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    Best American Poetry 2017

    Page 7
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      Hamlet Texts Guildenstern about Playing upon the Pipe

      True that. Rue that.

      That whch wld cause us 2 mscnstrue

      that whch we alwys hve knwn 2 be true,

      that we r a part of an unholy crew

      that drms we cn do whtvr we do.

      2 be honest eschw that. Chw that

      fr a while. Msticate. Xpctorate.

      Engnder only that whch will elevate. Do that.

      Elminate that whch invites u 2 spculate,

      pooh pooh that. Untrue that. Undo that.

      At least try. Set ur azmuth 2 aim at what-

      evr sky will allow u 2 prsue that.

      And avoid at all csts the truths ur uncouth at,

      squndring ur youth at, growng long in the tooth at,

      7 a.m. drinkng vermouth at, 9 a.m. flyng to Duluth at.

      Fnd that hue in the sky. Thn cry. Boohoo that. Hew 2 that.

      True blue that sky course, that heart settng. Few do that. Sail 2 that.

      And 2 anything that wld skew that, u know what to say. Screw that.

      from The Antioch Review

      DAVID BRENDAN HOPES

      * * *

      Certain Things

      For the sake of my father, certain things

      must be done in a certain way:

      tightening of bolts, of nuts around threads;

      coiling of hoses; firm, instant replacement of lids;

      spreading of seed from the hand held just so,

      in furrows dug to the joint or the knuckle, depending;

      wash it when you use it, never put it up wet;

      don’t be opening and closing the screen door

      as if you were a cat.

      Be grateful for a job, a meal, a leg up.

      All that.

      In the seasons set aside for such emotions,

      of course I hated him.

      All things, even hatred, wear away.

      In the season set aside I became him,

      doing what he did in the way he did it,

      hiding the injured heart the way he hid it.

      Waking so many hours before full day

      from the dream

      that something certain’s gone astray.

      from New Ohio Review

      MAJOR JACKSON

      * * *

      The Flâneur Tends a Well-Liked Summer Cocktail

      curbside on an Arp-like table. He’s alone

      of course, in the arts district as it were, legs folded,

      swaying a foot so that his body seems to summon

      some deep immensity from all that surrounds:

      dusk shadows inching near a late-thirtyish couple debating

      the post-galactic abyss of sex with strangers,

      tourists ambling by only to disappear into the street’s gloomy mouth,

      a young Italian woman bending to retrieve

      a dropped MetroCard, its black magnetic strip facing up,

      a lone speckled brown pigeon breaking from a flock of rock

      doves, then landing near a crushed fast-food wrapper

      newly tossed by a bike messenger, the man chortling

      after a sip of flaxen-colored beer, remembering

      that, in the Gospel of John the body and glory converge

      linked to incarnation and so, perhaps, we manifest each other,

      a tiny shower of sparks erupting from the knife sharpener’s

      truck who daily leans a blade into stone, a cloudscape reflected

      in the rear windshield of a halted taxi where inside

      a trans woman applies auburn lipstick, the warlike

      insignia on the lapel jacket of a white-gloved

      doorman who opening a glass door gets a whiff

      of a dowager’s thick perfume and recalls baling timothy

      hay as a boy in Albania, the woman distractedly watching

      a mother discuss Robert Colescott’s lurid appropriations

      of modernist art over niçoise salad, suddenly frees her left breast

      from its cup where awaits the blossoming mouth of an infant

      wildly reaching for a galaxy of milk behind her dark areola,

      the sharp coughs of a student carrying a yoga mat,

      the day’s last light edging high-rises on the West Side

      so that they seem rimmed by fire just when the man says, And yet,

      immense the wages we pay boarding the great carousel of flesh.

      from Virginia Quarterly Review

      JOHN JAMES

      * * *

      History (n.)

      “I didn’t make these verses because I wanted to rival that fellow, or his poems, in artistry—I knew that wouldn’t be easy—but to test what certain dreams of mine might be saying and to acquit myself of any impiety, just in case they might be repeatedly commanding me to make this music.”

      —Plato, Phaedo

      Viewed from space, the Chilean volcano blooms.

      I cannot see it. It’s a problem of scale. History—the branch

      of knowledge dealing with past events; a continuous,

      systematic narrative of; aggregate deeds; acts, ideas, events

      that will shape the course of the future; immediate

      but significant happenings; finished, done with—“he’s history.”

      —

      Calbuco: men shoveling ash from the street.

      Third time in a week. And counting.

      Infinite antithesis. Eleven

      miles of ash in the air. What to call it—

      just “ash.” They flee to Ensenada.

      —

      The power of motives does not proceed directly from the will—

      a changed form of knowledge. Wind pushing

      clouds toward Argentina. Knowledge is merely involved.

