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    The Best American Poetry 2019

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      In one of China’s great cities, before dawn.

      Forever I miss my Arab father’s way with mint leaves

      floating in a cup of sugared tea—his delicate hands

      arranging rinsed figs on a plate. What have we here?

      said the wolf in the children’s story

      stumbling upon people doing kind, small things.

      Is this small monster one of us?

      When your country does not feel cozy, what do you do?

      Teresa walks more now, to feel closer to her

      ground. If destination within two miles, she must

      hike or take the bus. Carries apples,

      extra bottles of chilled water to give away.

      Kim makes one positive move a day for someone else.

      I’m reading letters the ancestors wrote after arriving

      in the land of freedom, words in perfect English script . . .

      describing gifts they gave one another for Christmas.

      Even the listing seems oddly civilized,

      these 1906 Germans . . . hand-stitched embroideries for dresser

      tops. Bow ties. Slippers, parlor croquet, gold ring, “pretty

      inkwell.”

      How they comforted themselves! A giant roast

      made them feel more at home.

      Posthumous medals of honor for

      coming, continuing—could we do that?

      And where would we go?

      My father’s hope for Palestine

      stitching my bones, “no one wakes up and

      dreams of fighting around the house”—

      someday soon the steady eyes of children in Gaza,

      yearning for a little extra electricity

      to cool their lemons and cantaloupes, will be known.

      Yes?

      We talked for two hours via Google Chat,

      they did not complain once. Discussing stories,

      books, families, a character who does

      what you might do.

      Meanwhile secret diplomats are what we must be,

      as a girl in Qatar once assured me,

      each day slipping its blank visa into our hands.

      from Fifth Wednesday

      SHARON OLDS

      * * *

      Rasputin Aria

      I wish I did not think of Rasputin

      so often. To have been born with a penis which in

      manhood would be said to be,

      erect, 14" long,

      some said 18"

      organ which he used in brutal

      acts, penetrating helplessness,

      and then, at the end of his life, to be taken

      from behind, raped, then castrated,

      penis and testicles, harps of the nerves,

      gone—and then to be killed one way,

      and it did not take, and then another,

      then stabbed and drowned in a sack—

      though all that was found was the skein of burlap

      bitten and torn open and washed up—

      a cruel male leader, a brigand,

      law unto himself, taken, the shock of it, the

      disbelief, the poor anus from the

      worldwide family of anuses,

      the species’s helpless O, and the poor

      penis, brother to the poor sister

      vagina—tis of thee I think

      when I think of my country rendering,

      and being rendered, when I think of our body

      politic, its head of wrath

      with an orange flame for hair.

      from The Southampton Review

      MICHAEL PALMER

      * * *

      Nord-Sud

      That day when I thought of Pierre Reverdy

      for the first and final time

      I counted the butterflies in Rome.

      In Rome I counted the butterflies.

      There were always three,

      three on Trajan’s blood-stained column,

      three within the Memoirs of Hadrian,

      three alight on the Virgin’s left thigh,

      three perched amidst the eternal dust.

      (I counted to three because I felt I must.)

      Electric blue were these creatures of air

      born of the mind of Pierre Reverdy

      mourning the death of a violin by fire.

      The Tiber is flowing somewhat lazily today

      past a distant echo of Pierre Reverdy,

      past the burning manuscripts of Pierre Reverdy

      lighting the banks not of Tiber but of Seine.

      I counted the butterflies in Paris then

      as they caught fire one by one,

      one by a lock at the Quai de Valmy,

      one by the dying guillotine

      on the Place de la Cloche Vide

      where three last songs could be heard.

      You waved graciously and sang along

      as poetry, that blind ballerina in flames,

      bid you farewell while taking one last bow

      with no regrets other than a few.

      The earth is perfectly still

      and the butterflies have ended their day

      in the north and in the south.

      Listen, Pierre, the hands on the clock

      point towards the snows of yesteryear.

      Pierre, you died as we were about to meet.

      This poem is to be continued indefinitely.

      from Harper’s

      MORGAN PARKER

      * * *

      The Black Saint & The Sinner Lady & The Dead & The Truth

      For one thing, I hate stillness. On the front porch,

      waiting, I see an animal I don’t recognize:

      feet of a bird, wings of a leaf. The grotesqueness

      of attachment, the loudness of the woods, I knew it

      when I was dead before. I died for my sins

      and because of this, I am in the woods now,

      aching. It is June. I am used to being

      a certain kind of alone. Soon my photosynthesis

      will be complete, and I will be the gap

      between Angela Davis’s teeth. Do you ever

      love something so much, you become it?

