Authors: Devin Johnston
awaits, from which we'll be dismissed
(we both have too much history).
I wish him well in his campaign.
On an overbooked flight from Houston,
I find my seat beside a woman
in black shades, with the hard-bitten look
that sometimes follows addiction,
nails chewed down to the quick,
talking too loudly into her phone:
Yeah, I got my dad a new amp.
Rocking must run in the family!
As we level off in the tenuous dusk,
she orders a Red Bull and Skyy,
scarfing down her portion of pretzels,
shifting abruptly from side to side
to cross and recross her legs,
swiping through files on her phone.
Meanwhile, I skim an Audubon guide
and pause at the boat-tailed grackle
with its iridescence, yellow eye,
and long, harsh trilling song.
You like that book?
she interrupts.
I got some crazy shit to show you.
Here, a silky fantail
from the State Fair of Texas.
Have you ever seen a mule pull?
This team's dragging five tons.
Oh, that's me, getting an award.
I'm a doctor, you believe that shit?
In the snapshot, she wears a white lab coat
with a ribbon pinned to her lapel,
her arm around a soldier's waist
in what looks to be a shopping mall.
I love birds! So check it out:
I raised fuckin' racing pigeons
with my dad, a top geneticist
at Baylorâtotal brainiac.
We banded squabs, flew them in batches,
drove them out for training tosses.
This one, with a Belgian pedigree,
came first in the Texas Showdown.
Fuckin' A, I loved those birds.
On and on, an improbable mix
of tough talk and expertise
that finds no resolution.
But then, consider my own account,
withheld: an invitation
to read my poetry aloud,
tequila and a fine
lechón,
a morning free to watch a pair
of caracaras take apart
the carcass of a wild hog
along the Chocolate Bayou.
What would such scraps mean to her?
Even in our final descent
she pushes past my doubt
and reticence, to say,
I started as a dancer,
and now I'm a goddamn doc.
Looking back, it all makes sense!
âthe incidents of a life
fanning out in a strange display.
Newly a father, half asleep
between the dark and dawn,
I lean against the kitchen sink
and struggle to recall
a riddle of the sphinx,
the western sky a color
that the Greeks refused to name
because it extinguishes all others,
their sea of green or wine,
their sky of hammered bronze.
What starts as a faint
migration of light
extends itself alone and widely
across the kitchen tile,
pewter on a soap bubble,
bombycinous, endored,
adding word to word until
everything gets remembered.
There are two sisters: one
gives birth to the other
and then is born from her.
A golden hand
imprints the dawn
figurative
intent forgot
A black jug
with beak and brow
returns the owl
face to Pallas
Countless broken
pots unearth
evidence
of deep thirst
an afterlife
in earthenware
three thousand years
of twilight
When evening comes to find you still
at home and settling down to stay,
when the last rays have lit a cloud
of fingerprints on the storm door
and television's lambent flame
plays across veneer and glass,
when you have dealt a hand or two,
the dinner dishes cleared away,
and shrugging on the familiar robe,
you open an atlas of the world
to archipelagoes engraved
with light of other longitudes,
when a cold fog descends and drives
every creature down its hole,
when you have sat so quietly
that your least movement brings surprise
to everyone, and when, besides,
the stairs are dark, the deadbolt locked,
and in spite of all, you start up
in a sudden fit of restlessness,
shed your robe, snap a coat,
and bang the door shut more or less
emphatically, according to
the pique you fancy having stirred,
and when you find yourself once more
at unexpected liberty,
absorbed in rhythms of breath and limb,
attention racing on ahead
and then returning like a dog
through hawthorn blooming in the dark,
that rich potentiality,
when Mars and Jupiter ascend
above the cloudbank, bright and crisp,
then you become a clean stroke
of ink-and-brush calligraphy,
a lone figure strolling west
on Shenandoah Avenue.
Returning home, still full of such
euphoria, you stop to watch
flitting across your window shade
at this late hour, the silhouettes
of children loosed from all constraints.
On Friday afternoon, turned loose
like cattle dogs across a slope,
kids fling themselves out of doors
with a thin shout as though through bronze,
descend on idling cars en masse,
and then disperse on separate paths
as we distinguish one of ours.
On Saturday, stunned by the week
of school and work, we rise late
and linger at the table
above the morning's residue
of orange peels and magazines.
Light and unobtrusive,
a pencil rustles paper
to sketch a horse with arched neck
and whipping lines for legs.
Does anybody have the red?
On Sunday, after small delaysâ
the ritual of a coat refused
or shoe misplacedâwe find ourselves
within the hall of mastodons,
our clothes still radiating cold.
