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The Best American Poetry 2019

Page 14

by David Lehman


  to pretend to feel, to play along (was that too much to ask?)

  and throw myself into the part so we could both, this once

  at least, rise to the occasion of what we never shared.

  That final day, for instance, the way the Fighting Sullivans on TV

  seemed to watch us watch them as a taunt or dare parade their

  small town big war grieving fanfare across the screen,

  the five sons killed in battle, only the old man holding back,

  not crying when he’s told the news, not breaking down or

  even touching the wife he still calls mother, a stoicism fraught

  with all the feeling he stuffs back down inside him as he grabs

  his lunch pail, heads to work, just as he would on any other day,

  the only hint of sorrow the salute he gives as the train chugs past

  the water tower on the top of which the apparitions of his boys

  stand waving calling out goodbye pop, see you round pop—

  and as the credits roll she’s asking if there’s anything, anything

  at all about the past, the family, her childhood that I’d like to

  hear about before she dies, her voice decked out so gaudily

  in matriarchal sweetness that I freeze, I shake my head, say,

  no, ma, no, I’m good. And just like that the scene is over,

  the sweetness vanishes into the air, into thin air, like the

  baseless fabric of the mawkish film, an insubstantial pageant

  faded as she nods and grimaces and turns away

  relieved (it almost seemed) that that was that. Was us. Was me.

  The role that I was born for, and she was done with now.

  And yet it’s never done, is it. The pageant’s never faded.

  Shake off the cold and it gets colder. There’s just no end

  to how cold the cold can get, not even on the coldest nights,

  not even if I throw the windows open wide and turn

  the ceiling fan on high and lie in bed, uncovered,

  naked, shivering inward back into myself as if to draw

  the cold in with me deeper, down to the icy center stage

  where I will always find her frozen in the act of turning from me

  while I stand freezing saying, no, I’m good.

  from The Threepenny Review

  JANE SHORE

  * * *

  Who Knows One

  Who knows One. I know One.

  One is God for God is One—

  The only One in Heaven and on earth.

  Who knows two. I know two.

  Two are the first two: Adam and Eve.

  One is God for God is One—

  It takes one to know one.

  Who knows three. I know three.

  Bad things always come in threes.

  Two trees grew in the Garden of Eden.

  One is God for God is One—

  One rotten apple spoils the barrel.

  Who knows four. I know four.

  What were you doing on all fours?

  Three’s the hearts in a ménage à trois.

  Two’s the jump ropes in double Dutch.

  One is God for God is One—

  One good turn deserves another.

  Who knows five. I know five.

  Five is the five in Slaughterhouse-Five.

  Four is Egypt’s plague of flies.

  Three the Stooges on TV.

  Two the two-faced lie he told.

  One is God for God is One—

  One hand washes the other.

  Who knows six. I know six.

  Six are the wives of Henry VIII.

  Who? What? Where? When? Why?

  Four the phases of the moon.

  Three the bones inside the ear.

  Two eyes—the better to see you with, my dear.

  One is God for God is One—

  There’s only one to a customer.

  Who knows seven. I know seven.

  Seven the year of the seven-year itch.

  Six the paper anniversary.

  Asked if he did it, he pleaded the Fifth.

  Four are my absent wisdom teeth.

  Three is the three in the third degree.

  Two can play that game.

  One is God for God is One—

  Public Enemy No. 1.

  Who knows eight. I know eight.

  The Beatles’“Eight Days a Week.”

  Wrath is the seventh of the deadly sins.

  Six of one, half a dozen of the other.

  He lost it all in five-card stud.

  Four bits in a nibble equals half a byte.

  Three is the beginning, middle, and end.

  Two are the graves in the family plot.

  One is God for God is One—

  The only one in a hole in one.

  Who knows nine. I know nine.

  Nine are the lives of an average cat.

  Eight is the day of circumcision.

  Seven the locks on Samson’s head.

  Six the sense I wish I had.

  Five the five in nickeled-and-dimed.

  Four cold feet in the double bed.

  Three’s a crowd.

  Two’s company.

  One is God for God is One—

  The only one in a one-night stand.

  Who knows ten. I know ten.

  I wouldn’t touch that with a ten-foot pole.

  She dressed to the nines.

  Fellini’s 81/2.

  Seven the times the bride circles the groom.

  Six the number perfect in itself.

  She daubed her wrists with Chanel No. 5.

  Love is just a four-letter word.

  Three is as phony as a three-dollar bill.

  Two is the two in doubletalk.

  One is God for God is One—

  There’s one born every minute.

  Who knows eleven. I know eleven.

