Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    The Best American Poetry 2021

    Page 7
    Prev Next


      can you—his saying, there,

      that’s a mystery.

      And you said the word as if it were new ground to stand on,

      you uttered it to stand on it—

      mystery. Yes, mystery he said. Yes mystery you said

      talking to it now as it

      took its step out of the shadow into the clearing and there you

      saw it in the so-called in-

      visible. Then when the wave broke the first time on what had seemed

      terra firma and you knew as he held your hand

      insisting you hold your ground

      that there was foreclosure,

      there was oldness of a kind you couldn’t fathom, and there was the terrifying

      suddenness of the

      now. Your mind felt for it. It felt the reach from an elsewhere and a dip which cannot hold.

      Splash went the wave.

      Your feet stood fast.

      Your hem was touched.

      We saw you watch.

      We felt your hand grip

      but not to move back.

      Can you find that now now, wherever you are, even a candle would be a gift I know

      from there. Shhh he said so you could hear it. Pity he said

      not knowing to whom.

      Pity you said, laughing, pity pity, and that was the day of

      your being carried out

      in spite of your cold, wrapped tight, to see the evening star. And he pointed. And you

      looked up. And you took a breath I hear even now as I go

      out—the inhalation of dark secrecy fear distance the reach into an almost-touching

      of silence, of the thing that has no neighbors and never will, in you,

      the center of which is noise,

      the outermost a freezing you can travel his arm to with your gaze

      till it’s there. The real. A star. The earth is your

      home. No matter what they tell you now and what program you input via your chip or port

      or faster yet, no, no, in that now I am not there

      in, to point, to take your now large hand and say

      look, look through these fronds,

      hold your breath,

      the deer hiding from the hunter is right here in our field,

      it knows we are too,

      it does not fear us.

      Be still. Wait. And we, we

      will be left behind.

      Except just now. If you still once.

      That you might remember.

      Now. Remember now.

      from The New Yorker

      RACHEL ELIZA GRIFFITHS Hunger

      Weeks after her death I came to the garden window

      to marvel at sudden pale feathers catching, scattering

      past the rainy glass. I looked for magic everywhere.

      Signs from the afterlife that I was, indeed, distinct.

      Beneath the talon of a red-tailed hawk a pigeon

      moved briefly until it didn’t. The hawk stripped

      the common bird, piercing its thick neck. Beak probing body

      until I could see the blood from where I stood inside.

      This could happen, naturally enough, even in Brooklyn.

      This could happen whether or not my mother was dead.

      I didn’t eat for weeks because it felt wrong to want bread & milk.

      The hawk’s face running red, beautiful as it plucked & picked

      its silver-white prey apart. It wasn’t magic, but hungrily, I watched.

      As if I didn’t know memory could devour corpses

      caught alive in midair. I opened the window,

      knelt on the fire escape. I was the prey

      & hawk. This was finally myself swallowing

      those small, common parts of me. Tearing all of that away

      into strips, pulling my breast open to the bone. I saw myself

      torn apart, tearing & tearing at the beautiful face,

      the throat beneath my claw. My grieving face red

      with being exactly what I knew myself to be.

      from The Paris Review

      FRANCINE J. HARRIS Sonata in F Minor, K.183: Allegro

      [Domenico Scarlatti, Daria van den Bercken]

      Car tires rush through and announce the rain. You can hear

      the shuffling of someone street sweeping in the street.

      The insistent men outside Stingray’s, the cutoff lull

      of ambulance testing siren, the women. who step in the street and yell

      to anyone they loved once and it sounds like prelude if

      Scarlatti hadn’t moved to Madrid

      would he have moved the notes diatonically as the rain falls up

      a roof. ascends the scaffolding. It’s impossible to read The Street

      without seeing Mrs. Hedges on mine. leaning from a window on the ground

      level. of my building peering out under her red bandana considering

      me as I lean my body over the railing and watch the men dressed

      black and in gray I tell a man to stop peeing on my car and when

      he turns around. he is not surprised. He says

      he isn’t peeing, he

      is counting his money.

