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    Sixfold Poetry Fall 2013

    Page 5
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      to learn to steadily unpack

      the navel oranges exactly as they sit

      on the table, to draw the precise distance

      between the two pieces of citrus,

      how light catches the pebbled flesh,

      the flecks of shadow that fall

      into miniscule valleys, the lamplight

      that dazzles one pole of fruit bursting

      with miniature oranges tucked into the globe

      of larger fruit, the midnight that darkens the other.

      Bridge

      In her dream her son is dead.

      Candy cannot call his name

      as she once did when,

      four, he opened the iron gate

      at the park in Paris, careened down the hill

      past the waffle seller and the black swan

      toward the boulevard, cafes, gleaming cars.

      That was before she learned the names

      of machines she can now forget: Renault,

      Audi, Toyota Chevrolet, GM, Volvo.

      She can forget the spelling rules,

      the multiplication tables, the names

      and dates of all the presidents of the USA,

      the names of girls.

      None of them will do any good.

      And then it is morning.

      He is twenty-one. Candy doesn’t know

      where he is, not exactly

      though certainly he is in America,

      probably in a car, and she—

      surrounded by fog rising from the pines trees,

      from the hemlock, from the James river,

      from the Shenandoah mountains—

      taking her coffee down to the water

      hears a single engine in the distance.

      One rusty pick-up truck approaches

      with farm tags on the gravel road.

      A hand flies up and waves to her

      and moves past her where she stands on the bridge

      in the only location she knows for sure.

      Expedition

      Audrey shuts the book on Shackleton,

      the photos of his men: playing soccer in snow,

      the Endurance foundered in blocks of ice

      beyond them; gathered around the fire

      on Elephant Island, their weathered faces

      lit with wonder as they listen to stories

      waiting for the rescue team;

      petting the stripped tabby cat

      that Shackleton finally shot

      after calling it a weakling.

      She would have been the cat

      Audrey thinks worrying about the daughter

      she raised alone, who careens

      on the slick back roads of America

      in her Japanese car. She rises from the couch

      throws aside the weight of quilts

      to choose the spices from the carousel

      on the dining room table, soothed by

      the tiny achievement of the small

      wooden spoon in its bowl of salt,

      the four ounce canister of tandoori spice,

      glass bottles of whole black peppercorns,

      cinnamon, nutmeg. She stands at the center

      of a rag rug woven into a labyrinth of sienna,

      green and blue, boiling the collard greens,

      soy paste and tofu. Her daughter sings hello

      as she arrives, elegant and oblivious,

      from the storm, pets the purring tabby

      that sleeps at the head of the table.

      Satisfaction

      Not forgetting of course rising from the body that once thrilled you

      with the same delight you now recognize in golden retrievers 
chasing Frisbees

      or calves born at the penultimate day of spring frisking in pastures

      carpeted with blue violets, lime colored grasses, dandelions like helium balloons.

      Glittering space shuttles land safely in limpid blue oceans like transparent silks.

      The heroic astronauts resume the paperwork of their everyday lives

      to a tedious fanfare. The golden puppy now sleeps half the day.

      The toddler bites into the velvety pink Easter egg to discover salt.

      Friendships once fields of sweet clover, gone stale,

      weigh down your body like moldy hay bales left in the rain.

      What do you do with entire continents of disappointment

      once exhausted by the early rages?

      John Cage said if something is boring for five minutes

      do it for ten, if boring for ten do it for twenty, if it is boring 
for twenty,

      do it an hour, and so on for eternity. I think he had an answer

      to cherry blossoms after the spectacular show and the 
heartrending petal fall.

      Peter Kent

      Surliness in the Green Mountains

      I like to complain

      about too little steamed milk

      in coffee. And ill-timed

      cloud cover stripping the blue face

      off the ocean. I know

      I’m fortunate. No cancerous calamity

      has found me. No car crash

      has maimed me. Pulling away

      from the drive-through, my drink’s too hot

      to taste, to judge. I turn

      the wheel toward the hem

      of mountains, where clouds press

      like sour insistence: I have a duty

      to attend, a funeral for a colleague’s father.

      It will cost me

      two of the days I’ve rented the house

      on the cove for a holiday—a holiday

      to still the flurry of a life that feels

      like coins spilling to the pavement

      through a hole in my pant’s pocket.

      I should have gone to Jamaica.

      Someplace beyond obligation’s

      reach. A foreign paradise,

      blinged by palms and voices

      redolent, familiar, but off kilter.

      It helps to get places

      where traffic lights seem superfluous

      as they do in Montpelier. Though,

      I often stand before travel books

      on Budapest—petulant and wishing

      to be swallowed by its pandemonium.

