Thursday, December 03, 2009

Wet

Feel it, Lover. The moon moves.

Not much like it was before—

whispers. Creep. Nightmares.

Why words now? Now is not the place.

My timid tongue moves through flesh.

Sorry. Your tides,

pulling me, suppressed flesh into flesh.

I’m terrified of death, of digging into your grave.

Pull— Push— Don’t move.

Or, yes, tremble. That feels appropriate.

My tongue awful amid this night.

Does that make it for you?

It wouldn’t. I’m ripped under riptide covers.

Sorry lover. Covers come. My tongue.

I’m sorry, Lover.

You’re all wet. Drowning

seems possible tonight. Please, don’t die

Let me be the one to—

But no, of course, I don’t,

not through this fleshly night.

The moon moves. —Feel.

Saturday, November 14, 2009

Fiona

He kept her.

He placed her.


—even more than she, I am that


He made her.

He named her.


I, at the sea. She, within a day or two


He named her in respect

to her failing affect.


—ebbing more swiftly, probably gone


The impression was more or less

that of a sudden wonder.


The most…

the most whole, somehow.


Not just her stammer and pant,

but the whole of her being.


I, not she, am softly carried, smiling— smiling at an absence of grace

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Colors

I worked on my Rubik’s cube. People came in and out of the front door and sometimes the back door. They probably looked at me but I didn’t look at them. I just sat in Dad’s armchair, in the corner of the livingroom, working on my Rubik’s cube.

Mom asked me a question. I remember hearing the slow notes of her voice but I didn’t hear the words. I remember that when she tried to talk to me I almost had the blue side done. Then, when she stopped talking, I screwed it up.

I thought about grocery shopping at Meijer. Mostly, I thought about the camera department. Dad always made me run and grab a pack of Fuji film while he went and picked up the bananas or the chicken or something. He said he was timing me.

People came in and out of the doors and there were no lamps on in the livingroom. They probably worried I was hurting my eyes staring at the Rubik’s cube because there was not much light coming in through the window. I could see their dark suits and dresses out of the corner of my eye but I didn’t look up at their faces.

Jim sat down in the chair across from me. He asked how I was doing. I showed him that I was almost done with the green side and then we were both quiet for a very long time. He stood up and walked away so slowly and he probably went to make himself a drink. I was reminded of the Super Bowl. Dad and he had their annual barbecue in the backyard. I don’t remember anyone ever watching the game but people were always laughing a lot. Sometimes they asked me to sit with them on the porch and I laughed with them. I thought about that for a long time but I stared down at the Rubik’s cube so no one would know I was thinking about anything.

Mom bought me a little black suit special for today but I didn’t want it. I wanted to wear my blue jeans and tee shirt like normal and go and work on the car in the garage. That’s what he would have wanted, I thought. But Mom made me put on that suit. I didn’t know if we would get rid of that car now.

She also told me I was supposed to say something at the church today but I couldn’t think of anything so I just stood up there and everyone looked at me. Afterwards they said it was okay that I didn’t have anything to say but I didn’t want to talk to them so I went and waited in the car. Then we drove home and everyone came along.

I thought about how quiet it was in the church and how it wasn’t quiet anymore now that we were home. I didn’t know what everyone suddenly had to say. I almost had the red side done. Dad used to say, “keep your chin up,” and I wanted to say that to Jim now because he was just staring at his shoes the whole time that he was sitting across from me, but he had stood up and left by the time I remembered to say it so I just mumbled it to myself.

Mom asked what I had said but I didn’t repeat it because she wouldn’t have understood.

When everyone finally left I almost had the yellow side done but all the other sides were jumbled and the Rubik’s cube looked like a mess. I got out of the armchair and set the cube down on the little coffee table. I set it down next to Dad’s old Rubik’s cube with all the sides the right color. I just wanted to make mine look like his.

Saturday, September 05, 2009

Tall Woman II[1]

I could only love a dead woman.


In death, women know the extremes of beauty.


·


My love spent thousands of years by the pond

starving, malnourished, withering away.

When I found her she was gaunt and deformed.


Her limbs stretched forever into the pool—

reaching for the final absolution,

bony fingers grabbing for some fresh fish.


Groping for a school no human had yet discovered,

still pure— without chemicals coursing its veins,

she slowly grew weak and weary.


Unable to find such schools—

every fish she plucked, already toxic—

she consumed nothing.


Her breasts fell lopsided.

Her flesh paled to a pasty white.

When I found her, long dead, I loved her.


·


Living women refuse to struggle for their ideals,

for such beautiful inhuman perfection.


I could never love a living woman.




[1] Throughout the entire writing process of this poem, I was staring at an image of Tall Woman II, the sculpture by Alberto Giacometti. Let that affect your reading as it may.

Wednesday, September 02, 2009

Mirrored

I would often, oh so often, lay my head softly against your glass back. I would sometimes watch myself still but mostly I tried not to. This is how we were in love. You would sometimes shift, or worse, tremble, in your sleep and I was sure that you would shatter against my stiff cheek. Somehow, you never did and we felt a stronger love. But slowly, throughout the years, you stopped shaking and at first I imagined that was good but eventually I could not deny that it only meant that you were less alive. And when I took the chance, and gazed at myself, I too was gaunt and fragile, obviously dying. But still, we lay together every night and somehow that seemed lifelike. When you died I didn’t feel right telling people that I was shocked, that you seemed so healthy, or that I didn’t see it coming. But, of course, I did say those words and they obligatorily sympathized with me, acting as if they didn’t see your fate mirrored in me as well.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Evelyn 1909-1937, A Life in Six Sections

1.