      from The New York Review of Books

      TERRANCE HAYES George Floyd

      You can be a bother who dyes

      his hair Dennis Rodman blue

      in the face of the man kneeling in blue

      in the face the music of his wrist-

      watch your mouth is little more

      than a door being knocked

      out of the ring of fire around

      the afternoon came evening’s bell

      of the ball and chain around the neck

      of the unarmed brother ground down

      to gunpowder dirt can be inhaled

      like a puff the magic bullet point

      of transformation both kills and fires

      the life of the party like it’s 1999 bottles

      of beer on the wall street people

      who sleep in the streets do not sleep

      without counting yourself lucky

      rabbit’s foot of the mountain

      lion do not sleep without

      making your bed of the river

      boat gambling there will be

      no stormy weather on the water

      bored to death any means of killing

      time is on your side of the bed

      of the truck transporting Emmett

      till the break of day Emmett till

      the river runs dry your face

      the music of the spheres

      Emmett till the end of time

      from The New Yorker

      EDWARD HIRSCH Waste Management

      (Skokie, 1970)

      Punch the time clock

      and try to keep up

      with the two collectors

      who trained you

      since they need to finish

      the route in five hours

      and get to their second jobs

      on time, move steadily

      behind the truck,

      don’t stop to rest

      in the shade

      between the houses,

      don’t dawdle or slip

      on the gravel

      in the alley, watch out

      for needles

      and broken glass,

      it’s hot as a dustbowl

      in August, but don’t wipe

      the sweat from your face

      with your glove

      or your torn sleeve,

      lift the trash cans

      with your whole body,

      don’t embarrass yourself

      and wave to a girl

      from the step

      of the garbage truck

      racing down Niles Center Road

      on the way to the dump

      at the end of the day,

      don’t roll on the carpet

      in rage when you get home

      or slam the door to your room

      and topple the trophies,

     
    ; never turn yellow-eyed

      with hepatitis

      and land in the hospital

      just to be seen.

      from Five Points

      ISHION HUTCHINSON David

      You marveled at the vein in the marble.

      The moment’s slight pulse when you approached.

      His blood murmured when you neared, so I

      believed, and still do. When I returned to

      it, you were gone in the other country

      of my head that will never, like him, age.

      Long was I able to stare at the vein.

      The giant must’ve just laughed and mocked him.

      Then he imagined the giant’s fall, and heard

      a restless quiet as far as Sokho.

      He thought of the river near the vineyard,

      its broad dreaming-stone. He knew it no more.

      The animals looked inconsolable.

      They knew their boy was lost to become king.

      I was supposed to photograph you both;

      but the stone sank in me and I didn’t;

      my eyes going between David’s and your eyes

      as the army, scattered, pushed us apart,

      the tumult blotted out what I shouted

      to you, which he heard, turned, nodded gently

      with a killer’s uncommon sympathy.

      from The New York Review of Books

      DIDI JACKSON Two Mule Deer

      walked past my window

      this morning—female

      I think, no antlers,

      as the day-moon pressed

      like a faded thumbprint

      into the bare back

      of the Santa Cruz Mountains

      and the meadow of wild rye

      and wand buckwheat rocked

      in the new light,

      all hide and eyes and hunger

      moving with caution and blaze.

      Is there a coming of good?

      As if their path was already decided,

      I watched them step into the day,

      black tail tipped and wide eared.

      So much of what I want

      isn’t even about me.

      Yesterday, a friend said

      the sight of deer means danger

      is clear. No coyote

      or mountain lions nearby.

      Still, I remember

      what it feels like

      to be a sidewalk,

      a girl suddenly

      tamped down

      at an all-night party,

      fingered then dropped

      by a boy who will

      be dishonorably discharged

      from the Army

      only two years later.

      You know how it feels

      wanting to walk into

      the rain and disappear—

      While hiking,

      a photographer found

      two deer legs

      about one hundred feet apart.

      Cloven hooves and dewclaws

      intact. Adapted for fleeing

      predators. Left by a hunter.

      We are only what we are.

      Don’t pity me.

      A slight steam rises

      from the backs of the deer

      as they move past

      the black oaked edge

      into the white light

      lifting their eyes

      to the tree line,

      then to my window,

      then to the sky,

      hooves striking the ground

      over and over

      like the syllables

      of a low staccato voice.

      from The Kenyon Review

      MAJOR JACKSON Double Major

      I emerge whenever he confuses the lamp for a moon.

      It is then he thinks of fine bindings in ordered athenaeums.

      I own his face, but he washes and spends too little time behind his ears.

      He sees me in the mirror behind thick clouds of shaving

      cream then suddenly believes in ghosts.

      His other selves are murals in the cave of his mind. They are speechless

      yet large. They steer his wishes like summer rain and amplify

      his terrors like newscasters.