      Like how when hard rain comes, you learn

      quick. You straighten your shoulders and hope

      this is better than touching.

      I say casual death, and the half-moon

      is my enemy, an uncertain white girl.

      I wish I didn’t care. I am myself

      shaking hands, so subtle no one notices.

      Sometimes, it’s my ribcage, or my throat

      does the same damn thing as my skull,

      the little bear inside it. Please

      don’t make me repeat myself.

      from Harper’s

      WILLIE PERDOMO

      * * *

      Head Crack Head Crack

      Zoo Bang

      Auld Lang

      Brick City

      Fly Ditty

      Drug War

      Street Noir

      War Fat

      Bank That

      Sneaker Box

      Check Account

      Get Fresh

      Stay Fly

      Night Pool

      Old School

      Stash House

      Corner Store

      We Cool

      No More

      Smoked Out

      Player’s Ball

      Okey Doke

      Flat Broke

      Hang Out

      No Doubt

      Black Out

      Death Count

      Dwight Gone

      Tone Gone

      Petey Gone

      Chino Gone

      Body Shot

      Chop Shop

      Black Hole

      Myths Sold

      Break That

      Like This

      Black Cat

      Death Kiss

      Power Move

      Move That

      Krush Groove

      Dope Shit

      Step Back

      Get This

      from Green
    Mountains Review

      CARL PHILLIPS

      * * *

      Star Map with Action Figures

      More dark than gray, but not yet quite dark

      entirely, the stories keep ending as if there were

      a limit to what any story could hold onto, and this

      the limit, the latest version of it, looking a lot like the sea

      meeting shore.

      To constellate, the way desire

      does, sometimes, with fear, or anger—both, occasionally—

      and there’s been gentleness, too, I’m here, I’ve

      always been here . . .

      Maybe between mystery

      and what little we can say for sure

      happened, lies a secret even

      memory itself keeps somewhere

      hidden because for now

      it has to.

      Less like wishing too late, I mean,

      for a thing to be otherwise than like fire closing in

      so absolutely, it can almost seem intimacy

      had yet to be invented, and here’s the fire,

      inventing it: Constellate,

      with me—

      Look at the field,

      studded with the blue-black eyes of broken heroes.

      One of the eyes is moving. It can still see. What does it see?

      from Virginia Quarterly Review

      ISHMAEL REED

      * * *

      Just Rollin’ Along

      Louis Charles (L. C. “Good Rockin’ ” Robinson (born Louis Charles Robinson; May 13, 1914–September 26, 1976) was an American blues singer, guitarist, and fiddle player. “He played an electric steel guitar. Robinson was more than just a storyteller. He was one of the Bay Area’s most significant blues artists, . . . who helped shape what’s come to be known as West Coast Blues. When Robinson died in 1976, [Ron] Steward recounts, the influential bluesman was near penniless and friends had to pass a hat around at his funeral.”

      —Jim Harrington

      It was ’34 Oklahoma and L.C. was doing a gig

      People were doing the Texas Two Step

      And greasing on the pig

      There were mounds upon mounds of ice cream

      The pies were crusty and fine

      The following story is true and I ain’t lyin’

      Good Rockin’ Robinson was packing them in

      But the noise of a Ford sedan disrupted the

      Din

      A woman and a man

      The man had a grin

      They were

      Just rollin’ along

      Just rollin’ along

      Her lap held a Thompson

      The barrel was long

      “I’ll give you 12 silver dollars,” she said

      “If you play our song”

      “I’m sitting on top of the world”

      “I’m sitting on top of the world”

      They were Just rollin’ along

      Just rollin’ along

      They paid Good Rockin’ and

      Were on their way

      Very few in the crowd will forget that

      Day

      The policeman pulled up

      He was all out of breath

      “Did you see a couple in a Ford

      Come this way?

      She was dapper,” he said

      “He wore a Newsboy cap

      And a pistol on his side”

      Good Rockin’ asked who was

      In that ride

      The policeman said

      “It was Bonnie and Clyde”

      The policeman said

      “It was Bonnie and Clyde”

      They were

      Just rollin’ along

      Just rollin’ along

      from Black Renaissance Noire

      PAISLEY REKDAL

      * * *

      Four Marys

      —Madonna del Parto, 1460, Piero della Francesca

      Are the drapes drawn open, or being closed?

      Each of the heavy, velvet wings is clasped

      in the hands of a little angel, a little man really,

      in shades of plum and mint green that frame

      the birthing tent’s opening for a girl

      who retreats into or emerges from the dark.

