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The Second O of Sorrow

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by Sean Thomas Dougherty




  Copyright © 2018 by Sean Thomas Dougherty

  All rights reserved

  Manufactured in the United States of America

  ISBN: 978-1-942683-55-1

  eISBN: 978-1-942683-56-8

  For information about permission to reuse any material from this book, please contact The Permissions Company at www.permissionscompany.com or e-mail permdude@gmail.com.

  Publications by BOA Editions, Ltd.—a not-for-profit corporation under section 501 (c) (3) of the United States Internal Revenue Code—are made possible with funds from a variety of sources, including public funds from the Literature Program of the National Endowment for the Arts; the New York State Council on the Arts, a state agency; and the County of Monroe, NY. Private funding sources include the Lannan Foundation for support of the Lannan Translations Selection Series; the Max and Marian Farash Charitable Foundation; the Mary S. Mulligan Charitable Trust; the Rochester Area Community Foundation; the Steeple-Jack Fund; the Ames-Amzalak Memorial Trust in memory of Henry Ames, Semon Amzalak, and Dan Amzalak; and contributions from many individuals nationwide. See Colophon on page 72 for special individual acknowledgments.

  Cover Design: Sandy Knight

  Cover Art: “Motel Peninsula” by Greg Valiga

  Interior Design and Composition: Richard Foerster

  Manufacturing: McNaughton & Gunn

  BOA Logo: Mirko

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Dougherty, Sean Thomas, author.

  Title: The second O of sorrow / Sean Thomas Dougherty.

  Description: First edition. | Rochester, NY : BOA Editions, Ltd., [2018] | Series: American reader series ; no. 165

  Identifiers: LCCN 2017045511 | ISBN 9781942683551 (softcover : acid-free paper)

  Classification: LCC PS3554.O8213 A6 2018 | DDC 811/.54--dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2017045511

  BOA Editions, Ltd.

  250 North Goodman Street, Suite 306

  Rochester, NY 14607

  www.boaeditions.org

  A. Poulin, Jr., Founder (1938–1996)

  Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Why Bother?

  The Second O of Sorrow

  What Do You Say to a Daughter When She Suspects Her Mother Is Dying

  My Grief Grows a White Flower

  After Surgery

  In the Light of One Lamp

  The Bravery of Birds

  Scribbled on the Scaffolding of

  We a New Ledger

  Poem Written with a Cough

  We Pay the Rent We Breathe

  Grief

  Triptych of Desire and the Duende

  Red Dirt

  In the Absence of Others I Wanted Something Brave

  Tamir Rice

  Tattoos

  Parade Street

  Youngstown Monologue: Captured Light Stained Glass

  You’re Good at Going Under

  Far from Any Classroom

  Karaoke Night at the Y Not Bar, Carnegie, PA

  Pittsburgh

  Psalm of the Working Poor

  Toledo, Ohio 1977

  In the Midnight Waking

  Leaking Light

  My Youngest Daughter Brings Me Daisies and Bits of Plastic Trash

  Biography of LeBron as Ohio

  Poem Made of East Sides

  Elegy on the Side of a Milk Carton

  Eating Sea Roses in the Afterlife

  Down the Line

  Our Love as Lead Belly or

  You Are Beautiful as the Absence of the Air

  Rain, Gas, Boone County, West Virginia

  Gertrude Stein Lighthouse Sonnet

  DJ Jehovah

  Something Lovely as the Rain

  Grief ’s Familiar Rooms

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Colophon

  The Second O of Sorrow

  “Forgive me if this seems

  extreme—I don’t know how to make things

  ordinary anymore, though I dress and go to work

  each day as if the world were ordinary . . .”

  —Susan Aizenberg

  “What keeps us awake,

  other than the clock’s sweeping hand

  moving like a slow-cresting wave,

  is the sound of no sound, the sound

  of drifting, of grieving, of not letting go,

  of trying to find a name for this.”

  —January Gill O’Neil

  “Apollinaire lived in Paris, I live in Cleveland, Ohio.”

  —Hart Crane

  “I’ll love you like I love you

  Then I’ll die”

  —Land of Talk

  Why Bother?

  Because right now, there issomeone

  out there with

  a woundin the exact shape

  of your words.

