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    Best American Poetry 2018

    Page 9
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    America who cross the border unaccompanied.

      With lines from Maya Angelou and Richard Wilbur.

      Arcing above our apartment building,

      above the rousing city and green skirts

      of the San Salvador volcano, a flock

      of wild parakeets comes to roost

      outside our window; my nine-month son

      rests his head on my chest and all I want

      is to draw the curtains, but he’s coughed

      all night and now his breathing

      is slow, near sleep, though his eyes snap open

      with each squawk. I imagine the parakeets

      preening their emerald feathers, joyful in their ceremony

      of clacks and trills. They are not musing

      the capriciousness of nature as I am; they don’t know

      five-thirty a.m., only that the sun has tinged

      the mountainsides gold and that this alcove echoes

      their welcome beautifully. The wild parakeets tap

      at the windowpane and my son stirs,

      raises his sleep-etched face to mine.

      Together we slip past the curtain and discover

      seven green parakeets, perhaps a little smaller,

      their feathers scruffier than I had envisioned.

      Two squabble over a prime niche and the stronger

      one comes towards the glass, wings unfurled,

      fat tongue thrusting from his open beak. I want

      to unlatch the window and sprinkle seed, lure them

      to perch on our shoulders and arms, anything

      to make them stay longer. Instead, my son, rooted in

      the things unknown but longed for still—

      greets them with the slap of an open palm to the windowpane,

      and in a clapping of wings

      they leap from the narrow corridor at once, a raucous fleeing,

      with headlong and unanimous consent,

      a disappearing stain, a distant murmuration

      swallowed from sight.

      from Green Mountains Review

      PAISLEY REKDAL

      * * *

      Philomela

      Because her grandmother loved

      the arts, her father said, she’d willed

      the money to a distant cousin

      working as a sculptor. A decision

      made the month before she’d died

      from cancer, which the young woman

      cannot now believe was due

      only to a brain tumor, having endured

      the last, deliberate ways her grandmother asked

      why she’d never married.

      The cousin, who inherited the money,

      showed her sculptures in a converted barn:

      the only space large enough to contain

      the seething shapes that seemed to flame

      up from their pedestals

      in precarious arcs. An audacity

      of engineering the young woman

      tried not to see as a reproach

      when, curious, she visited:

      how the sculptures made her feel

      too earth-bound, solid. At the gallery,

      she stared a long while at what she thought

      was a tree blasted by lightning,

      but the more she looked, the more clearly

      shapes emerged. There

      were a man’s hands gripping a slender figure

      by the waist, the thin body writhing,

      frozen in his arms. It was

      a girl, she saw, with shredded

      bark for breasts and dark charred wood

      for legs, as if the limbs had been snatched

      from a fire while burning.

      Her twig hands raked

      her captor’s face. The young woman

      could read no emotion on it,

      however: the plank face

      had been scraped clean; all the fear

      and anger burned instead inside

      their twisting bodies: she could see

      the two there stuck at a point

      of perfect hatred for each other: she

      for his attack, he for her resistance,

      perhaps the beauty he could not

      stand in her, as her last date in college

      had hissed, “You think

      you’re so fucking pretty,” spitting it

      into her face so that she’d had to turn

      her cheek to wipe it, which was when

      he’d grabbed her arm then, pinning her—

      Was this why her cousin had been chosen, to make

      what she’d had no words for?

      Persephone, the piece she stood

      amazed before had been titled: the last,

      unconscious gift of her grandmother.

      “For your wedding,” she’d said

      her last week, pointing

      to her own open palm in which

      nothing rested. Perhaps

      her grandmother had imagined

      a gold ring there. Perhaps a string

      of thick pink pearls. The young woman

      drove home from the gallery, took a shower,

      and did not tell anyone that day

      what it was she’d seen. A month later,

      in the mail, a package came

      from her father: her grandmother’s Singer

      sewing machine, its antique brass wheel

      scrubbed of gold, the wooden handle

      glossy with vines of mother-of-pearl.

      It was lovely, and for a moment

      she considered sewing a quilt with it,

      onto which she might embroider

      shooting stars in reds and saffron, the figure

      of a child, perhaps, or of a man

      by a house’s courtyard, his hat

      in his hands, his broad body

      naked, harmless.

      How much thread would that take

      to make? she wondered. And considered it

      a long while before packing up

      the machine again, sliding it back

      into its wood crate and high up onto a shelf

      of her basement closet. The place

      she kept her college books and papers,

      where she told herself it could wait.

      from Narrative

      MICHAEL ROBBINS

      * * *

      Walkman

      I didn’t mean to quit drinking,

      it just sort of happened.

