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    The Best American Poetry 2015

    Page 8
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      now, with no wall of water behind them?

      How will Over Niagara Falls in a Barrel

      marry Across Niagara Falls on a Tightrope?

      Over the Falls would have worn a veil,

      Across the Falls would have tied a tie,

      hand in hand they would have poured

      down the aisle to the sound of rustling

      silks. Later they would narrow

      to a lovely neck, later they would make

      a gentle elbow in the water, later

      they would pour into a still round pool,

      and dance for three minutes to what they

      called music. Niagara Falls is a family

      member. He is drunk for the first time

      in a hundred years. “I don’t call that music

      I call that noise,” would have screamed

      Niagara Falls, right through his aquiline

      family nose. All of Niagara’s ex-lovers

      are here. The World’s Steepest Dive

      stands up and says, “I’ve been diving

      so long now, and when will I hit?

      When will you be there for me, Niagara?”

      First Woman Behind the Falls stands up

      so everyone can see her, so everyone

      can see what has happened to her looks.

      “You took the best day of my life,

      Niagara.” The World’s

      Longest Breath-Hold stands up,

      she loves him, she drew in her breath

      the first time she saw him and never

      breathed out again, not ever. The furious

      waterfall without water he punches her

      into tomorrow; the World’s Longest

      Breath-Hold is longer now and she calls

      to him from the future, “You’re here,

      you’re roaring again where I am,

      Tomorrow.” Finally his first love the U-

      Shape stands up. Stands up and she says,

      “Niagara.” The sound curves down and up

      again, even the shape of her voice is a U.

      “I don’t call that music I call that noise,”

      says the furious waterfall without water,

      trembling at the very lip, unable to contain

      himself, and there he goes roaring

      back into her arms.

      from A Public Space

      DORA MALECH

      * * *

      Party Games

      Might night right sight?

      —Andrew Joron

      The first thing she did after we blindfolded her

      and turned her in circles by her shoulders

      was lunge

      for where she thought her target hung

      and hit tree trunk instead, with one strike

      against it split the stick

      in half to jagged dagger

      in her

      fists. The donkey gently swayed

      within reach, barely grazed

      and staring straight ahead with the conviction

      inherent to its kind at the horizon

      that a gaze

      implies,

      paper mane fluttering in the breeze of a near miss,

      belly ballasted with melting chocolate kisses,

      drawn grin belying its

      thingness, rictus

      of ritual and craft. She’s grinning

      too, and laughing, regaining

      her balance,

      planting her feet in a samurai stance.

      She brandishes her splinter.

      There’s no harm in letting her

      take another turn

      without turning

      her around again.

      We think we know how this ends,

      how good it feels to play at this,

      violence and darkness,

      the beast

      that harbors something sweet.

      from The Hopkins Review

      DONNA MASINI

      * * *

      Anxieties

      It’s like ants

      and more ants.

      West, east

      their little axes

      hack and tease.

      Your sins. Your back taxes.

      This is your Etna,

      your senate

      of dread, at the axis

      of reason, your taxi

      to hell. You see

      your past tense—

      and next? a nest

      of jittery ties.

      You’re ill at ease,

      at sea

      almost in-

      sane. You’ve eaten

      your saints.

      You pray to your sins.

      Even sex

      is no exit.

      Ah, you exist.

      from Poem-a-Day

      AIREA D. MATTHEWS

      * * *

      If My Late Grandmother Were Gertrude Stein

      I. Southern Migration

      Leech. Broke speech. Leaf ain’t pruning pot. Lay. Lye. Lie. Hair straight off. Arrowed branch and horse joint. Elbow ash. Row fish. Row dog. Slow-milk pig. Blue-water sister. Hogs like willow. Weep crow. Weep cow. Sow bug. Soul narrow. Inchway. Inches away. Over the bridge. Back that way. Fur. Fir needles in coal. Black hole. Black out. Black feet. Blame. Long way still. Not there. There. Here. Same.

      II. Feed the Saw

      Old Crow. Liquor. Drink. Drunk. Girdle. Grits. Grit. Tea. Grit tea. Tea git. Get shaved. Shook. Shucked. Shit. Flour. Flower. Lard and swallow. Hardedge chew. Chipped tooth bite. Tool chip. Bite. Bloat. Bloat. Bloat. Blight seat. Blight sit tea. Be light city. Down town dim. Slight dark. Old Arc. New Arc. New Ark. New work. Newark. Lark-fed. Corned bread. Bedfeather back. Sunday-shack church fat. Greased gloved. Dust-rubbed. Love cheap-heeled shoes. Window seat. Mirror eye. Window. I. Window. Window. When though. When though. Wind blow. November. December. No cinder. No slumber. No summer. Branch. Branched. Blanched. Fried. Freed. Fly. Want. What. Want. What. Graves want.