  The Second O of Sorrow

  Somehow, I am still here, long after

  transistor radios, the eight-tracks my father blared

  driving from town to town across Ohio

  selling things, the music where we danced

  just to keep alive. I now understand I was not

  supposed to leave so soon, half a century

  a kind of boulder that I’ve pushed up the hill

  & now for a moment, like Sisyphus

  I watch it roll.

  I walk through the snow.

  I breathe the dirty East Side wind

  pushing past the Russian church, the scent

  of fish & freighters & the refinery

  filling the hole in my chest—how many years

  have piled since I last stumbled out onto the ice

  & sat down to die.

  Only to look up at the geometry

  of sky—& stood

  to face whoever might need me—

  What Do You Say to a Daughter When She Suspects Her Mother Is Dying

  That feverish perfume of the wound on her mother’s foot is the songbird of the bees, the xylophone of her bent spine is making a cacophonous chatter, that there is a silence to the stars we may once return to. That she should go outside and play. Write your name on the stoop. Make a drawing of a house that flies through the sky. You hunt around for chalk. You concentrate on the colors like fuchsia and magenta that conceal a dark brightness. Draw with me a window in the sidewalk you say. Where are we going she asks? You want to tell her a new hospital, a new doctor with tools like in Star Trek that they scan over her mother’s body and heal her wounds, her blood, her veins. Or back to a place and a time where the Medicine Mother grinds a few twigs, some leaves into a powder that tells the body again how to spell the names of the Gods in its bones. You want to say draw me a window so I may step into and take you to see her when you were a baby and she could run through the grass through the Balkan fields of yellow flowers and climb the mountain of the cross. A window to show her before her mother’s hands turned blue as the sky after it has snowed.

  My Grief Grows a White Flower

  Tonight, it is my grief who speaks

  beneath the dying laurel tree

  in late bloom, this spring evening.

  Silence is its rotting womb

  eaten from the inside by red ants,

  the hole in the black center

  of its trunk, my daughters cannot

  climb or its limbs will break,

  the one your father planted

  when you were first born,

  now like you it bends

  in the coming storm, the clouds

  that push across the slate sky.

  Nothing stills its weeping,

  nothing is hushed, the branches
>
  sway a slow dirge, & Death,

  who has become my companion,

  I hear beneath the wailing wind

  the quiet click of his bony fingers

  weaves a wreath of fallen thorns.

  After Surgery

  Forget the red berries on the snow. Forget how you were hungry but couldn’t eat, and the nurse who never came soon enough with the morphine. Forget the pain. Your pale face like a small moon. Your hair unwashed and unbraided, and all the papers they made us sign like citations. And the long walk from the parking lot in the snow, nervous I would not see you again, as I drove our daughters to school then rushing back across town to hold your IV’d arm. To wipe the drool from your mouth. And then more doctors, and the veins they couldn’t find. The holes they left in your arms. And the tests that told us nothing. And then another surgery, and another, and another, then it was time to go home, because we had one. With lists of appointments like citations, your limbs bandaged and bruised. Before we left, I glanced out that seventh-story window, down at the street of strangers rushing off to the normal world we no longer belonged to—

  In the Light of One Lamp

  I crawled into bed and closed my eyes and not long after heard the small hooves of the horses, the tiny ones that gallop in our dreams, or are they the dreams of our children, galloping through the black ruins. Everything we do is against the crippling light. To hear them cry at night is to know they are alive. When they are scared they come galloping down the long hall calling your name. Tonight, it is our oldest daughter, the red mare with her fiery mane, she snuggles in between us and falls back to sleep in your arms, to that secret place inside her, she barely moves, crossing over the river, through a grove of alders, through the black ruins, she is the one who once whispered, the grass it knows everything.

  The Bravery of Birds

  My daughters are shouting at the starlings in their murmuration. Their mother watches from a porch chair. The writhing pain, as if she is a broken necklace. Stones of pearls in the grass. Even the oxy does not help. The light of pills. The color of nausea. The color of sunlight for the crippled and the lame? To get up each day despite hopelessness. I think of Bernadette, and how they questioned her, the brilliant light of Mary who appeared to her in a grotto and offered water to heal the world. They called her a liar and a cheat. And only after decades was it revealed: the tumors and the pain that ravaged Bernadette. You will not be happy in this world, the Mother of God explained. And yet in the scrubbing of floors, the life lived in a cell away from the world, in this suffering there must have been something more. We go on suffering without fear? Though Bernadette suffered, was there envy or fear? Was there joy? Who of us is ever not weary? I watch the starlings swoop and dive as if they know the air will never let them go. My daughters run and their mother rocks in her chair and holds her bandaged foot, and bites down hard against the pain. And I want to ask her if she ever returns to that room overlooking the bay, when she was strong. And the lavender was high. And a few green flies buzzed against the screen. And the scent of salt and sea roses wafted through the window we left open, lying naked on the bed in the amethyst-colored light. O Love, were we too not afraid?