      I’d always assumed

      it’d be difficult, or not

      difficult, exactly,

      but impossible.

      Then one New Year’s Eve

      twenty years ago

      at the VFW, Craig and I

      were drinking beer

      from brown bottles,

      peeling the labels off

      into little confetti nests.

      In Mexico

      the previous New Year’s Eve,

      I’d started drinking

      again after a year sober.

      I traveled by myself

      in Oaxaca for a month

      and had at least two

      beautiful experiences.

      The bus I was on broke

      down in the mountains

      and I watched the stars blink

      on with a Mexican girl

      who later sent me a letter

      I never answered. That’s one

      of the experiences. The others

      are secrets. We left the VFW

      at a reasonable hour for once.

      I never took another drink.

      I’m not sure why not.

      I don’t think it had anything

      to do with me. I think

      it was a miracle. Like when

      the hero at the last

      second pulls the lever to switch

      the train to the track the heroine’s

      not tied to. I was always broke

      in those days, whereas now I’m just

      poor. I brought a Walkman

      and a backpack stuffed with

    &nb
    sp; cassettes to Oaxaca. I was sick

      of them all within a week

      and longed to buy a new tape

      but couldn’t spare the pesos.

      I listened to Live Through This

      at the Zapotec ruins

      of Monte Albán,

      Rumours on the bus to DF.

      At Puerto Ángel,

      my headphones leaking

      tinny discord

      across a rooftop bar,

      I sat watching the ocean.

      An American man about the age

      I am now

      asked me what I was listening to.

      I said Sonic Youth. He asked

      which album, I said Sister.

      He chuckled and said

      “I’m Johnny Strike.”

      It probably wasn’t a miracle,

      but I couldn’t believe it.

      Here was the guy who wrote

      Crime’s 1976 classic

      “Hot Wire My Heart,”

      which Sonic Youth covered

      on their 1987 classic, Sister,

      which I was listening to

      on my Walkman

      at the end of Mexico in the sun.

      Except actually I was

      listening to Daydream Nation,

      I change it to Sister

      when I tell that story.

      But it’s a beautiful story

      even without embellishment.

      That’s another of the Oaxacan

      experiences I mentioned,

      but the rest are secrets.

      Oh Mexico, as James Schuyler

      wrote to Frank O’Hara,

      are you just another

      dissembling dream?

      Schuyler was too tender

      for me then, but now

      he is just tender enough.

      I love his wishes.

      That “the beautiful humorous

      white whippet” could

      be immortal, for instance.

      But I can’t always forgive

      his Central Park West tone,

      his Austrian operettas

      and long long lawns,

      though he wasn’t rich

      and was tormented

      enough, God knows.

      In the summer of 1984

      in Salida, Colorado,

      I had Slade and Steve Perry

      on my Walkman.

      I drank milk from jumbo

      Burger King glasses

      emblazoned with scenes

      from Return of the Jedi.

      You can’t buy tampons

      with food stamps

      even if your mother

      insists that you try.

      Salida sits along

      the Arkansas River,

      whose current

      one hot afternoon

      swept me away

      and deposited me

      in a shallow far downstream.

      It was the first time

      I thought I was going

      to die and didn’t. The Arkansas

      and everything else are mortal.

      My mom had been born again,

      to my chagrin. But lately I find

      I do believe in God

      the Father Almighty, Maker

      of heaven and earth:

      and in Jesus Christ,

      his Son our Lord,

      who was conceived by

      the Holy Ghost. How

      the hell did I become

      a Christian? Grace,

      I guess. It just sort of

      happened. I admit I find

      the resurrection of the body

      and life everlasting

      difficult, or not difficult,

      exactly, but impossible.

      There is no crazier belief

      than that we won’t be

      covered by leaves, leaves,

      leaves, as Schuyler has it,

      which is to say, really gone,

      as O’Hara put it in his lovely

      sad poem to John Ashbery.

      But hope is a different animal

      from belief. “The crazy hope

      that Paul proclaims in 2

      Corinthians,” my friend John

      wrote to me when his mother

      died. The Christian religion

      is very beautiful sometimes

      and very true at other times,

      though sophisticated persons

      are still expected to be above

      all that sort of thing. Well,

      I’m a Marxist

      too. Go and sell that thou

      hast, and give to the poor.