      Ash falls, it is falling, it has fallen. Will fall. Already flights

      cancelled in Buenos Aires. I want to call it snow—

      what settles on the luma trees, their fruit black, purplish black,

      soot-speckled, hermaphroditic—if this book is unintelligible

      and hard on the ears—the oblong ovals of its leaves.

      Amos, fragrant. Family name Myrtus. The wood is extremely hard.

      —

      Ash falling on the concrete, falling on cars, ash

      on the windshields, windows, yards. They have lost

      all sense of direction. They might as well be deep

      in a forest or down in a well. They do not comprehend

      the fundamental principles. They have nothing in their heads.

      —

      The dream kept

        urging me on to do

      what I was doing—

        to make music—

      since philosophy,

        in my view, is

          the greatest music.

      —

      History—from the Greek historía, learning or knowing by inquiry. Historein (v.) to ask. The asking is not idle. From the French histoire, story. Hístor (Gk.) one who sees. It is just a matter of what we are looking for.

      from The Kenyon Review

      RODNEY JONES

      * * *

      Homecoming

      One place is as good as another to be born

      and return after years, like Odysseus to Ithaca or mildew to a rotting plank.

      How Sunday it all looks now, paved and pastured, fieldless and storeless.

      Burglar music. Late morning. No one home.

      And the past, still and under: its sawdust ice, its milk jugs screwed tight and

      suspended in spring water.

      County life, pre-telephone, without verbs.

      Small houses, a quarter of a mile apart, of whitewashed or unpainted clapboard,

      each with a well and outhouse.

      Larger houses with barns, chicken coops, toolsheds, and smokehouses. Hounds

      of some significance. Men. Women. Children.

      Nary and tarnation. A singing from the fields. A geeing and hawing.

      A voice here and there wi
    th a smidgeon of Euclid and a soupcon of Cicero to

      hifalute what twanged from across the fence and the other side of the bucksaw.

      Each day of 1953 like a pupa in a chrysalis.

      Phenomenology buzzing like wasps in the stripped timbers of the gristmill.

      The road out busting from trace and logging ruts. Now and then a backfiring

      Studebaker with its doggy entourage and roostertails of dust.

      But less and less in 1954, a mare and wagon, orbited by a yearling colt.

      The evolution of the cabin to dogtrot, the boarding up of the hall between the

      west side’s living room, kitchen, and pantry, and the east side’s two bedrooms.

      Stone chimneys at each end, and on the porch across it, the kitty-holed door to

      the attic’s must, mud daubers, and déjà vu.

      A spinning wheel with spavined and missing spokes, a warped sidesaddle, boxes

      of wooden tools, gaiters, spectacles, dried gloves, shoe lasts, letters from dead to dead.

      The cellar beneath it all. Wooden casks, wine bottles dusky and obsolesced by the

      hardshell feminism of the great Protestant reawakening

      that quarried legions of infidels from saloons and brothels and restored them to

      their families. Portis’s own.

      Tom Portis’s vineyard east of the house, his vines of small sour grapes still strung

      with rusted baling wire to rotting posts.

      His continuance bolstered and intensified should a client void a decade and show

      up early morning, stumble-drunk, moaning, “Virgie, Virgie.”

      Prose fragments.

      The smokehouse. Hams, shoulders, and side meat interred in separate salt bins.

      The hog lot.

      The well into which, it has been told, Portis once dropped a Persian cat.

      And what is the name of the cat? And what word now from the after?

      ~

      Here are some verbs: woke, saw, stretched, heard, washed, smelled, sat, blessed,

      ate, listened, rose, waited, walked, felt, shat, dug, meditated, buried, gone

      though somewhere, perhaps by some odd fractal of the principle of the

      conservation of matter, a remnant of the original template holds.

      Home odor, unreconstructed, peasant, third world—

      “Nostalgia of the infinite,” the nearly forgotten Bob Watson called it.

      Maybe it’s just like that. Maybe it’s exactly what they say

      after years to the old when they were children.

      from The Kenyon Review

      FADY JOUDAH

      * * *

      Progress Notes

      The age of portrait is drugged. Beauty

      is symmetry so rare it’s a mystery.

      My left eye is smaller than my right,

      my big mouth shows my nice teeth perfectly

      aligned like Muslims in prayer.