  Eleven are the stars in Joseph’s dream.

  Ten is the Roman Numeral X.

  Possession is nine-tenths of the law.

  Infinity’s a sideways figure eight.

  Seven long years Jacob had to wait.

  Six is the Lover’s Tarot card.

  Five is indivisible.

  Four, cruel April.

  Three witches in the Scottish play.

  Two is the two of “I and Thou.”

  One is God for God is One—

  One in the hand is worth two in the bush.

  Who knows twelve. I know twelve.

  Twelve are the face cards in a deck.

  Eleven are the thieves in Ocean’s Eleven.

  Take a deep breath and count to ten.

  It takes nine tailors to make a man.

  Eight are the people on Noah’s ark.

  Seven are the hues in a rainbow’s arc.

  Six is . . . I can’t remember what.

  Five the rivers of the Underworld.

  Four the rivers of Paradise.

  Three on a match.

  It takes two to tango.

  One is God for God is One—

  In one ear and out the other.

  Who knows thirteen. I know thirteen.

  Thirteen is the skyscraper’s missing floor.

  Twelve are the men who walked on the moon.

  At the eleventh hour, his life was spared.

  Do not covet your neighbor’s ass.

  Nine are the circles of Dante’s Hell.

  Eight is the game of crazy eights.

  The phone was busy 24/7.

  They deep-sixed their love affair.

  The five-o’clock shadow on your face.

  Four is putting two and two together.

  Three is the eternal triangle.

  Two plays second fiddle.

  Two minus one equals one.

  One is one all alone.

  You were my one and only one—

  The only one whose number’s up.

  from The New Yorke
r

  TRACY K. SMITH

  * * *

  The Greatest Personal Privation

  The greatest personal privation I have had to endure has been the want of either Patience or Phoebe—tell them I am never, if life is spared us, to be without both of them again.

  —letter from Mary Jones to Elizabeth Jones Maxwell regarding two of her slaves, 30 August 1849

  1.

  It is a painful and harassing business

  Belonging to her. We have had trouble enough,

  Have no comfort or confidence in them,

  And they appear unhappy themselves, no doubt

  From the trouble they have occasioned.

  They could dispose of the whole family

  Without consulting us—Father, Mother,

  Every good cook, washer, and seamstress

  Subject to sale. I believe Good shall be

  Glad if we may have hope of the loss of trouble.

  I remain in glad conscience, at peace with God

  And the world! I have prayed for those people

  Many, many, very many times.

  2.

  Much as I should miss Mother,

  I have had trouble enough

  And wish no more to be

  Only waiting to be sent

  Home in peace with God.

  3.

  In every probability

  We may yet discover

  The whole country

  Will not come back

  From the sale of parent

  And child. So far

  As I can see, the loss

  Is great and increasing.

  I know they have desired

  We should not know

  What was for our own good,

  But we cannot be all the cause

  Of all that has been done.

  4.

  We wish to act. We may yet.

  But we have to learn what their

  Character and moral conduct

  Will present. We have it in

  Contemplation to wait and see.

  If good, we shall be glad; if

  Evil, then we must meet evil

  As best we can.

  5.

  Father, mother, son, daughter, man.

  And if that family is sold:

  Please—

  We cannot—

  Please—

  We have got to—

  Please—

  The children—

  Mother and Father and husband and—

  All of you—

  All—

  I have no more—

  How soon and unexpectedly cut off

  Many, many, very many times.

  from The Believer

  A. E. STALLINGS

  * * *

  Harm’s Way

  It sounds like a country road.

  It sounds like the swerve

  Into the oncoming lane

  Of a blind curve,

  One teenager goading another

  About their nerve;

  It sounds like a wet stretch

  Where a bridge tosses

  Its back over a river

  And a valley of mosses,

  The humble guardrail studded

  With makeshift crosses,

  Like the shrug of black ice

  As the cold gets colder

  Running next to the ditch

  Off the soft shoulder

  Where the odometer stops

  And no one gets older,

  Or the path in a fairy tale

  Through an ancient wood

  Where the crumbs you dropped are gobbled

  And you’re lost for good.

