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    Best American Poetry 2018

    Page 5
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    This we entreat, implore, beseech

      Whose miseries are too deep for speech.

      from Rattle

      ROBERT CORDING

      * * *

      Toast to My Dead Parents

      My parents worshipped at the altar

      of the present, each moment

      an opportunity for bickering,

      for one of them, in their elaborate game

      of cat-and-mouse—Didn’t you say

      it was going to rain today?

      Who put the salt and pepper here,

      it’s gone in the cabinet above the stove

      for sixty years—to gain a slight advantage.

      They were entertaining, their fights

      like tickets to the Amusement Park

      we could never afford.

      My father, who liked wordplay,

      said they were keeping things fresh.

      They said good morning

      in myriad phrases—the eggs are dry,

      you burnt the English muffin again,

      where did you put my pills?

      That got the morning going like the cuckoo

      popping out of the Black Forest

      kitchen clock to jeeringly announce

      the hour that was an hour too late,

      each blaming the other for oversleeping.

      It was, I guess, in its sad, crazy

      destructive way, a form of communication.

      My brothers and I never understood

      their day-long bickering, nor that

      nagging devotion to each other,

      one of them unfailingly present

      at the other’s bedside in sickness.

      They never complained about money,

      lived happily by the house rule of enough,

      as in whatever we have is enough,

      yet seemed always to be in need

      of something that wasn’t to be had—

      something intangible they wanted

      to hold with their hands, or be

      able to say with the fluency of words

      which never came, or came

      garbled and incompletely, or twisted

      whatever they were looking for

      into another insult.

      Their bickering grew less playful,

      more cat batting a half-dead mouse

      back and forth between its paws,

      as they tried to ward off

      the clock-tick of dying’s boredom.

      They certainly kept things fresh,

      the freedom of destruction, I guess,

      better than some quiet descent

      into death. And so, dear parents, I toast you,

      toast all those words volleyed back and forth,

      the two of you filled with some great need

      that could never be fully met,

      true believers in all that might be

      that never was, hopeless

      romantics to the bitter end.

      from The Sewanee Review

      CYNTHIA CRUZ

      * * *

      Artaud

      At age five, with his sister Marie-Ange.

      Around 1920 at age twenty-four.

      Around 1920 at his sister’s wedding.

      As Cecco, in Marcel Vandal’s film Graziella (1926).

      As Gringalet, in Luitz-Morat’s film Le Juif errant (1926).

      As Marat, in Abel Gance’s Napoléon (1927).

      As Marat.

      As the Intellectual, in Léon Poirier’s film Verdun, visions d’histoire (1928).

      As the monk Massieu, in Carl Dreyer’s La Passion de Jeanne d’Arc (1928).

      As the father in his play, Les Cenci, produced in 1935 by the Theater of Cruelty.

      On the grounds of the asylum in Rodez, with Dr. Ferdière in May 1946.

      Self-portrait (December 17, 1946).

      His room in the clinic in Ivry-sur-Seine.

      In his room, shortly before his death.

      from Bennington Review

      DICK DAVIS

      * * *

      A Personal Sonnet

      How strange this life is mine, and not another,

      This jigsaw . . . each irrevocable piece.

      That bad, unfinished business of my brother,

      Dead at nineteen; my gadding years in Greece

      And Italy; life lived, not understood;

      A sunset in Kerala, when it seemed

      The sun had risen on my life for good.

      All this was real, but seems now as if dreamed.

      The presences I’ve loved, and poetry—

      Faces I cannot parse or paraphrase

      Whose mystery is all that they reveal;

      The Persian poets who laid hands on me

      And whispered that all poetry is praise:

      These are the dreams that turned out to be real.

      from The Hudson Review

      WARREN DECKER

      * * *

      Today’s Special

      Today’s special is all-natural rage,

      Grilled on a smoldering fire.

      Its powerful flavor made subtle with age,

      Today’s special is all-natural rage.

      Domestically raised in a comfortable cage,

      And fed only free-range desire,

      Today’s special is all-natural rage,

      Grilled on a smoldering fire.

      from Think Journal

      SUSAN DE SOLA

      * * *

      The Wives of the Poets

      All poets’ wives have rotten lives,

      Their husbands look at them like knives

      —Delmore Schwartz

      The wives of the poets,

      they never complain.

      They know they are married

      to drama and pain.

      They know they are married

      to more than their man.

      They know there are others—

      young lovers he can

      fend off from the marriage

      that keeps him afloat,

      for rail as they may,

      he won’t rock that boat.