      What he doesn’t know: his dreams are his father’s dreams, which are his

      grandfather’s dreams, and so on. They possessed a single wish.

      He knocks repeatedly on the bolted door to his imagination.

      Tragically, he believes he can mend his wounds with his poetry.

      And thus, I am his most loyal critic. He trots me out like a police dog.

      He calls our thirst for pads and pencils destiny.

      Our voices come together like two wings of a butterfly.

      On occasion, he closes his eyes and sees me.

      I am negative space: the test to all men are created equal.

      We are likely to dance at weddings against my will. He pulled out the same

      moves writing this poem, a smooth shimmy and a hop.

      This page is a kind of looking glass making strange whatever stone-carvings

      he installed along the narrow road to his interior.

      I suffer in silence wedded to his convictions. He would like to tell you

      the truth about love. But we are going to bed, to bed.

      from The Yale Review

      AMAUD JAMAUL JOHNSON So Much for America

      I was interrogated via helicopter

      while taking a shortcut through

      a field I was handcuffed leaving

      this post office I was placed in

      a lineup in the middle of the street

      I dress nattily I wear sports jackets

      I use rubbing alcohol to keep

      my sneakers clean My sweatshirts

      with the stitched block letters

      from certain colleges won’t stop

      complete strangers from searching

      my crotch I whisper uncontrollably

      I smile when nothing’s funny Gun

      at my temple Shit stinging my ear

      Is that a knife in your hand I thought

      protocol was the scruff of your collar

      On the curb On your stomach

      Cheekbone on the hood The smell

      of good wax I’m so aware of my

      body Do you think about your body

      Look at your hands Show me your

      hand I’m returning to Ellison

      I’m surrounded You’re surrounded

      But I’m always alone

      from The Southern Review

      YUSEF KOMUNYAKAA Wheelchair

      Weeks on my back, counting

      stars not up there, cutting quick

      close corners in the wheelchair

      Ralph kept moving true as oil,

      questions silent in my mouth

      after hearing a ragged sound

      rattle loose from other souls

      as if within my own body,

      trying not to drag my foot,

      & near misses in the hallway

      pumped dares through blood

      as we rolled into the elevator.

      I can see my great-grandma

      Sarah, as wheels of her chair

      furrowed those chopped rows,

      feet curled under her, a rake

      or a hoe held in strong hands,

      weeding corn, beans, & potatoes

      dug to feed her hungry family

      down in the Mississippi Delta,

      & today it is not hard to hear

      a moan rise out of black earth

      where this woman raised hot

      red peppers for her turtle soup.

      from The Paris Review

      DANA LEVIN Immigrant Song

      Bitter Mother

      Blue, dead, rush of mothers,

      conceal your island, little star.

      Trains, hands, note on a thread,

      Poland’s dish of salt.

      They said, The orphanlands

      of America

      promise you a father—

      T
    he ship’s sorrows, broken daughter,

      the ocean’s dark, dug out.

      Silent Father

      Rain, stars, sewage in the spill,

      hush the river.

      your black boat, broken snake,

      you hid. You sailed

      for the meritlands of America,

      dumped your name in the black

      water—

      In the village they pushed the Rabbi

      to the wall—someone

      blessed the hunter.

      Angry Daughter

      One says No and the other

      says nothing at all—

      Chicago, I will live in your museums

      where Europe is a picture on the wall.

      Obedient Child

      I concealed my island,

      my little star.

      In my black boat I hid.

      I hid in pictures on the wall.

      I said, I am here in America,

      your hero, your confusion,

      your disappointment after all.

      They said,

      How did you end up so bad

      in a country this good and tall.

      from The Nation

      ADA LIMÓN The End of Poetry

      Enough of osseous and chickadee and sunflower

      and snowshoes, maple and seeds, samara and shoot,

      enough chiaroscuro, enough of thus and prophecy

      and the stoic farmer and faith and our father and tis

      of thee, enough of bosom and bud, skin and god

      not forgetting and star bodies and frozen birds,

      enough of the will to go on and not go on or how

      a certain light does a certain thing, enough

      of the kneeling and the rising and the looking

      inward and the looking up, enough of the gun,

      the drama, and the acquaintance’s suicide, the long-lost

      letter on the dresser, enough of the longing and

      the ego and the obliteration of ego, enough

      of the mother and the child and the father and the child

      and enough of the pointing to the world, weary

      and desperate, enough of the brutal and the border,

      enough of can you see me, can you hear me, enough

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026