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Wonderland

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by Matthew Dickman




  WONDERLAND

  POEMS

  MATTHEW DICKMAN

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  FOR JULIA, HAMZA, AND OWEN

  IN MEMORY OF C. K. WILLIAMS

  There are so many roots to the tree of anger

  —AUDRE LORDE

  It’s tough, kid, but it’s life

  —DEAD KENNEDYS

  I hate hate

  —REAGAN YOUTH

  Was that youth? that clear

  sapphire on snow

  —ADRIENNE RICH

  CONTENTS

  TEENAGE RIOT

  TRANSUBSTANTIATION

  THE ORDER OF THINGS

  ONE A.M.

  WHITE POWER

  ASTRONAUT

  WONDERLAND

  TWO A.M.

  STRAWBERRY MOON

  LINOLEUM

  A VERY GOOD DOG

  THREE A.M.

  DIRTY ROTTEN IMBECILES

  ORCHARD

  FOR IAN SULLIVAN UPON JOINING THE EASTSIDE WHITE PRIDE

  FOUR A.M.

  BAD BRAINS

  WONDERLAND

  EIGHT A.M.

  SACK OF RABBITS

  BAD LOVE

  NINE A.M.

  BLOOD MOON

  LOST BOYS

  NOON

  WONDERLAND

  MINOR THREAT

  MINIMUM WAGE

  THREE P.M.

  SIDEWALK

  FOUR P.M.

  SAINT FRANCIS AND THE PINE TREE

  FIVE P.M.

  BLACK FLAG

  WALKING THE DOGS

  SIX P.M.

  CIRCLE JERKS

  WONDERLAND

  EIGHT P.M.

  GRASS MOON

  BLACK LIPSTICK

  WONDERLAND

  MIDNIGHT

  BIG LOVE

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  WONDERLAND

  TEENAGE RIOT

  All of us were boys only some were taller or already in high school, and almost nothing else

  mattered but to learn some new trick,

  to pull off something we saw in a skate video, wind cutting

  around our bodies when we flew

  off the lip of a ramp, grabbed the board and twisted

  into a 180, kicking

  a leg out and landing it, the only way to run

  through the neighborhood

  was to run through it

  together, flipping off cops and skinheads, I almost

  don’t even remember girls but a vague sense of the taste of bubble gum

  and how they smelled so different

  from us, sitting in some kid’s basement drinking

  his parents’ vodka, we grew out our bangs, moved in a pack,

  jumped in when some one of us

  got jumped,

  so when a man we had never seen before

  came up and started beating on Simon, one of us dropped his skateboard, walked

  over to the man

  like someone walking into a bank

  and stabbed him.

  The man, startled, sat down, right there on the asphalt,

  right in the middle of his new consciousness,

  kind of looking around.

  TRANSUBSTANTIATION

  My mother is taking

  me to the store

  because it’s hot out and I’m sick and want a Popsicle. All the other kids

  are at school sitting

  in rows of small desks, looking

  out the window.

  She is wearing one of those pantsuits

  with shoulder pads

  and carrying a purse with a checkbook. We are holding hands, standing in

  front of the big automatic doors

  which silently swing open

  so we can

  walk in together, so we can

  step out of the heat and step

  into a world of fluorescent light and cool, cool air.

  Then, as if a part of the heat

  had suddenly broken off,

  had become its own power, a man

  places his arm around her

  shoulders but also around her neck

  and she lets go of my hand and pushes me

  away. Pushes me toward

  the safety of the checkout line. Then the man begins to yell.

  And then the man begins to cry.

  The pyramid

  of canned beans in front of me

  is so perfect

  I can’t imagine anyone needing beans

  bad enough

  to destroy it. The man is walking my mother

  down one aisle and then another aisle

  and then another

  like a father dragging

  his daughter toward a wedding he cannot find.

  Everyone is

  standing so still. All you can hear

  is my mom pleading

  and the sound of the air conditioner like Shhhhhhhhhh.

  THE ORDER OF THINGS

  Now when I think of the second grade I think about fall leaves,

  black oaks, and urine.