      She won’t read the poems

      he’s written for her;

      the poems for lovers

      will cause no great stir.

      He knows she won’t read them,

      because her concern

      is life (and not words)

      but both feel the burn

      of the daggers they throw,

      the sharp looks that show

      the rot in the lives

      of poets, and wives.

      from The Dark Horse

      DANTE DI STEFANO

      * * *

      Reading Dostoyevsky at Seventeen

      In those days, my dreams always changed titles

      before they were finished and I wanted

      only to love in that insane tortured way

      of poor dear Dmitri Karamazov.

      Suddenly, I was speaking the language

      of lapdog and samovar. This is

      the ballroom, the barracks, the firing squad.

      This is the old monk with the beard of bees.

      This is the orange lullaby the moon

      of the moon will sing you when it’s grieving.

      This is the province you escape by train,

      fleeing heavy snow and eternal elk.

      This is the part where I take your hand in

      my hand and I tell you we are burning.

      from Met Magazine

      NAUSHEEN EUSUF

      * * *

      Pied Beauty

      Is it not the beauty of the maculate?

      The speckled, spotted, the rose now varicose;

      the sky now gold and now a purple bruise;

      the taint and sully of the soul’s caprice;

      the fitful orisons of a restless hour;

      the artful heart so fickle-quick to sour.

      Whatever wavers with the changing minute:

      the weather, the markets, the 401 and peace

      of mind; what had been promised but never meant;

      the youth and years that n
    ow seem badly spent—

      Accept it.

      from Birmingham Poetry Review

      JONATHAN GALASSI

      * * *

      Orient Epithalamion

      for Barry Bergdoll and Bill Ryall

      Fall will touch down in golden Orient,

      where ospreys float and peace comes dropping slow.

      There will be pumpkins by the ton at Latham’s.

      The trees will re-rehearse their yearly show.

      But now crepe myrtle ornaments the village,

      rose of Sharon, autumn clematis.

      The oyster ponds are dark and tranquil mirrors

      basking in the sunlight’s brazen kiss.

      On Skipper’s Lane, Sebastian and Sarah

      have packed up with their brood, as one expects,

      and Madeline and Chris, and Jane and Eddie.

      No more artists! No more architects!

      Just Miriam and Grayson, Sylvia and Freddie.

      Gone: writers, agents, publishers, and all!

      The real people, proudly holding steady,

      will reap the blond munificence of fall.

      Goodbye to the disturbances of summer,

      when Stevie’s singers jazzed in Poquatuck

      and a Supreme Court Justice read our rights out

      to every citizen, man, doe, and buck.

      Now egrets dot the marsh on Narrow River.

      The swan is hiding till she nests next spring.

      Virginia creeper reddens on the tree trunks.

      Goldenrod envelops everything,

      succeeding to swamp rose and honeysuckle

      and all the weeds that came and went in waves.

      The geese will soon be flying in formation

      the way the Tuthill slaves sleep in their graves.

      Near the monarch station, the Holzapfels

      harvest their garlic. Milkweed is in flower.

      Leslie’s pool is cooling down. The ferry

      disgorges only fifty cars an hour.

      It’s time for sweet bay scallops, now the jellies

      have turned tail in the Sound and sped away.

      The Bogdens lay their conch pots every morning,

      and the water climbs in Hallock’s Bay.

      Charles the First is staking lilies. Sinan

      reduces his last oozings, hours by hours.

      Karen surveys the still street from her study.

      Charles the Second’s arms are full of flowers.

      And the wild turkeys make their first appearance,

      though Bay and Sound still glisten from the Hill.

      The vineyard grapes hang blithe and ripe and ruddy.

      Ann builds her house and Barry marries Bill.

      Wreathe them with sea lavender and asters!

      Sing for the joys and years they have in store.

      Husband them; preserve them from disasters.

      Let there be jazzing in the deep heart’s core—

      and let the tide not overrun the causeway:

      may Orient be theirs forever more!

      from The New Yorker

      JESSICA GOODFELLOW

      * * *

      Test

      Mrs. Yeager’s handout of college prep vocab words

      was meant as an onerous task for a neophyte, a germane lexicon,

      but I ascertained first what had been my uncle’s initials: S A T.

      I heard no more of the lecture, repeated silently his moniker.

      Was this (a) auspicious; (b) ominous; (c) merely benign?

      My mother’s only story: how my uncle, between all-

      night shifts at the post office and arduous college courses,

      used to rouse and feed an infant me, his hand to my mouth.

