into a triangle
like a flag that has thrashed all day
inside the monologue of the wind and needs to sleep,
never letting you touch the ground, coming to you
with my hand over my heart, pledging vibrancy
and odors and sunspots, I'm sorry for the snot
at the end, my face full of sheepshank knots
and nails, had I only been an ocean for you,
just a little one, a closet wide, a bedpan deep,
plenty of infinity for your fuse, your hovering,
the truth is I did all of these things, and let go
the steering wheel on the highway until the rumble strip
called me a dumbass, and chopped a tree down
and built a crib for a child, I like it here
when the fog erases itself and says,
I offer you
the world freshly painted,
including the woods
where you walked, if only I could weigh its shade,
would it be larger or smaller by exactly
the size of you, O science, give me such instruments
of knowledge, they are as passionately useless as poems.