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    The Best American Poetry 2012

    Page 7
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      A mullah for a mauled age, a Muslim whose memory goes back farther than the Balfour Declaration.

      You may remember me as the grandfather who guided the gaze of a six-year-old Omar Khayyám to the constellations.

      Also maybe as the inmate of a Cairo jail who took the top bunk and shouted down at Sayyid Qutb to please please please shut up.

      from The New Yorker

      DAVID MASON

      Mrs. Mason and the Poets

      At that point I had lived with Mr. Tighe

      so many years apart from matrimony

      we quite forgot the world would call it sin.

      We were, in letters of our friends at Pisa,

      Mr. and Mrs. Mason, the common name

      domesticating the arrangement. (Our friends

      were younger, thinking it a novelty.)

      You’ve heard about Lord Byron and his zoo,

      how he befriended geese he meant to eat

      and how they ruled his villa like a byre

      with peacocks, horses, monkeys, cats and crows.

      And our friend Shelley whom we thought so ill,

      whose brilliant wife was palely loitering,

      waiting to give birth and dreading signs

      that some disaster surely must befall them.

      Shelley of the godless vegetable love,

      pursuer of expensive causes, sprite.

      He had confided in me more than once

      how his enthusiasms caused him pain

      and caused no end of pain to those he loved.

      Some nights I see his blue eyes thrashing back

      and comprehend how grieved he was, how aged.

      Genius, yes, but often idiotic.

      It took too many deaths, too many drownings,

      fevers, accusations, to make him see

      the ordinary life was not all bad.

      I saw him last, not at the stormy pier

      but in a dream. He came by candlelight,

      one hand inside a pocket, and I said,

      You look ill, you are tired, sit down and eat.

      He answered, No. I shall never eat more.

      I have not a soldo left in all the world.

      Nonsense, this is no inn—you need not pay.

      Perhaps it is the worse for that, he said.

      He drew the hand out of his pocket, holding

      a book of poems as if to buy his supper.

      To see such brightness fallen broke my heart,

      and then, of course, I learned that he had drowned.

      Once, they say, he spread a paper out

      upon a table, dipped his quill and made

      a single dot of ink. That, he said,

      is all of human knowledge, and the white

      is all experience we dream of touching.

      If I should spread more paper here, if all

      the paper made by man were lying here,

      that whiteness would be like experience,

      but still our knowledge would be that one dot.

      I’ve watched so many of the young die young.

      As evening falls, I know that Mr. Tighe

      will come back from his stroll, and he will say

      to humour me, Why Mrs. Mason, how

      might you have spent these several lovely hours?

      And I shall notice how a slight peach flush

      illuminates his whiskers as the sun

      rounds the palms and enters at our windows.

      And I shall say, As you have, Mr. Mason,

      thinking of lost friends, wishing they were here.

      And he: Lost friends? Then I should pour the wine.

      And I? What shall I say to this kind man

      but Yes, my darling, time to pour the wine.

      from The Hudson Review and Umbrella

      KERRIN MCCADDEN

      Becca

      She says, It’s my birthday, I’m going tomorrow,

      What’s your favorite font? What should I

      have him write? Serifs, I say. I like serifs.

      I like old typewriters, the keys little platters.

      I don’t answer the question about what to write.

      The vellum of her back. I am not her mother,

      who later weeps at the words written between

      her shoulders. I get ready to retract the idea of serifs,

      the pennants that pull the eye from one word

      forward, but the eye loves a serif. When we

      handwrite, we stop to add them to I. Read this

      word like typeface, make me always published,

      I am always a text. Write this on your back,

      I want to say. Write that you are a lyric

      and flying—serifed, syntactical. Becca chooses

      Make of my life a few wild stanzas. She lies

      on the bed while the artist marks her back,

      his needle the harrow for her sentence. Make of

      my life a place to stand, stopping-places, a series

      of rooms, stances, stare, stantia, stay. She has

      shown him a bird she wants perched above the final

      word, stanza. It is a barn swallow—ink blue flash.

      He says, toward the end, so she can know it will hurt

      to ink so much blue, I am filling in the stanza now,

      and he stings her right shoulder again and again,

      filling the room of the bird. Make of my life

      a poem, she asks me and him and her mother

      as she walks away, make of my life something

      wild, she says. I watch her strike out across

      Number 10 Pond, the tattoo flashing with each stroke

      and there is barely enough time to read it.

      from The American Poetry Review

      HONOR MOORE

      Song

      Of sheets and skin and fur of him,

      bed of ground and river, of land,

      or tongue, of arms, the wanton field,

      of flame and flowers, stalk of him,

      harp, arboreal, steep and rush.