      Otherwise she kept a silence in which I learned ambiguous,

      lugubrious, and truncate. Through my uncle’s absence

      I memorized doleful, evanescent, and curtailed by heart.

      “Choose the best answer from the following.” The sentence suggests

      there is a best answer for an empty mouth. Mortality is

      (a) conditional; (b) congenital; (c) incompatible; (d) superfluous.

      Death is (a) insatiable; (b) inexorable; (c) ineffable; (d) immutable.

      I am (a) the niece of no body; (b) death’s little dilettante;

      (c) consanguine with hoar frost; (d) kin to white noise.

      from The Southern Review

      SONIA GREENFIELD

      * * *

      Ghost Ship

      I have been that young, that electrified

      by the bohemian scene of a city spilling its lights

      all around me. I have been to parties

      in sketchy spaces where painters have work

      on the walls that should be seen by millions

      but is seen by the few of us figuring out

      who we’re going to fuck after too much cheap wine

      drunk from plastic tumblers, figuring out

      how we’re going to make it a country’s width away

      from families, struck out on our own

      like explorers getting comfortable with being alone

      in a wilderness that is actually just a room

      rented in a house of strangers. I have been

      that woman high on E, my eyes doll-dark, jaw

      clenched, body ready to swallow pleasure

      in a million lusty gulps. I know any space we inhabit

      can become a ghost ship. I have read enough

      to know stories of wildfires, of boats found

      empty, of the soul yanked whole cloth from

      its innocent wearer. But you can’t live in fear

      of the apparition, the adventurers afloat on

      their rickety structure and cast to a sea

      of flames. It can happen at any time to anyone,

      so when music flares up and takes a hold of you,

      when a swirl of colored spotlights sets you

      spinning, you have to dance as if

      the very act of living depends on it.

      from Rattle

      JOY HARJO

      * * *

      An American Sunrise

      We were running out of breath, as we ran out to meet ourselves. We

      were surfacing the edge of our ancestors’ fights, and ready to strike.

      It was difficult to lose days in the Indian bar if you were straight.

      Easy if you played pool and drank to remember to forget. We

      made plans to be professional—and did. And some of us could sing

      so we drummed a fire-lit pathway up to those starry stars. Sin

      was invented by the Christians, as was the Devil, we sang. We

      were the heathens, but needed to be saved from them—thin

      chance. We knew we were all related in this story, a little gin

      will clarify the dark and make us all feel like dancing. We

      had something to do with the origins of blues and jazz

      I argued with the music as I filled the jukebox with dimes in June.

      Forty years later and we still want justice. We are still America. We

      know the rumors of our demise. We spit them out. They die soon.

      from Poetry

      TERRANCE HAYES

      * * *

      American Sonnet for My Past and Future Assassin

      The black poet would love to say his century began

      With Hughes or, God forbid, Wheatley, but actually

      It began with all the poetry weirdos & worriers, warriors,

      Poetry whiners & winos falling from ship bows, sunset

      Bridges & windows. In a second I’ll tell you how little

      Writing rescues. My hunch is that Sylvia Plath was not

      Especially fun company. A drama queen, thin-skinned,

      And skittery, she thought her poems were ordinary.

      What do you call a visionary who does not recognize

      Her vision? Orpheus was alone when he invented writing.

      His manic drawing became a kind of writing when he sent


      His beloved a sketch of an eye with an X struck through it.

      He meant I am blind without you. She thought he meant

      I never want to see you again. It is possible he meant that, too.

      from The New Yorker

      ERNEST HILBERT

      * * *

      Mars Ultor

      Before they had a fleet

      Romans rowed on logs

      As they prepared to meet

      Carthage. Treaties, public

      Or secret, do little when

      The border of the republic

      Is breached without notice:

      More tug-of-war

      Than elegant chess.

      Some ask: Is virtù virtue?

      After reconciliation, consensus,

      Appeasement, the coup.

      Some rely on law,

      But law relies on guns,

      Or must withdraw.

      Brutes push their way to power,

      But the muddiest barbarian

      Also wants the throne an hour,

      And dons a crown, marks affairs,

      Nods under a golden branch until

      A stronger one turns up the stairs.

      from Academic Questions

      R. NEMO HILL

      * * *

      The View from The Bar

      So much of the coin of youth was spent,

      while leaning here, with smoke and brew,

      my back half-turned to face a view

      beyond this room’s brief consequence.

      So many nights washed up against

      my eyes in their impassive mask

      and touched this quadrangle of glass,

     


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