The Good Kiss

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by George Bilgere


  For as long as I could recall.

  There was the backyard,

  With its dead patch in the shadow.

  The cat with its strange meow.

  Everything—the doorknobs,

  The white clock above the sink,

  The open novel (whose title

  I can almost read from here)—

  Wore that laid-on look, the impasto

  Of familiarity.

  There was a bolted-down feeling.

  Things swung on their hinges

  To the right degree, evenings

  Came on, and the two of us,

  Whoever we were, spoke authentically

  Across a little table.

  A forest burned somewhere.

  The sunsets were appealing.

  It was always happening,

  Though how I couldn’t say.

  But there she was, across

  A wood-grained table. It might

  Have been happiness: a clock

  Somewhere clicking reliably.

  The light at the end of the day.

  And at dawn, geese in the sky.

  Cordell

  I drove the tiny, grasshopper-green

  Motorcycle to the town’s edge

  And, for the first time,

  Bought gas, counting out dimes

  And quarters to an old guy in a bill cap.

  For the first time,

  I pondered the venous skin

  Of a map and charted a route from Burns Flat

  To Cordell, a little town

  On the Oklahoma plains. The day

  Was sparkling and unrehearsed, the air

  Cool in the morning, and, for the first time,

  I went out on the public roads alone,

  Despite having no license, the world,

  For the first time, passing in a rush

  At the tips of the handlebars

  On the little country road,

  A pick-up passing now and then,

  The farmer inside raising the index finger

  Of his left hand precisely

  An inch above the wheel,

  A man greeting me

  As a man for the first time,

  The little engine whirring under me,

  The scissortails watching from barbed wire,

  The road unspooling for thirty miles

  Just as my map had promised, and, for the first time,

  I paused to rest on a long journey,

  In this case in the town of Corn,

  Its sole street signal

  Flashing amber at the crossroads

  As I sat at a picnic bench

  Under the green dinosaur of the Sinclair station,

  Staring at the town and the little bike that took me there,

  Feeling, for the first time, like a traveler,

  A sojourner of the plains—

  And I drove on to Bessie, where,

  For the first time, I ordered lunch,

  Reading from the menu in a little café,

  Speaking seriously and in what I took

  To be a manly way, the way of a sojourner,

  To the pretty waitress, and what I’d give

  Today to see myself sitting there in terror

  Amid the half-dozen farmers eating their chicken-

  Fried steak, their untanned foreheads white as halos

  Above their sunburned faces, and, for the first time,

  I left a tip, counting out a silver gift for her,

  And walked out to the bike

  That waited for me among pick-ups and tractors,

  Moving on, for the first time leaving

  A woman behind, someone to watch

  And acknowledge how the road pulled me away,

  Someone to keep on looking down that road

  Long after I’d disappeared, someone who might,

  From time to time, look toward the window

  And brush the hair from her cheek,

  Hearing an engine coming from the distance

  That swallowed me, for the first time,

  That day long ago, a day which for some reason

  I am remembering as I sit sipping coffee

  In this roadside café, just another rest stop

  On the way to Cordell.

  Annulment

  It’s a strange place, that city

  Of the people who have forgotten me.

  It is not the land of the dead, but

  Of the living, which is more terrible.

  Boys and girls from old playgrounds

  Are growing old there. My best friends

  And girlfriends, my fellow drones

  At the restaurant, the retail stores,

  In Boy Scouts, on the track team,

  At the language school in Japan,

  The cast of thousands who knew me

  And laughed with me and had a beer

  Or two with me after work, and confessed

  To me their perfectly valid realities

  As I confessed mine in turn, our lies

  And stories mingling, becoming our lives—

  They’re mowing the lawn now, or sitting

  At a desk, or worrying about their marriages,

  Or just walking idly along

  In that small city of those who have forgotten me,

  Or nearly have, my name sometimes

  Gusting across the wide yard of memory

  Like a dead leaf, raising a smile,

  Or a twinge of regret, or anger,

  Or nothing much at all, as their lives

  Go on with less of me

  By the minute, in that bustling town

  I cannot find, somewhere on the plains

  Where she is traveling now,

  Drawing closer to it every day.

  About the Author

  George Bilgere is the author of two previous collections of poetry, The Going (University of Missouri Press) and Big Bang (Copper Beech Press). His poems have appeared in such periodicals and anthologies as Poetry, Sewanee Review, The Southern Review, Ploughshares, The Kenyon Review, and The Best American Poetry. A recipient of fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Fulbright Commission, the Witter Bynner Foundation, and the Ohio Arts Council, he is a professor of English at John Carroll University in Cleveland, Ohio.

  About the Book

  The Good Kiss was designed and typeset by Amy Freels. The cover was designed and typeset by Jodi Gabor.

  The Good Kiss was printed on 60-pound Natural and bound by BookMasters of Ashland, Ohio.

 

 

 


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