  And I would keep you out of it

  If I only could.

  from The Hopkins Review

  ARTHUR SZE

  * * *

  The White Orchard

  Under a supermoon, you gaze into the orchard—

  a glass blower shapes a glowing orange mass into a horse—

  you step into a space where you once lived—

  crushed mica glitters on plastered walls—

  a raccoon strolls in moonlight along the top of an adobe wall—

  swimming in a pond, we notice a reflected cottonwood on the water—

  clang: a deer leaps over the gate—

  every fifteen minutes an elephant is shot for its tusks—

  you mark a bleached earless lizard against the snowfall of this white page—

  the skins of eggplants glistening in a garden—

  our bodies glistening by firelight—

  though skunks once ravaged corn, our bright moments cannot be ravaged—

  sleeping near a canal, you hear lapping waves—

  at dawn, waves lapping and the noise of men unloading scallops and shrimp—

  no noise of gunshots—

  you focus on the branches of hundred-year-old apple trees—

  opening the door, we find red and yellow rose petals scattered on our bed—

  then light years—

  you see pear branches farther in the orchard as the moon rises—

  branches bending under the snow of this white page—

  from The Kenyon Review

  NATASHA TRETHEWEY

  * * *

  Duty

  When he tells the story now

  he’s at the center of it,

  everyone else in the house

  falling into the backdrop—

  my mother, grandmother,

  an uncle, all dead now—props

  in our story: father and daughter

  caught in memory’s half-light.

  I’m too young to recall it,

  so his story becomes the story:

  1969, Hurricane Camille

  bearing down, the old house

  shuddering as if it will collapse.

  Rain pours into every room

  and he has to keep moving,

  keep me out of harm’s way—

  a father’s first duty: to protect.

  And so, in the story, he does:

  I am small in his arms, perhaps

  even sleeping. Water is rising

  around us and there is no

  higher place he can take me

  than this, memory forged

  in the storm’s eye: a girl

  clinging to her father. What

  can I do but this? Let him

  tell it again and again as if

  it’s always been only us,

  and that, when it mattered,

  he was the one who saved me.

  from Time

  OCEAN VUONG

  * * *

  Partly True Poem Reflected in a Mirror

  i want to find a gun / and change myself / he said / in the dream only a week before his mother called / no hello only / her breath a windmill crashing slowly into my head / this face already changed since heavy rain left november too bloody / to read in a boy finds a bridge and becomes / everywhere and i decide against / tuesday / vandross on the stereo muted tv / the room pink / with images of a bloody dictator / my face the shade of strawberry icing / as i sit through one war / another hold / the page closer to the glass dammit / imagine yourself in / real life / there should be tears / there should be / a reason but all i have / is the voice: 17 children are gunned down in afghanistan today / and i think: shouldn’t it be gunned up? / doesn’t the bullet / in a child / become an angel-seed / the beginning / of “heaven” / how dare you / i mutter to myself / and the face / is only a little “prettier” than yesterday / which is enough / so i step into the n train doors opening / the linebreak i finished / schuyler’s book / his grip still warm on my shoulder / words all blurry / the last time / someone borrowed him was may 13 1981 / which makes me sadder / than mondays in the library / reading all the heroes who killed themselves / trying to save / my life / but the pills were like / “the teeth of an angel” i said / into the mirror / said i’d make it / to 34th st. but now i’m not sure / what i smoked is
working / i take long hits / cause i don’t have healthcare / a line here / and there keeps my hands from shaking / barely made it to brooklyn college / without palms wet again / clutching the seats i’m sick / and sorry / for the scar on your face even / at night the day brighter / as a memory / the young poet with a mustache / sitting in the dusty classroom says / don’t worry you have an edge / your friend died plus / you’re asian and i want / to take his hand and lie down in the room / lit only with broken glass / a coffee table axed to pieces / the statue of a plastic buddha / decapitated / and there no more prayers / at the prow of you / instead / i said have you ever been fucked in the ass? . . . no / no i don’t mean figuratively / you see / all this trouble / just to make some sense / just to make a ghost appear / on paper / so you can see me in this mirror and maybe it’s 8pm there / after all / this face already gone / maybe this is just to say / that i found the gun / and changed / the world instead / and now it’s just you and me / dear reader / meeting each other for / the first time in a room dark / as the insides of / our skulls / and look i’m sorry i’m reflecting / the two gashes in your face / i would stitch them up / but you’ll never see again

  from Freeman’s

  DAVID WOJAHN

  * * *

  Still Life: Stevens’s Wallet on a Key West Hotel Dresser

  Its alligator skin, now pliant from the years

  of summoning & concealing, of the jaw

  snapping open & shut, adding & subtracting

  the large old-fangled twenties, immaculately crisp,

  venereally green & a cache of Jeffersons

  for setting down at the betting booth in Hialeah.

  Chaste Diana’s greyhounds: how agilely

  they bolt & quicken, rounding the palm-lined

  backstretch as their metal rabbit quarry

  taunts them ever faster. Sometimes a payoff,

  sometimes not. Sometimes torts,

  sometimes the palacios of Crispin or Hoon.

 

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