      On his new album Dr. Dre

      says “Anybody complaining

      about their circumstances

      lost me.” At the risk of losing

      more billionaires, complain

      about your circumstances,

      I say. I listened to The Chronic

      on my Walkman the summer

      I worked the night shift

      at Kinko’s. I was dating Deirdre,

      who when I placed my headphones

      on her ears and pushed play

      said “Why is this man cursing

      at me?” Said it more loudly

      than was strictly necessary.

      A crazy man

      would come into Kinko’s

      around two A.M. and ask me

      to fax dire, scribbled warnings

      to every news outlet in Denver.

      He wanted to let people know

      that God would punish the area

      with natural disasters

      if the county succeeded

      in evicting him from the land

      he was squatting on. He’d ask me

      to help him think of various

      extreme weather events

      that God might unleash.

      I’d say “Typhoons?”

      though we were in Colorado.

      He’d scribble typhoons.

      Scraps of dirty paper absolutely

      covered front and back with ominous,

      angrily scrawled black characters:

      ATTN. NBC NIGHTLY NEWS THERE WILL

      BE FIRES TORNADOES TYPHOONS.

      I would help him compose his screeds

      then fax each one to Denver’s

      major TV and radio stations, The Denver Post,

      and the Rocky Mountain News,

      which has since stopped its presses

      for good. Except in fact I would

      only pretend to fax them

      and then refuse his money,

      saying I was glad to help the cause.

      What if he wasn’t batshit but a true

      prophet? The Denver metropolitan area

      was not visited by disaster

      at that time, but this proves

      nothing. Look at Jonah and

      Nineveh, that great city.

      I don’t believe he was a prophet,

      but Kinko’s is beautiful

      at two A.M. even if I hated

      working there. The rows

      of silent copiers

      like retired dreadnoughts

      in a back bay, the fluorescent

      pallor, the classic-rock station

      I would turn back up after

      my coworker turned it down.

      Did the guy sketch amateurish

      floods, tornadoes, etc.,

      on his jeremiads or did I

      imagine that? I wish

      I’d thought to make copies

      for myself. I wish I’d kept

      the Mexican girl’s letter.

      I wish I’d kept the copiers

      with their slow arms

      of light, the lights of DF

      filling the Valley of Mexico

      as the bus makes its slow way

      down and Stevie sings what you

      had, oh, what you lost. Schuyler

      and his wishes! “I wish it was

      1938 or ’39 again.” “I wish

      I could take an engine apart

      and reassemble i
    t.” “I wish I’d

      brought my book of enlightening

      literary essays.” “I wish I could press

      snowflakes in a book like flowers.”

      That last one’s my favorite. I wish

      I’d written it. I would often kick

      for months until driven back to a bar

      by fear or boredom or both. I saw

      Tomorrow Never Dies—starring

      Pierce Brosnan, the second-worst

      James Bond—in Oaxaca and

      came out wishing my life were

      romantic and exciting and charmed

      or at least that I had someone

      to talk to. So I stopped at the first

      bar I saw, and someone

      talked to me. It’s so sad and

      perfect to be young and alone

      in the Zócalo when the little lights

      come up like fish surfacing

      beneath the moon and you want

      to grab the people walking by

      and say who are you, are you

      as afraid as I am. And you don’t

      know that twenty years later

      you’ll be writing this poem.

      Well, now I’m being sentimental

      and forgetting that in those days

      I wrote the worst poems ever.

      “I held a guitar and trembled

      and would not sing” is an actual

      line I wrote! The typhoon guy

      could have written better poetry.

      Today I want to write about

      how it’s been almost twenty years

      since I owned a Walkman.

      Just think: there was a song

      that I didn’t know

      would be the last song

      I would ever play on a Walkman.

      I listened to it like it was just

      any old song,

      because it was.

      from The Paris Review

      J. ALLYN ROSSER

      * * *

      Personae Who Got Loose

      Aloof, wary, notwithstanding her giddy enthusiasm for handsome misogynists and fine crystal.

      So cavalier and mischievous, no one noticed that he never drank more than one glass of anything.

      Anxious, extremely frugal man who lavishes every third paycheck on a charity for children in Nicaragua.

      At four years she could not enjoy the ride on her carousel pony, angrily rocking and urging it forward against the pole to go faster.

      He was a veteran zen buddhist with a hankering for Mounds Bars and women with multiple tattoos.

      She drove a pickup and walked a muzzled Doberman, and any day of the week could fall apart completely over Greta Garbo love scenes.

      Nonchalance was his middle name, in spite of his serially intense devotion to his mother’s boyfriends.

      The stage was full of splinters and dog hair, but people liked to lie down naked on it anyway.

      from Copper Nickel

     


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