Authors: Angela Sorby
Kilmer died fighting in France
in 1918. He wrote, “I think that I shall never see
a poem lovely as a tree,”
but was silent on the topic
of rest stops,
how the engine pauses,
and the Starbucks steamer hisses,
and all states feel equidistant
though this is nominally
New Jersey. He exploded
before he could picture a cup of coffee,
dark and complex
like modern poetry (Ezra Pound's maybe)
which, though stronger than Kilmer's,
still isn't cool and stark and pure
as a tree.
Soldier, soldier:
can you tell us where to go
now that we've shaken up the glass
globe and brought down the snow?
The cold is large and pale and everywhere,
and falling on the South Milwaukee trees.
A cardinal moves his heat across the air,
above the clearance sales, the vacancies,
above the locks that fasten as they freeze
key-holders in the act of passing through.
A mortgage is a number no one sees:
a sleight-of-moon, a slip, a coming-due
of obligations tightening the screw.
The neighbor takes her name off every list,
and blows a fog onto the windowpane
to stamp a phony footprint with her fist.
Petite and singular, the print remains,
as if the neighbor walked out of her veins,
and up the glassâand up, and out of sight.
The cold invades the outlets, cracks, and drains.
The cardinal sheds its red coat overnight.
No blood runs deep enough to crack the ice.
Gerund comes from the Latin
gerere
(future p. p.
gerundus
) to carry on; it carries on the power or function of the verb.
âJ
OHN
W. W
ILKINSON
, 1895
Do you have 5, 10, 20
thousand dollars in credit card debt?
1-800-398-2067.
Call now! Imagine
           walk-
ing the green spring
like a fawn sprung
from its spots.
No need to winter over.
You are the gerund.
The sky aches blueâ
no cure, no analgesic.
Your debt is buried
like the skeleton
of a twin born dead.
Your feet trot horn-
hard, so far from human
you can't remember
how the voices sounded,
or what they wanted.
First I thought it was my furnace:
a black metallic odor
seeping through the glass-block
window into the yard.
Then I guessed it started
under my car: a shimmery river
of darkness. Then I figured: my lawn-
mower. Did it blow a plug?
What was that weird smell?
Where were the plovers, the sparrows,
the terns? My eco-neighbor,
out watering compost worms,
said, “It's BP!”
And then I knew.
It's not BP. It's him. It's me.
We've been gushing bullshit
since Earth Day, 1970.
What to do? Make a
poem
?
Christ.
Rilke beat everyone to it.
He wrote, “You must change your life.”
It doesn't pay to try,
All the smart boys know why.
âJ
OHNNY
T
HUNDERS
i.
To cure insomnia,
don't try. Pretend
the bed's a bunk
in a Pullman car,
bolted to the floor,
but moving steadily
from A to B.
The trick's to picture
neither A nor B
but the space
between characters,
large and yet limited,
like timeâ
how it elapses
everywhere at once,
despite the zones
fixed by railway
executives in 1883.
Wrong clock
,
thought the Chinese
laborers who ached
but could not write.
The pain spread
from their arms
into their spines.
ii.
All the smart transcontinental titans know
vision is motion. To be
is not to be, but to go.
A koan:
keeping moving.
An hour lost in Maine
is lost in California.
The perennials flash their steam-
punk violet hues,
daring human
women to lose
the flats, the control-
top hose. My mother
always says, “If I have a stroke,
don't let the hairs on my chin grow.”
No clots yet: our spines
climb up to our minds,
node after node,
though lately the ladder
seems long, and the sky
is comatose
in the bird bath,
its whole weight
half-floating, half-drowning.
How strange
, murmur the bearded
irises,
how entrancing,
to drop petals into the dirt.
Slowly they cede
their beauty,
except on posters
in suburban kitchens
where Van Gogh's irises press
predictably against the wind,
as if color were muscle,
as if it were possible to resist
the copyists, the corset-makers, the stylized
forces of nature. Tonight I'll pull
on my scuffed black boots,
where there's space
to stash a razor.
1.
“The fault lies with an over-human God,”
wrote Wallace Stevens (bless his brittle heart).
His balding broker's head began to nod,
then, Humpty-over-Dumpty, broke apart,
all smash and scatteration. There's an art
to making chickens hatch. His spacious mind
compelled him to consume the yellow part
for salt. His daughter knew: he could not find
the words to leave ought but his words behind.
2.
Our father, Wallace Stevens, you are blind
to all we see. We walk you in our arms
like corpse-walkers in China, poised behind
the body, passing factories and farms
en route to the home province. No alarm
can jolt you from your sleep. The black-eyed girls
who pass on bicycles are swift and warm,
and as they ride the road they need unfurls
as if there were no fathers in the world.