      III. Miscegenation

      Good. Smooth. Curly-haired baby. Baby rock-a-bye. My baby. Mama rock-a-bye that baby. Wrestle the earth, baby. No dirt. No. Dirt-shine. Shine. Shine-neck. Porcelain. Tin. Tarnish. Powder milk. Pout her. Milk. Powder-silk inheritance. Front the washtub. Top the bed. Bin. Leaky numbers run in. Run in. Run on. Red fevers hold your palm. Sweat it out. Hot. Hot. Heat the rest. Pretty melt that wax. Wide flower. Ellis-Island daddy. O, Daddy’s bar. Banned. Mongrel hum. Come. Come now. Little bones bend. Old crack. Creak. Crank. Crick. Curly-Q. Fuck. Them. Then fuck them. You hear me. Walk through good-haired baby. Half of you. Belong.

      IV. Gertrude Stein

      Who. Bills mount. Picasso. Who. Matisse. Who. Mortgage. No currency canvass. Pay brushes. Stroke. Stroke. Bridge. Brittle. Blend. 10 miles daybreak. 10 miles they break. They broke. No brick. Widgets in the envelope. No railroad green. Agriculture. Pea snap. Earth under nails. Spine and stilt woman. Roach-kill heel woman. Roaches in the crawl. Woman, creep. Keep 5th grade. Every where. Wear every where. We’re every. Where. Any. How. We sacrifice and hammer. They sacrifice the hammer. Never. Ax and hatchet make callous. Hard hand. Prison-pen privilege. Prison. Privilege pinned. Bar-thorn pinned. Pine cross. Crown. Weight. Wait. Iron is harder. Chicken fat can is full of spark. Spark kill. Ore. Sparkle. Or. Spark cull. Spark. Cull. Hoe. Heave. Heave-holy. Heavy. Heavy. Heavy lights genius. That is that Gertrude. Who.

      from Kinfolks Quarterly

      JAMAAL MAY

      * * *

      There Are Birds Here

      for Detroit

      There are birds here,

      so many birds here

      is what I was trying to say

      when they said those birds were metaphors

      for what is trapped

      between fences

      and buildings. No.

      The birds are here

      to root around for bread

      the girl’s hands tear

      and toss like confetti. No,

      I don’t mean the bread is torn like cotton,

      I said confetti, and no

      not
    the confetti

      a tank can make out of a building.

      I mean the confetti

      a boy can’t stop smiling about,

      and no his smile isn’t much

      like a skeleton at all. And no

      their neighborhood is not like a war zone.

      I am trying to say

      the neighborhood is as tattered

      and feathered as anything else,

      as shadow pierced by sun

      and light parted

      by shadow-dance as anything else,

      but they won’t stop saying

      how lovely the ruins,

      how ruined the lovely

      children must be in your birdless city.

      from Poetry

      LAURA MCCULLOUGH

      * * *

      There Were Only Dandelions

      And the boy.

      Everywhere, sound. Here: sirens. There: sirens.

      And the crying

      [because one woman’s husband

      doesn’t love her anymore

      and wants to go to medical school,

      now, after so many years of lawyering;

      because another one woke up one day,

      told her husband, I don’t think I ever want

      to sleep with you again, meaning sex,

      and then he learned it meant not

      even the sleeping, the spooned, belly loose

      intimacy of howler monkey night;

      because the dandelion blew

      into a million parachuting seeds.]:

      Pre-dandelions floating everywhere, to every continent.

      There, too, screaming, just like sirens,

      and everywhere in between, each anniversary of the living.

      My boy is in college now, one says,

      but that day of the bombing,

      when they called, I stopped at the 7–11

      to buy bags to bring the body parts home in.

      He was one of only four that survived.

      [Whose baby, anonymous, in the trash heap

      Whose boys aiming, aiming, falling in love

      with the fear they won’t ever outrun?

      Whose child that one,

      without an arm, a knife in the other?]

      They’re not all white faces, and this poem

      is not a public poem.

      Not all poems are meant to entertain,

      like Jericho said, named

      after that city by that river

      in the hot place so many people

      have lived in, so many hostages

      been taken in, so many,

      so many—whose offices I can’t name or know—

      no, not entertain, but sing just the same,

      a polyphony of song

      birds in the morning,

      snow geese aflight, guns rocketing,

      barrel out, sound through

      the beating blood,

      bleating animals, beseeching

      all those river gods

      for some respite from this suffering.

      [Each a lawn weed having grown

      up in some crevice,

      against the wall of each life,

      flowering heads all in all

      and each in one, this explosion

      on the seed-headed planet,

      fractal imagining, and this

      is my imagining, this declaimed I]

      Though some of you—

      even though this is not a public poem—

      will say the I is dead; there is no self;

      no things but in ideas

      dead, yet no ideas in things either;

      and then the accumulation

      of linguistic artifacts heats up like a

      like a like a

      lava lamp.

      [All Spencer’s Gifts’ glow and thrift store chic.]