  I think about being caught in the bathroom, swinging

  from the bar above the door to the whitewashed stall and how I was

  dragged out by my arm

  and how it felt like my arm was an avocado

  someone had stabbed with a knife

  to remove the pit,

  and how I was

  made to stand before each of my teachers and tell them

  I couldn’t go to the bathroom by myself, Tell them

  you don’t know

  how—said God’s adult, the nun

  who found me, who now leads me

  to each classroom,

  like following the Stations of the Cross.

  And at each station—

  the girl who’d been forced

  to stand the whole day

  over the spot where she peed

  in the library, the kid who was made to wear a piece

  of pink string

  around his wrist,

  a reminder

  not to pee in his pants,

  the boy who was marched through the mall, past the food court and arcade,

  pushed along

  by his father

  who had made a sign,

  made it from scratch, a sign

  the boy was wearing around his neck, that read I wet the bed, and how

  no one tried to stop it.

  ONE A.M.

  I went outside to see if I was there.

  I went around the corner of the first time we met.

  I went into your bedroom and found a little bit of night but just enough.

  I went and got sick and now I don’t know what to do.

  I went to school and was punished.

  I went to school and sat in the coatroom and was on fire.

  I went outside and the sky was a computer program with no father.

  I went home early.

  I went to the store and thought of Allen.

  I went over my happiness to see if I could see you.

  I went into the citrus coffee cups of your hands and stayed there.

  I went to my mother and asked her to shut up.

  I went to my mother and asked if she would hold me.

  I went into a city I didn’t know and I was OK with it.

  I went into a city I didn’t know and something like an accident killed me.

  I went home after the car accident and you sat beside me.

  I went over to your house and destroyed things.

  I went but I didn’t know what I was doing.

 
I went behind the garbage can to be OK.

  I went on vacation and lived like a boat for three days.

  I went for it.

  I went into the forest and all my friends were digging up their brains.

  I went to sea and thought this is what I came for.

  I went into the city of hammers and rang like a bell and rang like a bell.

  WHITE POWER

  They took an Ethiopian soccer player

  and split his head open with a baseball bat. Trees

  were standing around, cars were driving by.

  My mother was making chipped beef and toast.

  We never borrowed milk from the neighbors

  though sometimes we had no money

  for milk. My sister thought any man taller than me

  was her father.

  ASTRONAUT

  What does it

  what does it

  what does it

  feel like to walk in space, to walk on the moon, and then come back,

  come home and cook your dinner inside a microwave oven?

  Is it like when Michael was fourteen and walked into the Checkers Mart

  on 92nd Avenue with a gun under his white T-shirt? His long legs

  spacewalking between the aisles, all the different

  colors of candy and car oil, moving through

  the gravity like ice water. Is it like that? And what about

  the cashier behind the counter? Standing there, Mission Control

  watching him like coordinates on a screen, like you

  would watch anything you thought you knew, but you don’t know,

  you don’t know

  you don’t know

  you don’t know.

  WONDERLAND

  Caleb is standing in his front yard

  hitting a stick

  against a tree. In three months he will

  be in the fifth grade.

  He’s thinking

  about He-Man and She-Ra,

  about Castle Grayskull.

  Inside the house

  his dad is screaming at his mom.

  Now Caleb’s throwing the stick

  in the air

  and imagining it’s a sword on fire

  that only he can catch.

  When his dad leaves

  Caleb will go into the house

  and find his mom in the weird dark

  of his parents’ bedroom

  where he will kiss her busted lip, crawl

  onto the bed and hold her,

  his arms just beneath

  her ribs. Eventually

  he will go back

  out into the yard,

  pick up the once flaming sword, and wait.

  TWO A.M.

  I lost my body in the fight for my body.

  I lost my brother because his body hated him so much.

  I lost time.

  I lost the way and was happy and the moon was above me.

  I lost the feeling in my fingers.

  I lost some friends but found a secret room in my apartment.

  I lost the chandelier light behind your shoulder blade.

  I lost 1975.

  I lost the hat you gave me and have never been the same.

  I lost the polar bears and I lost the tigers and I lost the elephants.

  I lost the ship at sea.

  I lost the bottle.

  I lost the rib that God gave and the rib that God took away.