I don't want to pay
all the parking tickets my junkie
handyman racked up
using my Honda
while I was in Asia
on a Fulbright fellowship,
but hey! The judge says his wife
also did a Fulbright,
“had a fantastic time,”
and packed her white
privilege as a carry-on.
It was oversized. The airline
didn't charge her a dime.
The judge declares
all fees dismissed,
but it takes me awhile
to find the exit,
because there are two elevators:
one for courthouse clients,
and one for prisoners.
At night Seattle's scenery
sinks into Elliott Bay.
No toga party, no everybody limbo! No.
Limbo is stalling on the floating
bridge. Limbo is look out a cop.
Limbo is the Frontier Room's closedâ
even that guy Ben with scars for a chest
went home. A young woman lives
with a man she doesn't love:
this is deep structural corruption,
the way the Pacific Ocean
keeps acting like an ocean,
even in dead zones
where toxins are man-made:
PS oligomer, bisphenol A.
So why does the brain bother
to rebuild itself in sleep
(carefully, nerdily)
as the blacked-out woman
dreams of drunk-
driving off a bluff?
O but they love her,
these organs she shreds:
gently the pons and the meek cerebellum
follow her to bed.
Raven scours the Pike
Place Market. He's bereft:
the sun he once kept
in a cedar box is lost,
“replaced by an exact replica,”
as his brother the human
junk-picker mutters,
combing a dumpster
for cans. In the version of history
that didn't happen,
everyone's Salish,
Makah, or Tsimshian,
and under the Sound
a squid the size of Vashon
spurts ink enough to blot
out the Constitution,
but in lieu of that,
what?
Sales stalls. Hipsters. Blind
buskers by the pig sculpture,
bending notes with a slide.
The singer bangs a crate.
The ground vibrates.
There is a fault,
a fault under Seattle,
from Fall City to Whidbey,
not
fault
as in guilty,
but
fault
as in geology,
bigger and deeper
than any historical error,
which is why Seattle can't gentrify,
not entirely,
no matter how tightly
the newcomers close their eyes,
no matter how hard they visualize
a PDF copy, not dirty,
not bloody, as if the Coast
were not the West,
as if some app could elevate
the city above the quake.
When my grandmother
was cremated she relaxed
enough to dissolve
off the Pacific shelf,
but alive she moved
neck-deep in nerves,
the way a spiny dogfish swims
even when it slumbers,
picking up electromagnetic
fields from the sea.
She'd disappear
to jump off the Aurora bridge,
and though she never did,
I still sense her slow surreal
fall in my chest. She always said
Light up to make the bus come,
which makes me miss smoking,
how it fills the lungs
with poison
that feels like heaven:
one suck on a Winston
will draw the Ballard #10,
its driver seeking
fire in the fog.
Flew through White Center in a borrowed Volvo.
White Center, where they tried to snuff your ghost.
They used a tin can. They didn't know who the hell you were
but they knew how it smells to suffer. Still you drift.
Excuse me while I block your path. Your eyes glide past,
seeking a type of female English major (younger, prettier)
who doesn't exist anymore. The current crop would sue your ass.
So listen:
soul retrieval.
I know, it's crapâa New Age metaphor,
so let's call it
fishing. Fishing from the hood of an old car
as bait floats down the Skagit. You're parked at the edge,
waiting to yankâwhatâsalmon? No, too heavy. Yuck:
in the Northwest (until recently) souls weren't sexy.
This one's moldy and mossy. Light rain falls on the scene
like a net. You can't start a fire with wet wood. In this state,
no one freezes to death. They rot. Look: the soul walks,
like a deer under the overpass as if its legs were barely up
to the task. Drunk, fat, and dead: only the latter lasts.
You must remember this: matter persists. Beer
still resembles beer when it's piss. Fresh water turns
to salt at Deception Pass. RichardâDickâyour shadow
can't be cast. Instead, clouds cover the mountains.
Chris “Slats” Harvey, d. 2009
1.
Post-millennium,
post-Lou Reed,
post-Elliott Smith,
it's too late to subsist
on three chords
and a leather jacket,
so your corpse looks tiny now,
floating out to sea,
much tinier than a human soul
ought to be.
The waves move autoerotically
because they don't give a damn
2.
about us velveteen rabbits.
We thought we could make ourselves real
by knowing the words to songs.
Colorless green
ideas sleep furiously,
but hang it all, Noam Chomsky,
you can't drain meaning out,
not entirely,
because say you have a sealed can of Diet Coke
in your messenger bag
(not that you are a messenger)
and it's dented and the dent
weakens the aluminum so it leaks all over,
then still, dammit: wet
Kleenexes and a wet wallet.
That dream
you failed a math class
and now you have to retake it at the age of forty
but you can't find the classroom
and you're in your pajamas,
even that means
and keeps on meaning,
which is not the same as thinking:
it's an outside pressure,
a chemical insoluble in water,