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    Sinners Welcome: Poems

    Page 5
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    I pray for: Lord, before my own death,

      let me learn from this animal’s deep release

      into my arms. Let me cease to fear

      the embrace that seeks to still me.

      COAT HANGER BENT INTO HALO

      Gathering up my mother’s clothes for the poor,

      I find the coathanger that almost aborted me,

      or so I dub it—the last hand clung to the high rod.

      Unwound, it could have poked

      through the pink, puckered hole of her cervix

      to spill me before I got going good.

      Instead, from the furred litter of souls squirming

      to be visible, I was picked.

      May I someday spy Mother’s poppy-studded hat

      on the skull of a street-corner gospel singer

      swarming with sores. May I twist from this black wire

      a halo to crown my son’s head.

      LAST LOVE

      For years I chose the man to suit the instant,

      from good guy to goat boy,

      dreadlocked to crewcut. Not one could bridal me.

      In place of lace veil,

      I peered from bandage gauze. And if,

      in rage, some suitor

      tore that off, the red sun was a scald, and I felt

      scalped and rocket-shot

      onto the nearest flight. So everyone I kissed

      left hurt. One man broke

      the table I served him bread on. Another

      claimed my heart

      was arsenic at its core. When my last love came,

      he slid a palm across

      mine eyes, lent me his mouth

      (a bitten plum)

      lay his head in the middle of me, bent me

      to that. Nights now,

      my face rests on the meadow of his chest—

      so I’m a loose-petaled poppy

      blown open, a girl again, for the first time

      hearing the earth’s heartbeat.

      THE ICE FISHERMAN

      Because Grandpa Joe pronounced way

      long ago, They’s fish

      big as Cadillacs down there, the ice fisherman

      hacked a hole

      and stood above a slush abyss

      in steel-toed boots. Headphoned to the Pops—

      engrossed, he couldn’t hear the spider cracks.

      When the river chasmed under him,

      it was a blind

      plunge into white flame, headphones

      drifting down to silt. He rolled like a walrus,

      body chub keeping him up

      as green currents pulled him seaward at a tilt.

      He felt the scarf his wife had knit an iron noose.

      He failed to feel his hands.

      His numb lips pressed to the river’s spine, to suck

      slid inches of air.

      When he skimmed under the town rink,

      music blurred and bored into his hurt ears.

      Maybe some grappling hook wielded by solid citizens

      would boost him, heave him

      steaming onto the ice like a calved seal.

      But the skaters’ blades just cut scrollwork above his face.

      Their blades went whisk, and he went out of reach.

      Then out of his red mouth hole

      he hollered up.

      His dumb heart slowed.

      All this was very swift, and by the time

      the great gray fish with mandarin whiskers

      nosed his hand, he didn’t know

      it wasn’t the stony ghost of Grandpa Joe,

      or that his every filament

      was being reeled to the burnished floor

      of Heaven, where he’d be

      hoisted up to show.

      DESCENDING THEOLOGY: THE CRUCIFIXION

      To be crucified is first to lie down

      on a shaved tree, and then to have oafs stretch you out

      on a crossbar as if for flight, then thick spikes

      fix you into place.

      Once the cross props up and the pole stob

      sinks vertically in an earth hole, perhaps

      at an awkward list, what then can you blame for hurt

      but your own self’s burden?

      You’re not the figurehead on a ship. You’re not

      flying anywhere, and no one’s coming to hug you.

      You hang like that, a sack of flesh with the hard

      trinity of nails holding you into place.

      Thus hung, your rib cage struggles up

      to breathe until you suffocate. If God

      permits this, one wonders if some less

      than loving watcher

      watches us. The man on the cross

      under massed thunderheads feels

      his soul leak away, then surge. Some wind

      sucks him into the light stream

      in the rent sky, and he’s snatched back, held close.

      RED-CIRCLED WANT AD FOR MY SON ON HIS COMMENCEMENT

      The cabdriver wants a job where he can play

      head-banging music loud, the director

      to flicker forever on each skull’s screen.

      The scholar wants the whole oceanic mystery

      to radiate from the next flipped page.

      The drummer wants to keep time,

      to beat it, the President to leave scorched

      imprints of his oily dollar sign in every flaming

      foreign field. I only want strafe bombers

      to drop zillions of my books

      over stadium and glen and rice

      paddy, to satisfy the citizens who scream

      for whatever streams from my Razorpoint,

      plus for my son never to suffer

      a knife tear in the frail

      fabric of self, and to reckon

      this loud, head-banging

      world is a bequest no labor can earn.