We scrutinize an arc of tusk
and chronicle of bone.
Among so many strangers,
the children cling to me like burrs
and I disregard the impulse
to be free of them.
Monday in my office,
a day that will not bring them near,
I want nothing but their presence,
my ears attuned to outdoors
and the timbre of their voices,
the damp friction of their shrieks
so primitive and freshly peeled.
Let the child cry awhile
with a rasp that strains his throat.
Let him learn what can't be satisfied
and break him like a colt.
Beneath a blanket, let him find
some solace in himself.
              *
I need mine cuddy!
âthe family word
for a blanket frayed
to a snarl of yarn,
a mushy cud
that smells of spit.
As the soporific
takes effect,
eyes roll inward
and night unravels
the wale
that day has knit.
              *
Tilt this lacquered disk
against the sun
tap tap
its pendulum
pulls each head in turn
to pivot in a slot
and peck at painted
flecks of scratch
the hollow tap
of appetite
Passing our porch, a girl of ten
holds a drum against her stomach
as you might a covered dish.
China trembles with a truck's idle
or the white hum of compressors,
the morning air muted
as though near the ocean,
lightly ruffled by subaquatic
scales on a clarinet
and the tuning of strings.
When she passes again, near dusk,
the insect chorus subsides
to a pinprick of cricket song.
Narrow pens of fenced yards,
as yet unraked, lie thick
with indotherms and agitrons.
Something keeps brushing against me!
Around a plot of ragged mint,
the lemon zest of walnut leaves
illuminates the lawn,
brickwork slowly revealed.
Kids crowd the stoop
backs to a darkened house
so close to nothing
yet incurious
              *
Across the brick façade
a kestrel
races to meet
its shadow
              *
Hawk and starling sport
through all this rigging
of blocks and lines
counterweights and arbors
the street
a theater set for storms
              *
A chunk of sycamore
adorns the telephone line
branch and trunk long gone
stump a faint impression
just that cylinder
faintly nautical
hung in a crown of air
              *
Triple your chances to win
Take it at twenty-to-one
No money down
No faith in desire
              *
Cashing out
the bartender croons
If you see me getting smaller
Trobar clus
Closing time
              *
Two boys lug
a Samsonite
full of leaves
across the lawn
              *
A starling whets
her thorn of beak
and song gives way
to sunlight on concrete
One beech within a winter wood
glowed with a crown of leaves
and slid behind the bare trees,
a little evening sun.
It traveled with you awhile
in ghostly fashion,
your own crown of hair
in faint reflection,
here and gone.
A Sunday in Saint Louis,
the avenues
quiet as country lanes.
Cabbage whites
ride a current of air.
Sycamores lean
and scrape the sky
like schooners
not yet under sail,
their leaves in tatters.
A soft rustle,
a nautical creak.
More faintly still,
sticks clatter
on the playing field
behind Our Lady of Sorrows.
You've lived here
thirty, forty years.
Suddenly a Clydesdale
with no tack or rider
clip-clops around the corner
and trots along
the yellow lines.
A marvel of
the Pleistocene,
creature of grass and dung,
it must have wandered far
to reach us,
through all hours
and seasons,
trampling the dust
of every kingdom.
From dark recesses
residents
step out to watch,
stepping away
from busy lives,
something on the stove,
a bath drawn,
the phone covered
like an astonished mouth.
Along the freight yard, a cop
waved me to the side.
Windows down, engine off,
I heard the clink of chains
and steady brush of pads
before a pair of elephants
entered my left mirror.
              *
A lyrebird at noon!â
fossicking for worms.
No song, no
éventail plissé
of filaments and plumes.
Regardless, clear as dayâ
a lyrebird at noon!
              *
You talk with animation
of what you've seen, and whereâ
proud to have been so lucky,
amused to feel so proud.
The fisherman makes an appointment
by map and tidal chart
unfolded across the bare floor.
Sorting through his gear,
he ties a knot and talks of jewies,
not jew- but jewelfish
for the otolith within its ear,
a bob for equilibrium
like the bubble of a spirit level.
According to lore, a traveler shines
from weeks on the open sea,
cold sluicing along its flanks
and buffing its soft scales to chrome,
crossing Lord Howe Rise,
who knows why,
then home past Lion Island's head
with a worm inhaled en route
writhing in its gut.
All the while, a resident
turns to bronze and tarnishes
at the mouth of Mooney Creek,
wolfish yet asleep
in the shadow of a pile.
Motionless, the monster steeps
in its own ammonia tang.
Traveler and resident,
both taste about the same.
This heavy weather drives you out