  I lost the sheet you had cut the two holes in for my eyes to see through.

  I lost all my money.

  I lost nothing that might have kept me alive.

  I lost the light in the puddle with my face in it and a stick.

  I lost the way to be with you.

  I lost the wind coming through my window and the bed below it.

  I lost blood.

  I lost blood and stars and the fifth grade.

  I lost paint-by-numbers and the color yellow and blue make.

  I lost all my fillings.

  I lost a fight in which I paid cash to fall and not get up and never get up.

  STRAWBERRY MOON

  It felt like the whole world

  exhaled really fast like being

  punched in the stomach.

  Every song was about you.

  I’m not kidding. Just

  like in really bad songs and now

  I can’t listen to anything

  because I’m like a fuzzy bumblebee

  bouncing off all these stamens,

  flicking them with my wet

  chin and pretending

  it’s your stomach, honey, honey,

  it feels like I’m never going

  to be OK and summer

  is coming no matter what.

  Summer looks at me,

  shakes its head

  and says fuck you,

  you should have prepared

  for this, you should have been

  a father but now you’re like

  a can of dog food and only

  the dogs are excited

  but you and I know that’s only

  because they don’t know better,

  that’s only because they’re pets

  and have been beaten

  with the daily paper they are

  trained to bring inside

  and lay at the big hairless feet

  of their masters. Lay. Lie.

  I only ever wanted you to tell me

  to sit. And now more than ever

  I’m going to die, and that’s on me

  I know, I know that’s my deal,

  that’s my fault, that’s what

  they say, and they should.

  I keep praying it’s only summer

  talking, that it’s only the dogs

  barking, I keep looking at houses

  we could live in like someone

  shot in the head and asking

  the people screaming

  around him if he has something

  on his face, he just can’t figure

  it out, dumb beast, gone but not

  really even knowing he’s gone.

  LINOLEUM

  Ryan had pictures of his mom

  he would show

  his friends, all of us

  lost in the maze of sixth grade, reaching up

  into the air of girls, and his mom

  in a cheetah bra, laid back on the plastic

  covering of the couch, her arms

  folded across her body,

  her hands

  covering her crotch, her mouth

  in a smile

  and her eyes, I suppose, looking

  into the eyes

  of a man she had met and liked, a man

  she had taken home, or a friend had

  taken it for her, or she made her son take the pictures.

  Ryan had a small stack of them

  which he kept in a sock with yellow stripes on it.

  My favorite picture of Ryan’s mother

  was the one where she is kneeling down in the kitchen,

  naked but covered by her long

  hair, her knees

  pressed into the linoleum, the same floor

  where she would stand

  in the morning,

  mix her vodka with orange juice, a new day

  appearing in the street like a van

  with its windows

  painted black. She was so beautiful

  and sweet to us. I remember

  she laughed a lot.

  You and I both know what Ryan did

  with the pictures when he was alone,

  and it wasn’t anything short of dying.

  He had found something

  he could hold

  in his hand like an alchemist,

  a way of turning his shame from base metal into gold.

  A VERY GOOD DOG

  I must have looked so handsome because she said you look so handsome

  and I must have b
een eight years old

  because she said I can’t believe you are already

  eight years old

  and it must have been

  a dark and romantic Italian restaurant

  because it was dark in there and full of men and women holding hands

  across the beautiful tables feeding each other

  pasta and bread

  and drinking wine and kissing and my mother with her Black Russian and me

  with my Shirley Temple

  and before we even sat down in the candlelight we must have

  sat in the car because we were sitting in the car

  in the pocket of the driveway where she placed her hand on my knee

  and patted it like you would if the knee was

  a very good dog

  and she must have smiled and said are you excited for our date

  because she smiled and said are you excited for our date

  and then combed my hair

  because my hair must have

  needed to be combed, to be made right.

  And we must have danced that night

  because the restaurant had a dance floor full of other couples and she showed me

  where my hands were supposed to go

  and how to move my legs

  and laughed

  and beamed and said I love you so much

  which meant there would be no other world

  but this world,

  no other way, no

  other forest

  but this forest and all the trees on fire and all the animals running.

  THREE A.M.

  The light invented who I was supposed to be.

 

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