      SON’S ROOM

      After my son left for college, come dusk,

      I used to sit in his room painted green

      like the first shoot of any plant,

      caterpillar green, neon green of unripe papaya.

      There was no stuffed polar bear to hold nor illustrated book

      whose valley I could wander down;

      no laundry heap—no shirt an acre wide

      I had to steam an iron across; no gunboat soccer shoes

      to scrape mud off; no posters of beachball-breasted girls

      urging him to sling on his backpack

      and hop a train the length of Italy

      to the topless beach.

      The walls were bare, the windows losing light.

      If you’ve never been a kid, and choose to raise one, know

      he’ll wind up raising you. From whatever small drop

      of care you start out with, he’ll have to grow an ocean

      and you a boat on which to sail from yourself

      forever, else you’ll both drown.

      From his desk, I’d stare across the courtyard

      while night dragged its tide across the stones.

      Once the fire escape vanished, I’d reenter the sarcophagus

      my drinking boxed me in when he was a baby whose cry

      ripped through the swathe of ether I hid in,

      and the certain, struggling

      substance of him helped to my shoulder

      did birth me to this flesh,

      each luminous dawn

      he grinned up and eventually down

      to me from his towering height—each breath

      that filled him freed me

      from my own ribcage.

      EASTER AT AL QAEDA BODEGA

      At the gold speckled counter, my pal in white apron—

      index finger tapping his Arabic paper,

      where the body count dwarfs the one in my Times—announces,

      You’re killing my people.

      But in Hell’s Kitchen, even the Antichrist

      ought to have coffee—one cream

      and two sugars. Blessings

      upon you, he says, and means it.


      GARMENT DISTRICT SWEATSHOP

      Through the plate glass, a vast concrete field of machines

      repeating like war crosses on the Expressway

      graveyard you pass coming in from the airport—so many.

      You must be bred small

      to fit such a slot.

      Through the needle’s eye a thread stabs

      a slit void. You’re on one side

      then the other, where work gets done, gears engage.

      Your wiry frame must bend like a fishhook

      and hold there. Your black hair must convey restraint

      with its ponytail or chopped bowl cut

      or snake snarl at the nape.

      That’s at eyelevel, but below the hummingbird engines

      of the work surface, the women dip into cool water.

      It’s a secret level where each woman

      insists on using her free hand, where folded notes swim

      clever as pilot fish—and white bottles of tablets

      are passed—orange aspirin,

      Extra Strength and Aleve.

      By each woman a bag;

      in each bag a billfold closes over a window

      into another country’s house—fat grandson,

      rice-powdered daughter.

      Some windows are vacant.

      No one keeps the brothel’s ceiling fan;

      or the infant’s mouth sewn shut.

      On the factory floor all day, the tiny feet

      are encased in embroidered shoes flimsy

      as those you get buried in. They stomp down

      on the machines’ accelerators,

      making the guises fit, never staying in one place.

      OVERDUE PARDON FOR MOTHER WITH KNIFE

      Some nights I startle up from sleep to gasp down

      your death again like a draft of venom,

      and feel I’m five, and see your flame-eyed shape

      raise the knife you failed

      to bury in my chest—whose gleam can still flash

      across some desert in me, searing me awake.

      I no longer curse that hand, as I once did,

      but glorify the force that stayed it, set the blade

      aside. Last week in the city you loved most

      (the Paradise my birth stole you from),

      I paused at a shop window

      where spring heels floated

      above staggered pedestals, as if tiptoeing

      some drunken stair to the invisible.

      Through the mist barrier,

      your stare became a flicker

      in the glass; then holding my face,

      as if I were a gift, your hands (which grow now

      on the ends of my own arms). It was me,

      astonished, inside you.

      Again in the chest, the heart’s aperture (not

      a dagger slot) opened. There

      was the odd resolve I found in youth—

      to guzzle down breath like sweet spirits,

      as if a pillow just slid off my face.

      DESCENDING THEOLOGY: THE RESURRECTION

      From the far star points of his pinned extremities,

      cold inched in—black ice and blood ink—

      till the hung flesh was empty. Lonely in that void

      even for pain, he missed his splintered feet,

      the human stare buried in his face.

      He ached for two hands made of meat

      he could reach to the end of.

      In the corpse’s core, the stone fist of his heart

      began to bang on the stiff chest’s door,

      and breath spilled back into that battered shape. Now

      it’s your limbs he longs to flow into—

      from the sunflower center in your chest

      outward—as warm water

      shatters at birth, rivering every way.

      A BLESSING FROM MY SIXTEEN YEARS’ SON

      I have this son who assembled inside me

      during Hurricane Gloria. In a flash, he appeared,

     


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