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    The Best American Poetry 2015

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      * * *

      Poem Begun on a Train

      Excuse me while I adjust the privacy settings of this poem

      so that if it’s ever published it will exist as a legible text

      and not as a string of stubborn phrases I silently repeat to myself.

      Three lines written, now three and a half, yet for the moment no one

      but me has access to them, as they stretch haltingly

      across the perfect grid of my Rhodia notebook,

      unless, that is, Amtrak has installed

      hidden video cameras above the seats in the coach class

      of this Northeast Regional and one of them is focused on this very page.

      Whoa, that idea came a little too easily.

      The belief that your every move is being watched

      used to be a sign of clinical paranoia,

      except for those living under totalitarian regimes

      in which case it was a perfectly reasonable assumption.

      Now it’s becoming a perfectly reasonable assumption

      no matter where you breathe, no matter where you write.

      Let’s assume that Amtrak hasn’t installed

      individual video surveillance, at least not yet.

      Let’s further assume that this poem, which is slowly crawling from pure potentiality

      to an intermediate state of being more concrete

      than if I wrote it by fingertip on a steamy window

      but less so than the station signs howling past,

      has no other reader but me.

      Still, once I transcribe my handwritten draft into my MacBook Pro,

      a nearly inevitable step I am already contemplating

      and will have long since accomplished by the time you read these lines

      it will have become so easily available to endless numbers

      of bureaucrats and hackers that I might as well post

      the whole thing online immediately.

      Every poet thinks about every line being read by someone else

      even if, as the line is written, its author suspects that he or she may die

      before those words will win the attention of any other human being.

      Positing a reader, sympathetic or dismissive,

      is apparently necessary for every poem,

      from the most compressed, tongue-entangled lyric

      to stanzas as aerated and matter-of-fact as these.

      There are times, however, when a reader is not merely posited

      but becomes as factually undeniable as the poem itself.

      What’s more, instead of turning a cold shoulder

      or bestowing ceremonial kisses on a prize-winner’s cheeks,

      this invisible reader rattles a set of prison keys

      and is ready to dispatch an inconvenient text and author

      to a cold library with zero opening hours

      from which nothing circulates except ashes.

      To earn shelf space in this grim depository

      a poem doesn’t even need to be written down.

      Think of Mandelstam’s “Stalin Epigram,”

      16 lines recited to a few friends that signed their author’s death warrant.

      Obviously, I don’t have the slightest intention of comparing myself to Mandelstam

      or to any other poet writing within rifle shot of deadly auditors

      nor, for that matter, to Muhammad ibn al-Dheeb al-Ajami,

      recently sentenced to life in prison (subsequently reduced to a mere 15 years)

      for reciting a poem on YouTube that displeased the Emir of Qatar.

      I can’t imagine any poem I might write coming with such a price,

      yet I live at a time when writing and its surveillance

      have become practically synonymous.

      In Discipline and Punish (original French title, Surveiller et punir)

      Foucault cites Bentham’s panopticon prison

      where an inmate can’t know whether or not he or she

      is being watched by a guard at any given moment

      so must assume that observation is continual.

      In the present state of “carceral society” surveillance really is continual

      and increasingly it is undertaken by the subjects themselves.

      Fitbit, I read, is a small device to track your physical activity or sleep.

      You can wear the device all day because it easily clips in your pocket,

      pants, shirt, bra, or to your wrist when you are sleeping.

      The data collected is automatically synched online when the device

      is near the base station. After uploading, you can explore visualizations

      of your physical activity and sleep quality on the web site.

      You can also view your data using their new mobile web site.

      You can also track what you eat, other exercises that you do, and your weight.

      This is the world prophesied by Kenneth Goldsmith circa 1997

      when he submitted himself to week-long audio surveillance

      or attempted to describe his every physical action for a 13-hour period.

      It’s also the world embraced by a new generation of digital literary scholars

      who employ data-mining techniques pioneered by the NSA.

      True, poets have been engaged in “self tracking” for a long time.

      “Let no thought pass incognito and keep your notebook

      as strictly as the authorities keep their register of aliens,” Walter Benjamin advised.

      They’ve also sometimes operated on the other side of the fence:

      Wordsworth spying for England on his and Coleridge’s 1798 trip to Hamburg,

      Basil Bunting working undercover for British Military Intelligence

      in Teheran until he was expelled in 1952.

      But more often they have been the ones spied upon,

      like Hugh MacDiarmid hounded in wartime Scotland

      as a Communist agitator while he looked for “a poetry of facts.”

      At least he had the opportunity to lash back in a letter

      to one of his tormentors, a certain Captain Jock Hay:

      “It is intolerable that I should be subjected to inconvenience

      and misrepresentation by a fatuous blowhard like you

      and I have no intention of submitting to it,

      even though the seriousness of it is mitigated by the fact

      you are known as a windy ass and egregious buffoon

      and not taken seriously by anyone who knows you.”