      House him in the coil of my hair,

      silk of him and open sea, flood, star,

      toes of him, stickiness, of flesh.

      Rind of him, gaze, of salt and heat,

      face, food and blade, island in bright

      bloom, bristle, blossom, all this night

      lie long with him as dark flies fleet.

      Transparent, filled up, emptied out,

      here of him, here I find his mouth.

      from The Common

      MICHAEL MORSE

      Void and Compensation (Facebook)

      My friends who were and aren’t dead

      are coming back to say hello.

      There’s a wall that they write things on.

      They have status updates. What are you doing right now?

      For the most part, they seem successful.

      They have children, which I can only imagine.

      The hairy kid we called Aper, I haven’t heard

      from him and wonder if in every contact

      there are apologies inherent

      for feelings hurt and falling out of touch—

      I’m sorry in the way that dogs out back

      bark at the nothing they’re trying to name.

      Now the missing turn up online,

      the immanent unheard becoming memory.

      We have conversations that are flat

      or we speak to one another in threads,

      a wall more kind than faces posted downtown

      when tower dust settled and sky went blue again.

      When Leo died we couldn’t believe he wasn’t hiding,

      that his laugh would not sound out, announce his return.

      What a laugh. Goofy. His. Purely his

      and out loud like a dog barking at stars.

      Something heavenly. An application

      against insults or things that spill.

      That was Leo. And he left.

      I don’t think he meant to go

      before he found some beloved and made

      so
    meone in and not of his image.

      I want to find Leo on Facebook.

      I want to discover that he’s a chemist

      and tell him it’s like high school all over

      with so much living, it was nice, to be done

      and to see and hear from you after so long.

      You seem great. You look exactly the same.

      from Ploughshares

      CAROL MUSKE-DUKES

      Hate Mail

      You are a whore. You are an old whore.

      Everyone hates you. God hates you.

      He pretty much has had it with all women

      But, let me tell you, especially you. You like

      To think that you can think faster than

      The rest of us—hah! We drive the car

      In which you’re a crash dummy! So

      Why do you defy our Executive Committee

      Which will never cede its floor to you? If a pig

      Flew out of a tree & rose to become

      A blimp—you would write a poem

      About it, ignoring the Greater Good,

      The hard facts of gravity. You deserve to be

      Flattened by the Greater Good—pigs don’t

      Fly, yet your arrogance is that of a blimp

      Which has long forgotten its place on this earth.

      Big arrogance unmoored from its launchpad

      Floating free, up with mangy Canadian honkers,

      Up with the spy satellites and the ruined

      Ozone layer which is, btw, caused by your breath,

      Because you were born to ruin everything, hacking

      Into the inspiration of the normal human ego.

      You are not Queen Tut, honey, you are not

      Even a peasant barmaid, you are an aristocrat

      Of Trash, land mine of exploding rhinestones,

      Crown of thorns, cabal of screech bats!

      I am telling you this as an old friend,

      Who is offering advice for your own good—

      Change now or we will have to Take Measures—

      If you know what I mean, which you do—

      & now let’s hear one of your fucked-up poems:

      Let’s hear you refute this truth any way you can.

      from Boston Review

      ANGELO NIKOLOPOULOS

      Daffodil

      A poet could not but be gay

      —William Wordsworth

      Don’t you know, sweetheart,

      less is more?

      Giving yourself away

      so quickly

      with your eager trumpet—

      April’s rentboy

      in your flock of clones,

      unreasonably cheerful, cellulose,

      as yellow as a crow’s foot—please.

      I don’t get you.

      Maybe it’s me,

      always loving what I can’t have,

      the bulb refusing itself,

      perennial challenge.

      I’d rather have mulch

      than three blithe sepals from you.

      I’ve never learned

      how to handle kindness

      from strangers.

      It’s uncomfortable, uncalled-for.

      I’m into piss and vinegar,

      brazen disregard,

      the minimum-wage indifference

      of bark, prickly pear.

      Flirtation’s tension:

      I dare, don’t dare.

      But what would you know

      about restraint,

      binge-drinking

      your way through spring,

      botany’s twink bucked

      by lycorine, lethal self-esteem?

      You who come and go

      with the seasons,

      bridge and tunnel.

      You’re all milk and no cow—

      intimacy for beginners.

      The blond-eyed boy stumbling home.

      If I were you, I’d pipe down.

      Believe me,

      I’ve bloomed like you before.

      from Lambda Literary Review

      MARY OLIVER

      In Provincetown, and Ohio, and Alabama

      Death taps his black wand and something vanishes. Summer, winter; the thickest branch of an oak tree for which I have a special love; three just hatched geese. Many trees and thickets of catbrier as bulldozers widen the bicycle path. The violets down by the old creek, the flow itself now raveling forward through an underground tunnel.