      Cities are survival’s hallmarks.

      Slaughter and roast everyone

      rooted in them, and they rebound,

      resilient as Vermont maples after winter.

      This beleaguered Toyota

      doesn’t like the climb—its four cylinders

      wheezing, coaxing combustion

      to reach another summit.

      The service will be in the same chapel

      where my colleague was married, back

      when she was a friend. I never knew

      her father. So why the struggle

      to attend? To be politic, to feel less

      awkward when we run into each other

      at a meeting back in Boston? I suppose

      that’s enough motivation. Or,

      maybe I simply relish

                   something new

      for my repertoire of complaints.

      A flat tire, broken axle—

                   a chance to show

      how far I’ll go to suffer.

      Meditation Waiting for the Orange Line

      If I were a savant,

      I could calculate the number

      of lavender tiles that cover

      the walls in this station.

      I could detect the aria

      in the brake squall

      arriving from Forest Hills.

      I would grasp the quantum dimensions

      that transcend the urge to copulate,

      and that lush-lipped girl’s photograph

      in the frame beyond the tracks

      could never entice me

      to purchase toothpaste

      that can’t possibly whiten

     
    enamel this stained by coffee

      and neglect. If I were a savant,

      I could remain mute,

      without consequence

      or criticism: He hardly ever

      talks to anyone. I might know

      the mollusk phylum’s almost infinite

      array, from pre-history to present.

      No one would know.

      Gifted as a sideshow act

      in an intellectual circus,

      I could recite Sumerian limericks

      and every move from the past

      twenty years’ chess championships.

      If I were a savant, I’d tattoo syllables

      down the backs of waterfalls

      and watch them coalesce to sonnets,

      in the mist and foam of pools

      at the base of the cliffs

      we’re all tottering toward.

      But I’m not a savant.

      I’m an overwrought grunger

      passing through mid-life

      with a messenger’s bag of images

      muddled as crayon drawings.

      I am St. Francis to mosquitos.

      I guard a small vault

      dubiously filled with trivia:

      the two dozen counties in the states

      of Vermont and New Hampshire,

      the lyrics of most songs

      Pearl Jam’s recorded.

      To be a savant might be

      wondrous. To scan and recall

      every word in the dictionary—

      vocabulary unfettered by the urge

      to reorder and coax meaning

      to the surface. To the savant,

      meaning kicks off its shoes

      and finds a careworn bed in a room suffused

      with incomprehensibility’s pleasures . . .

      the city’s walls resting in the distance,

      untroubled by a single ambition. If

      I could join the savants’ tribe,

      would I? It’s easy to proclaim one might

      choose to undiscover the practical,

      to let incandescence dissolve into dark’s mystery.

      Perhaps what’s wanted is a variation

      on Kurzweil’s singularity: To integrate

      intellect and insight with savant capacity

      could be the next stop on evolution’s tour.

      Here’s the Orange Line, at last . . .

      screeching, rolling, rectangular

      pumpkin, ready to ferry us

      to Downtown Crossing.

      If I were a savant, I might

      not know to get on. I might stand

      here all afternoon, like an arrow

      without a bow. Harmless

      potential. Traveler on an island

      of flesh, unsure how to reach

      any destination beyond

      this maze of interior revelations.

      If I were a savant, wouldn’t I

                   be happy

                   just to be here?

      Blowing the Third Eye

      A friend would never threaten to paddle

      up the Amazon in a canoe commanded

      by an American-turned-shaman. What

      could be less American? Wait, did you say

      hallucinogens are involved? And,

      a vomit bucket? It sounds suspiciously like

      the Age of Aquarius as reimagined by Dick Cheney.

      Or, a variation on the sublimely surreal—like the time

      Allen Ginsberg cleared an audience at an all-girl’s school

      in Kansas with a soliloquy on ass-fucking.

      Language can only transcend so far. It takes

      a good hit of ayahuasca to blow the lid

      from the third eye, to melt the wall where

      the snakes gyrate like electrified ribbons

      through undetected dimensions. Split and

      spill the terrors that hunger for one’s life . . .

      those vibratory hells that demand homage,

      that refuse to cauterize lonely nights with vodka

      bottles. When television nurses hunger

      for amenable society, who could argue

      that the ship has foundered on a shoal

      of snapping serpents? In the jungle’s night,

      any shaman’s a beacon. Even the Pentecostal pastor,

      with all his uncaged tigers of damnation, might seem

      a friend. Physical ruin feels right (or at least familiar).