      (Andrew McNeillie, “A Scottish Siberia,” TLS, Sept. 13, 2013.)

      In The Prelude, Wordsworth was baffled at “how men lived

      Even next-door neighbours, as we say, yet still

      Strangers, not knowing each other’s name.”

      Now I know the names of a thousand “friends” I’ve never met, and they mine,

      so what do I have to hide from any device capturing these lines

      to a distant database? My mind is filled with eavesdroppers and spies.

      I think a thousand times, or not a second, before I commit to a phrase

      and leave trails of metadata I’m asked to believe no one will ever pursue.

      Rather than wallow in outmoded subjectivities

      raw and naked to those unseen all-seeing eyes

      maybe it’s better to simply claim existing chunks of language

      as MacDiarmid did in the Shetland Islands in the early 1940s

      transcribing lengthy passages from the TLS

      for his eventually abandoned megapoem

      “Cornish Heroic Song for Valda Trevlyn.”

      In June 1940 the authorities judged him “a case for continued observation”

      and in the following March put him on the “invasion list.”

      “It is probably unnecessary,” Brooman-White wrote to Major Peter Perfect

      (Box 5, Edinburgh) on March 16, 1941, “as no doubt the local Police and Military

      are all standing round waiting to pounce on him,


      but to make assurance doubly sure, it might be as well to have his name added.

      I think we have plenty of evidence to justify this

      but if you like I will send you up a summary of our file against the man.”

      The character Iris Henderson (Margaret Lockwood) in Hitchcock’s The Lady Vanishes,

      released in 1938, the year Mandelstam died,

      is having tea in the dining car with the charming

      but penniless musicologist Gilbert Redman (Michael Redgrave)

      when she glimpses the name that Miss Froy (Dame May Whitty)

      had left on the window, a second before it vanishes.

      She bolts from the table and desperately addresses the travelers around her:

      “I appeal to you, all of you—stop the train. Please help me.

      Please make them stop the train. Do you hear?

      Why don’t you do something before it’s too late?”

      Redgrave and duplicitous psychiatrist Dr. Harz (Paul Lukas)

      attempt to restrain her but she breaks away.

      Before pulling the train’s emergency cord and collapsing in a dead faint,

      she cries out: “I know! You think I’m crazy, but I’m not.

      For heaven’s sake, stop this train. Leave me alone. Leave me alone.”

      Amid the fascist shadows she is driven to hysteria

      because a text has vanished before it could acquire other readers.

      At the Whitney’s “Rituals of Rented Island”

      I walk into the Squat Theatre installation, suddenly remembering

      evenings of radical performance circa 1979

      as a long-forgotten line from one of Kafka’s parables

      hisses around me in low-fi analog:

      “Nobody could fight his way through here even with a message from a dead man.”

      from Harper’s

      NATALIE SCENTERS-ZAPICO

      * * *

      Endnotes on Ciudad Juárez

      1. The larger portion of this text discusses El Paso, Texas, the boring sister to Ciudad Juárez, México.

      2. There are apartments that feel like they are by the sea, but out the window there is only freeway.

      3. The geraniums always wilt either from heat or pollution.

      4. El Canelo is the red-headed Mexican boxer who speaks Spanish.

      5. Sometimes the candles are religious, sometimes they are not.

      6. The girl from Juárez is beautiful. The girl from Juárez is God.

      7. The tortilla border has shanties on one side and trailers on the other.

      8. Some call them Fronchis because their license plates read: Fron-Chi for Frontera Chihuahua. Some just call them fresas.

      9. In summer, roaches cross the street and travel home to home like people.

      10. Campestre, Anapra, Chaveña, Anahuac, Flores Magon, and Independencia are only some of the neighborhoods in Ciudad Juárez.

      11. Some streets are lined in wires because it’s so easy to steal electricity.

      12. Moxas graffiti walls: mee aamooo!! noo aa laas coopiioonaas!!

      13. Some days saliva evaporates from the tongue.

      14. The river has become the only blue vein left pulsing on the map.

      15. The river is only blue on the map.

      from West Branch

      EVIE SHOCKLEY

      * * *

      legend

      fern wept, let her eyes

      wet her tresses, her cheeks,

      her feet. the cheerlessness

      rendered her blessed,

      strengthened her nerve.

      even then, she’d seen

      she needed her regrets

      melted. the weep-fest

      helped her shed her tender

      edges, she felt the steel

      emerge. she’d served her

      sentence. she’d get herself

      west, persevere, exert

      herself. they’d tell bess—

      her sweet bess!—fern’d

      deserted her. bess knew

      better! when she left, fern

      pretended phlegm, yet

      she’d pledged she’d never

      rest ere she freed bess:

      the excellent secret they

      kept between themselves.