      Lambs that, only recently, were gamboling in the field. An old mule, in Alabama, that could take no more of anything. And then, what follows? Then spring again, summer, and the season of harvest. More catbrier, almost instantly rising. (No violets, ever, or song of the old creek.) More lambs and new green grass in the field, for their happiness until. And some kind of yellow flower whose name I don’t know (but what does that matter?) rising around and out of the half-buried, half-vulture-eaten, harness-galled, open-mouthed (its teeth long and blackened), breathless, holy mule.

      from Five Points

      STEVE ORLEN

      Where Do We Go After We Die

      They’re at their old favorite bar. The funeral’s over. The question

      Commands and divides them. One sees the pictograph

      Of the great wheel; another, a figure of closed eyes,

      Another, the heavenly throne surrounded by a choir of angels,

      Remembered from Sunday School. Scripture,

      From many sources, is cited, science invoked

      And contradictions exposed. The peacemaker

      Among them declares that all the stories are true

      But on different planes, you can travel among them

      When you’re dead, if you want to, even this one,

      And find those you cared for and follow them around,

      Walk through their pratfalls and the wreckage

      And be amazed again at the poignant bravery of the living,

      Then the fabulist adds that you want to help, but you can’t,

      You’re a ghost, that’s a rule in all the stories,

      And that’s why both compassion and a coolness of spirit

      Can be felt on every street, making the best of a bad deal.

      Someone tells a story about Jon, who died

      And gathered them here. It brings them to tears.

      Another story, and they curse his transgressions.

      Then other friends who have died, story and commentary

      And rebuttal, they drink, they complicate,

      They begin to forget the quirks they loved

      And the spirit that flows like a river powerful enough

      To ignore the seasons. The lights flash off and on,

      The bartender is drying the last of the glasses,

      Stories slide under the chairs into the shadows,

      Speech reverts to its ancient, parabolic self—Yea,

      Though I walk through the valley—

      And actions lose their agency—It came to pass—

      The things of the world become scarce,

      And what’s left spreads its wings

      And flies around among them, like bats at dusk.

      from New Ohio Review

      ALICIA OSTRIKER

      Song

      Some claim the origin of song

      was a war cry

      some say it was a rhyme

      telling the farmers when to plant and reap

      don’t they know the first song was a lullaby

      pulled from a mother’s sleep

      said the old woman

      A significant

      factor generating my delight in being

      alive this springtime

      is the birdsong

      that like a sweeping mesh has captured me

      like diamond rain I can’t

      hear it enough said the tulip

      lifetime after lifetime

      we surged up the hill

      I and my dear brothers

      thirsty for blood

      uttering

      our beautiful songs

      said the dog

    &nbs
    p; from Poetry

      ERIC PANKEY

      Sober Then Drunk Again

      On the lightning-struck pin oak,

      On the swayed spine of the Blue Ridge,

      a little gold leaf.

      Once I drank with a vengeance.

      Now I drink in surrender.

      The thaw cannot keep me from wintering in.

      I prepare for death when I should prepare

      For tomorrow and the day after

      and the day after that.

      A clinker of grief where once hung my heart.

      Memory—moon-drawn, tidal.

      The moon’s celadon glaze dulls in the morning’s cold kiln.

      from The Cincinnati Review

      LUCIA PERILLO

      Samara

      1.

      At first they’re yellow butterflies

      whirling outside the window—

      but no: they’re flying seeds.

      An offering from the maple tree,

      hard to believe the earth-engine capable of such invention,

      that the process of mutation and dispersal

      will not only formulate the right equations

      but that when they finally arrive they’ll be so

      . . . giddy?

      2.

      Somewhere Darwin speculates that happiness

      should be the outcome of his theory—

      those who take pleasure

      will produce offspring who’ll take pleasure,

      though he concedes the advantage of the animal who keeps death in mind

      and so is vigilant.

      And doesn’t vigilance call for

      at least an ounce of expectation,

      imagining the lion’s tooth inside your neck already,

      for you to have your best chance of outrunning the lion

      on the arrival of the lion.

      3.

      When it comes time to “dedicate the merit”

      my Buddhist friends chant from the ocean of samsara

      may I free all beings—

      at first I misremembered, and thought

      the word for the seed the same.

      Meaning “the wheel of birth and misery and death,”

      nothing in between the birth and death but misery,

      surely an overzealous bit of whittlework

      on the part of Webster’s Third New International Unabridged

     


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