      Whatever potion one can find to swallow, to salvage

      the pretension of a soul . . . that’s medicine worth

      a paddle up the Amazon, worth a wade in magical

      self-delusion’s improbable realms. Say hello

      to Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson . . .

                   they’re the only angels

      who might prove all that’s unseen

      transcends the drying skin

      on this latticework that carries us

                   through these days.

      Under the Influence

      The best days often include

      a browse through a bookstore.

      When my libido was more

      vigorous, I liked to sneak a paperback

      kama sutra to the automotive section.

      I appreciate the symmetry now—

      the proper calibration of carburetor

      and clitoris both essential

      to effective performance and power.

      Though at the time, I imagined,

      if caught, I could claim to have found

      (quite unexpectedly) this sexual concordance

      tucked between Edmunds Used Car Guide and

      the Encyclopedia of Corvettes. These days,

      I gravitate to the literary review section.

      It’s interesting to see poems written by people

      I know—and there’s always the potential to find

      that gloriously intact shell, tumbling in the surf,

      inhabited by some living thing wanting someone

      to appreciate its nearly unrecognizable luster.

      Tonight I sit beside a poster—On Becoming

      an Alchemist: A Guide for the Modern Magician.

      So much wisdom undiscovered, crusted and nestled

      like jewels in the strata of bound pages. Though

      we’re such lazy miners, requiring Provigil’s

      stimulation and the simulated realities of television

      to provoke the intellect. I might hurry back down

      Newbury Street to catch Saturday Night Live.

      What a metaphoric mash. This week’s show’s a repeat—

      leftover, half-clever satire in three minute skits, wedged

      between commercials. I’ve got a bed half-buried

      in books and unread New Yorkers. It makes

      me apprehensive to sleep with so much knowledge

      wanting to snuggle with my witless, empty notebook

      of a mind. So, I’ll probably doze on the couch

      and wake to infomercials in the netherworld

      that insomniacs are cursed to wander—

      having dreamt a shaman with a blouse half-

      unbuttoned, finding the windows

      to my consciousness open—believing

      it’s Whitman’s fingers brushing my hair,

      trusting I’ve written this indisputably compelling

      paean for an original century.

      William Doreski

      Gathering Sea Lavender

      Gathering sea lavender

      in salt marshes south of Brunswick

      we ease ourselves into contours

      so gentle they don’t show on maps.

      Only the washboard effect

      of successive waves of lavender

      reveals a dainty presence.

      Sea lavender sells for five

      dollars a spray in Boston,


      but we’re harvesting just enough

      to warm us one dreary winter,

      a candelabra as nostalgic

      as my mother’s genealogy.

      Last night when the wind banged the doors

      in our rented cottage and the tide

      swept our neighbor’s dory from the beach,

      we felt each other quicken in sleep

      as we both dreamt of gathering

      sea lavender in brilliant light.

      I also dreamt, quite separately,

      that a former lover came home

      to sort through my possessions

      and take away what pleased her,

      especially sentimental

      items like the shard of slate

      from the Deerfield Massacre stone,

      the purple ribbon from Robert

      Lowell’s grave, the small glass cat

      that was my first gift from my wife.

      No wonder when morning came

      I proposed we scout the marshes

      for sea lavender, despite the rain,

      our bodies still uneasy

      upon us, the briny damp

      revealing as X-rays or radar,

      the losses of our previous lives

      reflected by the stony fog

      and empowered by the radiance

      ignited by our love of the sea.

      Hurricanes Named After Us

      The season’s first two hurricanes

      have named themselves after us.

      As they plow across the Atlantic

      toward Florida, we drift over

      books we’ve admired all our lives.

      You’re still retreating from Moscow

      in the bosom of War and Peace

      while I drift along the equator

      in the doldrums of Moby-Dick.

      Your storm will cross to the Gulf

      before mine. Your violence spent

      on the cringing Everglades, you’ll ease

      long before reaching Galveston,

      while passing south of the Keys I’ll trip

      unimpeded down to Veracruz

      and shatter on Mexico’s highlands.

      The summer heat drips from the trees

      in long greasy strings of drool.

      Your air-conditioned townhouse

      insulates you from the silence

      that centers in my tiny house

      as though a giant foot has crushed

      the finest of my earthly functions.

      Soon the fall semester will fill

      our datebooks. Scholarly poise

      will sculpt you upright and prim,

      but I’ll slump like Igor to class

      and growl and frighten young women

      and make the stoned young fellows laugh.

      Neither of us look like hurricanes,

      but the government knows better,

      and named its storms as precisely

      as decorum allows. Enjoy

      your book. Palm Beach and Miami

      curse you, but don’t worry. Soon enough

     


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