      My lips are an accordion. Each sneeze

      a facial thumbprint. One corner

      of my mouth hangs downward when I want

      to hold a guffaw hostage. Bell’s Palsy perhaps

      or what Mark Twain said about steamboat piloting,

      that a doctor’s unable to look upon the blush

      in a young beauty’s face without thinking

      it could be a fever, a malar rash,

      a butterfly announcing a wolf. Can I lie

      face down now as cadavers posed

      on first anatomy lesson? I didn’t know mine

      was a woman until three weeks later

      we turned her over. Out of reverence

      there was to be no untimely exposure of donors,

      our patrons who were covered in patches

      of scrubs-green dish towels,

      and by semester’s end we were sick of all that,

      tossed mega livers and mammoth hearts

      into lab air and caught them. My body

      was Margaret. That’s what the death certificate said

      when it was released before finals. The cause

      of her death? Nothing memorable,

      frail old age. But the colonel on table nineteen

      with an accessory spleen had put a bullet through

      his temple, a final prayer. Not in entry or exit

      were there skull cracks to condemn the house

      of death, no shattered glass in the brain,

      only a smooth tunnel of deep violet that bloomed

      in concentric circles. The weekends were lonely.

      He had the most beautiful muscles

      of all 32 bodies that were neatly arranged,

      zipped up as if a mass grave had been disinterred.

      Or when unzipped and facing the ceiling

      had cloth over their eyes as if they’d just been executed.

      Gray silver hair, chiseled countenance,

      he was sixty-seven, a veteran of more than one war.

      I had come across that which will end me, ex-

      tend me, at least once, without knowing it.

      from The Kenyon Review

      MEG KEARNEY

      * * *

      Grackle

      What a grackle is doing perched on the rail

      of her baby’s crib, noiselessly twitching its

      tail, she doesn’t wonder. The way this baby

      gleams he’s bound to catch a grackle’s

      eye. Besides, birds have flit in and out

      of these baby dreams forever. Sapsucker,

      blue jay. Sparrow, kingfisher, titmouse.

      She just likes to say grackle, a crack-your-

      knuckles, hard-candy word. In the dream,

      her baby’s black as a grackle, meaning

      when she holds him to the light he shines

      purple and blue, a glittery bronze. Silent

      and nameless. Sometimes he is a she but

      always the dream-baby is hers. That is

      the miracle. Her nights of nursery rhymes

      and sorrow. Of yellow quilts and song

      birds. Enough to break a bow. Enough

      to fell a cradle.

      from The Massachusetts Review

      JOHN KOETHE

      * * *

      The Age of Anxiety

             isn’t an historical age,

      But an individual one, an age to be repeated

      Constantly through history. It could be any age

      When the self-absorbing practicalities of life

      Are overwhelmed by a sense of its contingency,

      A feeling that the solid body of this world

      Might suddenly dissolve and leave the simple soul

      That’s not a soul detached from tense and circumstance,

      From anything it might recognize as home.

      I like to think that it’s behind me now, that at my age

      Life assumes a settled tone as it explains itself

      To no one in particular, to everyone. I like to think

      That of those “gifts reserved for age,” the least

      Is understanding and the last a premonition of the

      Limits of the poem that’s never done, the poem

      Everyone writes in the end. I see myself on a stage,

      Declaiming, as the golden hour wanes, my long apology

      For all the wasted time I’m pleased to call my life—

      A complacent, measured speech that suddenly turns

      Fretful as the lights come up to show an empty theater

      Where I stand halting and alone. I rehearse these things

      Because I want to and I can. I know they’re quaint,

      And that they’ve all been heard before. I write them

      Down against the day when the words in my mouth

      Turn empty, and the trap door opens on the page.

      from Raritan

      YUSEF KOMUNYAKAA

      * * *

      from The Last Bohemian of Avenue A

      It makes me sad to look up

      at the crest of a building


      & see washed-out names,

      decals, numbers, lettering

      half-gone, muted tinges

      of the past, edges of lives

      discolored & flaking off

      signs, the bold signatures

      now silenced & mildewed

      a hundred times in gray.

      I see them come & go, new

      faces with question marks

      & dollar signs in their eyes,

      believing they can still birth

      the Immaculate. But I know

      when the heart’s only a big

      mouth & the pumping is not

      a cutting contest at Slug’s.

      A paint job has taken away

      patinas of years, romance,

      & chance. I have stumbled

      upon a thing that stuns me

      beneath a busted light globe.

      Even if loneliness arrives

      around 3 a.m., it isn’t easy

      to touch myself because

      it’s a sin. But now & then

      I must hold on to something

      to keep me here on Earth,

      in the middle of an old tune

      & a new one—I touch myself

      as a face blooms in my head

      & somehow worlds collide

      gently. What set did she step

      from, or was it on my last gig

      at Smoke? Or, maybe she was

      wearing a garden of orchids

      when we passed, or the face

      of a waitress among changes

      in a Trane solo as I almost

      walked in front of a taxicab.

      When I touch myself I am

      reaching for some blue note

      on the other side of an abyss.

      Mary Travers stands before me

      in Washington Square Park

      in a silvery dress, whispering

      “Where Have All the Flowers Gone?”

      as I lean against Garibaldi

      reaching for his sword,

      & blow riffs of luster,

     


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