  Scribbled on the Scaffolding of

  You can love someone fiercely. You can love them like a country. You can love them like a cathedral, or like a fretting child. And then they leave you. Even if they are right there, they go somewhere else. You tell them come back and they turn towards the gutter’s wind. They cook casseroles. You start to put a brick down in your chest. Then another brick. And that wall grows. You get going. And the waters rise behind that giant wall. You can say you get no more of my heart. You can move on. You can tell them to their face. You can drive a thousand miles. You can drive a thousand more. Years can pass. And then one day you look up and you can find in their face that person you loved from years ago. And it all goes to hell, that Giant Dam you built crumbles and falls, and it all floods out, and you dive straight down and deep as you can in that long-lost drowning. Let them find my body floating on that river. Let them say he dived deeper than anyone. Let them carry me to her and lay me at her feet. Then pour the gasoline. And strike the match and the plumes of ash will flutter all around my Beloved’s hands like black butterflies.

  We a New Ledger

  I want to find a new name for the wind, for the smoke

  curling around her eyes in some punk club

  after hours high. I want to rewrite each day after it dies,

  so it may keep us breathing. The barbiturates of our mouths.

  Push into the black dirt, lying in the long grass

  outside of an abandoned farm house,

  the soft cindered earth of our dead.

  I want to find one new word for making music,

  a language which is nearly song itself,

  electric as copper tubing joining our palms

  into applause, or more like the pause

  right before the clapping, the rising hairs

  on the back of our hands. Where is the name for that?

  A name like a birthmark in a small town to get some fix.

  What is the smeared name written inside a matchbook?

  The strange scratching on the wooden pallet at work,

  the letters you can read in the seeded grass, the shape

  of a clipped fingernail is a moon and a word.

  How nearly everything was. A name to disown

  what has been done. A new name for the rain,

  a new name for a cloud, an old name for the dirt.

  The oldest we witness. Gripping it in our two fists.

  Poem Written with a Cough

  After we were fired from the hospital

  we dove into Prince.

  We shot junk & ate junk food

  & watched MTV for weeks.

  We fucked on the bare mattress

  with our futures now behind us.

  The lengthening of our shadows

  ground down my teeth.

  All the noise was brilliant, a radio

  in my brain I tuned to the station

  I hummed the beautiful static of tiny pills.

  I peeled the torn red wallpaper

  & wrote my dairy of the amber rain

  on the scraps. Outside, a fire escape

  that led to an alley.

  I’d climb down to stare at the brick wall.

  I folded my body into an envelope

  & mailed it to the department of dead letters.

  ~

  Stories are seeds & the circus

  of us was like a trapeze

  of sunflowers, bowing

  in the deserted lot of decades

  beside the closed

  down paper mill—

  maybe the dope man wouldn’t arrive—

  for you the matchstick girl

  by the side of the road.

  I refused to betray

  like the small wooden figurine

  of the Black Madonna you clutched

  in your coat pocket. Luck

  in little ways, you always said.

  To protect us—

  like the glint of a blade.

  We used to cut the cord.

  When you kissed you tasted

  like peppermints

  you stole from the bowl

  of every clinic counter.

  You my crushed orchid—

  How we trembled

  like the lighter’s flame

  to the bent spoon

  of our bodies—

  We Pay the Rent We Breathe

  To say the word orange

  is to say a kind of light,

  the light of our daughter,

  as she peels an orange

  at the hospital, beside your IV’d arm

  already beginning to infiltrate,

  every day the pills

  you were—

  we were our own exile

  on the bare mattress,

  our daughter’s chord


  diminished,

  down the dark hallway

  towards her crib, your swayed

  reaching—

  removed the night’s sleep mask.

  Across the arm’s frets, the small prick

  & then the push; leaning

  in the pool hall door,

  another one of your ex’s boys

  strung-out, swallowed

  peace by jagged piece.

  In the city of stray dogs

  & stolen cell phones,

  the pregnant girl

  at the Get Go Mart

 

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