She stood at the water’s edge.

They all said she was in love.

She stood at the water’s edge;

a hand grew from the surface,

sprouted like a pea plant.

She plucked waterlogged nails from each fingertip

and cracked them open like peapods.

She was searching.

We all knew she was in love.


2.


She wore a white dress.

Damp, it clung to her body—

something like foreplay the way it groped her.

Some said they saw him:

flashing and flailing, drunken and dying.

She stood at the water’s edge.

Maybe a head was visible somewhere

in the depths, through the fog.

She stood staring, deeply in love.


3.


A spring day, 1932

and everything was white.

He was happy and she too was smiling.

She said important words;

he repeated them but with feeling.

Flowers, rings, gems, kisses,

and were there doves?

Standing at the water’s edge,

Maybe she saw the blurred reflection of doves.


4.


Oh, he touched her.

He scraped her white flesh

with razor finger nails—

told her to moan.

He bruised her,

mostly where clothes covered.

Oh, he touched her when he was drunk.

She was in love at the water’s edge.

A hand grew out and touched her.


5.


She stood at the water’s edge

and we watched her weep.

They knew that she loved him.

Into the pool, blood dripped—

but no tears— and screams flooded. Screams.

Oh, he touched her.

She dropped slowly to her knees,

knelt at the water’s edge,

screamed, but we saw her weeping.


6.


Oh, she was deeply in love.

Against a bloody hand, she fought.

Her body writhed almost as during rough sex

and blood dripped and bruises formed,

and she resisted, then weakly resisted.

That strong hand held tight.

From the depths, he tugged,

and at first, she screamed.

Then, we knew, too in love, she fell in with him.

Saturday, August 15, 2009

Two Weeks

I put my lighter away in the drawer

for the fifth time this year

(it’s only March).


It cooed I’ll see you in two weeks.

No, you bastard. I’m done with you.

But we both knew there was a reason

I didn’t throw it in the trash.

·

Again, it’s been two weeks,

so I take the slow walk

past the Methodist Church and

show up in your living room.


You look up at your calendar,

Oh, two weeks already?

reaching for our pill bottle.


Yes, I say, but I’m not staying.

I just wanted to see if

you were dead yet.


You take two.

With a smirk you retort, I’m trying,

but not hard enough, I think.


I’m leaving you.

This time it’s for good,

I tell you.

·

Well, it’s been three months,

and my nerves still shake for you.


We first met in the waiting room.

They told you,

You have two weeks.

I figured I could collapse with you

among Benzedrine and cigarettes for that long.


You can sleep when you’re dead,

but stubborn as hell,

you’ve developed a living slumber.


Now, I’m just trying to keep awake.

Friday, August 14, 2009

Three Months in Forty-Six Words

I saw some sort of Art Punk movement coming on.

My feet scrambled to find the words

and my tongue died somewhere along the grass path.


My hands found shooting stars against your breasts;

that was the worst part.

But, like I said, I saw it coming.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

We Were Always Looking for the Best Things in the Wrong Places

We would search for wildlife on neighborhood streets,

and we spent many an evening hunting skunks and raccoons in backyards.


We sought out love in the caverns of each others’ eyes,

and tried, hopelessly, hour after hour to force it from between clenched palms.

Monday, August 10, 2009

What I Can Still Hear

I can still hear Somewhere Over the Rainbow.

Someone sang it when I was young

but now I can’t remember who.


I can hear tires screeching

as I chased a pop fly

down the middle of the road

before that car crashed

into my tom-boy body.


And then, while I sat in my bed recovering,

with bruises all over my face,

the neighbor boy strolled past,

so I called out the window, “Hi, Jimmy”.

I can still hear him screaming all the way home

“A monster! A monster!”


I can hear Bethel cursing my name

when Jack and I popped out of the rumble seat

after she and her fiancé

had driven out to the woods

for some alone time.

Actually, I can’t. I’m overwhelmed

by the sound of childish laughing.


I can hear “Don’t tell Mummy!

Don’t tell Mummy!” Rudy standing over my chest

while I lay flat on my back on the pitcher’s mound

with a baseball imprint on my forehead.

I had thought I would be the nice sister,

give him an easy pitch.


I can still hear those rascal boys squealing in terror

after Grandma dropped a sheet over her head

and went and knocked on the clubhouse door

crooning “Woooo,”

holding a butcher’s knife.


I still hear my cough,

horrible and persistent,

the dry kind that tears apart your throat.

That was when I went to the hospital.


There, they asked me about all those ear infections.

I can still hear my mother in our one bedroom,

“We just can’t afford the doctor, Sweetheart,”

but at the hospital she had to say,

“Go ahead with the surgery, sir.”


I can hear myself screaming FUCK YOU

and my fist thudding against his cheek

after the doctor scribbled what had happened.

Although, I guess that was really

the first thing I could not hear.