      And you will not be warmed by it,

      but who is this you?

      Because if there is no I,

      there can be no we,

      and I am not willing to surrender to that.

      [to no us-ness, to you not being

      one sole being on the other end

      of this this-ness, but only part

      of some conglomerate, corporate

      entity called nothing-we-can-comprehend.

      I am unwilling;

      I am a dissenter.

      I am.]

      Which renders the corporation something

      more than they,

      which is almost always paralytic or amoral,

      certainly unsympathetic and unsympathizable,

      something approaching evil.

      Just you. And me. Please.

      First, I claim this I, that only has this

      language(s), technology(s), space,

      time, sex, gender, religion

      or lack thereof,

      sensibility, sense,

      a body, a body in time,

      in sex, in faith and betrayal

      and reason and reasoning:

      out of this great unsynthesized manifold,

      all penetration and penetrating.

      [Like a seed head blown apart,

      all pollination and flowering

      and dried and falling away

      and lifting and airborne and borne

      away from each other to land

      and germinate and survive

      in the meagerness of conditions,

      the little dying, the little survivals.]

      An image, Williams said; an idea, said Stevens,

      ancestors we think of: lion’s teeth leaves, prickly

      and persevering, no things but in ideas, really?

      So much depends upon this small boy

      who doesn’t look like any small boy you know;

      he is my small boy—the I of this this-ness—

      with small bones and wide dark eyes,

      hair as straight and black as spun obsidian.

      So much depends upon a child like him, this one I love,

      sitting in calf-high grass, so new-green, the edges

      blaze white, and the dandelions all sprung overnight,

      one night in this boy’s newborn awareness,

      as new as any child’s, burying his face in the common

      and undervalued florets, eyes blazing with YELLOW!!

      Mind cracking—everywhere this cracking—a portal

      into a new way of being, the dancing around him,

      the buzz of new insects, the spray of misting winds;

      it is all so amazing, this world of wonder.

      from Verse Daily

      RAJIV MOHABIR

      * * *

      Dove

      bichwa ke mare ordhniya ke torde,

      tohar najariya jaherile jaherile

      A scorpion stings me; its toxins swim my veins,

      one ill prick from you and I writhe in your fever.

      I dream I cough up a songbird I release to the sky,

      you board a plane to take you across the desert.

      I will tie messages to the feet of doves,

      set them to sail at dusk with a map to your country.

      Dizzy with thirst they fall, raining, from the sky,

      their dried meat hardening in tawny feathers.

      I throw stones at planes’ shadows, cursing iron

      to crash, to burn in serrated-leafed cane fields.

      So my skin never blisters with your desire,

      in birdbaths I empty vials of avicide.

      The scorpion’s sting tears my veil,

      the glance from your poisonous eyes.

      from Prairie Schooner

      AIMEE NEZHUKUMATATHIL

      * * *

      Upon Hearing the News You Buried Our Dog

      I have faith in the single glossy capsule of a butterfly egg.

      I have faith in the way a wasp nest is never quiet

      and never wants to be. I have faith that the pile of forty

      painted turtles balanced on top of each other will not fall

      as the whole messy mass makes a scrabble-run

      for the cr
    eek and away from a fox’s muddy paws.

      I have been thinking of you on these moonless nights—

      nights so full of blue fur and needle-whiskers, I don’t dare

      linger outside for long. I wonder if scientists could classify

      us a binary star—something like Albireo, four hundred

      light-years away. I love that this star is actually two—

      one blue, one gold, circling each other, never touching—

      a single star soldered and edged in two colors if you spy it

      on a clear night in July. And if this evening, wherever you are,

      brings you face-to-face with a raccoon or possum—

      be careful of the teeth and all that wet bite.

      During the darkest part of the night, teeth grow longer

      in their mouths. And if the oleander spins you still

      another way—take a turn and follow it. It will help you avoid

      the spun-light sky, what singularity we might’ve become.

      from Poem-a-Day

      D. NURKSE

      * * *

      Plutonium

      after Richard Rhodes

      1

      A man stood beside the gate

      with his severed eyeball

      in the palm of his hand.

      The empty socket stared at me

      with a shy creeping fire

      or so I imagined in my pride.

      So I said, “I can undo this.”

      2

      We watched the blast through welder’s glass

      and a tinted lens, from twenty miles east

      in the Sierra Oscura. We slathered ourselves

      with suntan lotion. Serber peeped

      with a naked eye, and was blinded

      for ninety seconds—when he could see again,

      just chaparral and nine scrub pines.

      The light had bounced off the moon.

      3

      Neils Bohr recites in his soft rapt voice: I divide myself into two persons, one of whom tries to fool the other, while a third, who is in fact the same as the other two, is filled with wonder at this confusion. Thinking becomes dramatic, and quietly acts the most complicated plots with itself and for itself; and the spectator again and again becomes an actor.

     


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