      when fern’d netted the

      needed green, she’d send

      bess her debt fee—then,

      pressed, they’d sell her . . .

      her self. (senseless!) see,

      bess, she’d greet her when

      they re-met, necks nestled,

      flesh welded, essence-deep,

      we knew we’d effect the deed!

      we’re the bee’s knees! they’ll

      never see cleverer femmes.

      from Fence

      CHARLES SIMIC

      * * *

      So Early in the Morning

      It pains me to see an old woman fret over

      A few small coins outside a grocery store—

      How swiftly I forget her as my own grief

      Finds me again—a friend at death’s door

      And the memory of the night we spent together.

      I had so much love in my heart afterward,

      I could have run into the street naked,

      Confident anyone I met would understand

      My madness and my need to tell them

      About life being both cruel and beautiful,

      But I did not—despite the overwhelming evidence:

      A crow bent over a dead squirrel in the road,

      The lilac bushes flowering in some yard,

      And the sight of a dog free from his chain

      Searching through a neighbor’s trash can.

      from The Paris Review

      SANDRA SIMONDS

      * * *

      Similitude at Versailles

      Welcome to Humanities 203!

      Here you will find the mysterious

      death of the honeybee, the Byzantine emperor,

      Justinian, who made church and state

      a seamless whole. Quiz tomorrow.

      When someone dies, you buy their relatives flowers.

      1-800-FLOWERS. As a result

      your driving privilege will be suspended

      indefinitely on 11/13/2012.

      Where’s mommy?

      I said I was trying to write this poem

      for the day, do you mind?

      The Real Ghostbusters will return

      after these messages. The trap’s ready.

      I can get a girlfriend anytime I want.

      On the toddler bed, wrapped in the felt

      blanket with monkeys printed all over it,

      their prehensile tails curled—

      I promise guys, I’ll never let myself

      get carried away by women again. I want pancakes.

      Hey Sandra, I think Charlotte might be hungry.

      I’ll be there in a second.

      Okay, I’ll just feed her now.

      —what could pass as love inside capital?

      Maybe just these records, the real.

      At the Halloween festival, my friend dressed

      her child as one of the 1%. Ezekiel

      was a pirate. Her little girl threw

      fake bills into the air. She danced

      in her suit and mustache. Thought—

      it will only ever snow $ in Florida

      and you seemed more like the bas-relief,

      the minor key, some detail about Louis XIV’s

      weak blood I always forget to teach,

      and for a moment I had become

      the anarchy of the sea—you know how the waves

      are always pounding out some polyphony

      in saltwater, algae and fish

      that their subjects cannot understand.

      from Colorado Review

      ED SKOOG

      * * *

      The Macarena

      The chair I’m sitting on is mostly nothing.

      Electrons go right through it. Memory, which

      is electricity, seems li
    ke less than anything

      and yet in the inexplicable universe I’m there

      again, and it’s now, the summer of the Macarena.

      Two months in Abilene, Kansas, and I see

      nobody in the central air of the Sunflower Hotel.

      My eighth-floor window stares at soft, buttery hills.

      Streetlights pink the tracks downtown

      like a chalk outline to fill in later.

      I never know what next. I am writing a novel.

      Its characters are historians at the Eisenhower Library.

      I go to its chapel daily, sit before his tomb

      looking for a way to make a story up. I write

      hundreds of pages, there and at my kitchenette,

      alone and twenty-three. Some weekends I drive

      to KC, where a woman who won’t need me

      lets me stay over, though at sex I’m still a boy,

      the way at writing I’m still naïve, unskilled,

      fascinated by form but lazy about content.

      I’d like to finally read what I’ve been quoting.

      Rummaging after maturity, I overdo the easy

      and am too timid to engage full heart.

      But I work the paths that may lead from myself.

      Ike stays a boy, boyishly winning the worst war.

      As president little happened we praise him for,

      and by we I mean the characters of my novel,

      among the adult troubles they fall into

      and I don’t understand. I avoid addressing

      tyranny and battlefield and Holocaust.

      For years I write liner notes to real life.

      All drafts of that story will leave the earth,

      and I’ll send gratitude to the devil of fortune,

      who will let that manuscript drift

      like a bad vapor through offices of agent and editor.

      This summer at the Democratic Party Convention

      in Chicago, where the man who gives Leaves of Grass

      away carelessly will be renominated, the delegates

      keep doing the Macarena every time I look.

      The vice president claims during his speech

      to be doing the Macarena, but does not move,

      then offers to demonstrate it again. Presidents

     


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