      It isn’t clear: the perspective is such

      that if I cover the painting’s

      top half with a hand, Mary steps forward;

      if I cover the lower, she shrinks back,

      her blue bodice split at the bulging seams

      to show the pear-white cut of her linen shift,

      the great weight of the child she is about to bear

      and later bury. And even if I didn’t believe

      the child would rise again, I would believe the artist

      had seen such fear paint a girl’s face

      when the eldest women in the village

      are called for help, and fresh straw brought in

      if there isn’t a bed, and hot water, and rose oil to rub

      over the hips, and vinegar and sugar water

      to drink, and hog’s gut and a thick needle

      to sew her up with later. Even if I did not believe

      in Mary’s joy, I would believe in her pain, the quick flick

      of her thoughts turning to the sister, or the cousin,

      or to her own mother who died giving birth,

      the baby too not making it, for the birth

      was in winter: ice so clogged the village’s

      deep ruts that the midwife’s cart slipped

      into the soak dike, splitting the wood wheel

      in two, and by the time the woman could walk

      the steep hill up to the villa, the mother had torn,

      and in the rush to save her, no one worked

      quick enough to cut the cord wrapped

      around the baby’s throat. Or the baby came out

      strong and fine, but died two years later

      when it stumbled into a fire, or was bitten by a rat

      and sickened and starved, or caught the fever

      that spread through town when all the animals

      were stabled inside the houses for winter.

      So many people died, so many people

      were supposed to die, it’s hard to conceive

      of how the mothers survived their grief,

      and how they named their next, living baby

      after the dead one, because the name, at least,

      was good. It’s hard to know if I should read

      the deepest grief or resignation or both in the line

      from Mary Shelley’s 1818 notebook, the year

      her daughter, Clara, died, two weeks

      after Mary had given birth to her. Woke this morning.

      Found my baby dead, all the little black scratching pen

      could add to paper, and the rest was blank,

      and then there were months, and then

      there was Frankenstein. Piero della Francesca

      painted an embroidery of pomegranates

      into Mary’s birthing tent, symbol of fruitfulness

      and of the underworld, of a mother’s grief

      and of her rage to get her child back, the daughter

      both dead and alive to her, as Mary knows her own child

      is both dead and alive to us. A winter fruit

      for the winter birth of a rich woman

      whose house wanted to ward off a grueling

      delivery, and so whose midwife would feed her

      pomegranate seeds to sustain her, a fruit

      the midwife herself would eat only once, as payment

      from the duke for the son she finally ushered

      for him into the world. Such a strange, leathery

      skin, though the color was bright

      as blood on fresh linen, and who could have expected

      those glistening cells packed inside, wet prisms

      in the ruby eye of a ruby insect, or the heart

      of a god who takes what he wants

      and never gives it back. The midwife
    took the fruit home

      and split it with her husband, and tried not to think

      of the bed of the girl she’d just left, its stains

      that looked almost black in the dawn light,

      and how the girl’s skin had turned bluish, the fragile spring

      she’d require to spend alone in bed away from the duke

      and healing. How can Mary not look

      downcast before these curtains that threaten

      to close on her, to open? I have no doubt

      of seeing the animal today, Mary Wollstonecraft

      Godwin, Mary Shelley’s mother wrote,

      meaning birth, meaning Mary, the little animal

      she never saw grow up, because Wollstonecraft

      died of an infection days after giving birth.

      But before that was told she could not nurse

      her infant daughter for fear the corruption

      would spread through her milk, though she stayed

      at Mary’s bedside the final three days of her life.

      And Godwin beside her, who, because he loved

      his wife, believed her genius could survive

      any truth, and so published a memoir later

      detailing everything: Wollstonecraft’s affairs,

      her daughter’s illegitimacy, attempts at suicide, so that

      in 1798 the index of the Anti-Jacobin Review would publish,

      under the heading “Prostitution,” See Mary

      Wollstonecraft. Two towns over from his Madonna,

      in a church in Arezzo, Piero della Francesca

      painted a fresco of Mary Magdalene, her curled hair wet

      with the tears she used to bathe Christ’s feet,

      her body a swollen green swathe of dress, the red cape

      folded so as to accentuate the pendulous belly

      and thick thigh, the Magdalene bristling

      between arch columns that frame her, one

      painted slightly forward, the other behind

      her body, so that we do not know in which direction

      Mary is headed, nor what she is, really,

      her almond eyes glittering out at us, halo chipped,

      over centuries, away. It is wonderful

      when time accentuates something of the truth

     


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