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    Space Struck

    Page 4
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      and pebble-dented. Reaching in, I pulled

      back empty fists and it always seemed

      like a trick, those tadpoles all green-glinting

      and shadows. My brother could catch

      them, could make the squirming real

      in his palm before he swallowed each whole.

      We are only remembered as cruel when

      what we harm does not die quickly. I

      don’t know how long it took the tadpoles,

      but I know I was trying to say I’m sorry

      when I leaned down, pressed my mouth

      against his stomach and said, If you’d

      just let me catch you, I’d let you go.

      LAST NIGHT I DREAMED

      I MADE MYSELF

      your paperweight. This seems

      wrong. Seems like a sign that I need

      to spend more time on my own, so I

      call my friend and drive him to the store

      full of overpriced healing stones. I want

      the women shopping to know I’m not

      with my friend. I want them to know

      how great I’m doing with my adventures

      in independence. I’m ready to shout,

      Look at my healthy new life! But my friend

      thinks it’s a bad idea to frighten people

      in a place with so many hard throwables.

      Would they hurt me? These women

      look as if they’d smell like pink magnolias

      and violin rosin if I got close enough,

      but I won’t. I’m too busy searching for

      the stone that best represents me—it’s

      not the blue one specked with God bits,

      or the ear-shaped obsidian. It’s

      not anything polished—and I think

      about how hard it is for me to believe

      in the first Adam because if Adam

      had the power to name everything,

      everything would be named Adam.

      Then I think, That’s a pretty smart thought.

      I don’t say it to my friend. I don’t say it

      to the magnolia women. Do they still

      count, these hours I’ve spent on my

      own? Do they still count if I’m saving

      all of my shiniest thoughts for you?

      GOD’S SECRETARY,

      OVERWORKED

      Get real, darling. If He answered all prayers

      you’d be dead five times over. And I don’t

      mean the men you left just wished you were

      gone, I mean they scraped holes in your photos

      and kneeled in front of votive candles, begging

      for you to sleep between the tracks and train.

      One even asked for you to appear in his bed

      still wet from the lake. And while I’m not one to name

      names, you should be grateful that God

      doesn’t work like that. Listen, I’ve got children

      in car wrecks and old folks in hospice to call on,

      but take my advice and stop asking for men’s

      forgiveness. It’s a dangerous demonstration.

      If you offer a sorry mouth, they’ll break it.

      PAVLOV WAS THE

      SON OF A PRIEST

      which is a biographical fact only ever stated

      when discussing a man of either unrivaled

      righteousness or extreme wickedness.

      Imagine this: he never once used a bell

      in his saliva experiments, unless you count

      the plink of kibble falling from his dogs’

      surgically opened throats, and why would

      you count that? I admit I often tell you

      about the cruelties of others to stifle

      the growling in my own troubled core. I

      sense something is about to happen, though

      I can’t tell you what because last night,

      after I prophesized that a man would steal

      the Smithsonian’s rare and hideous pumpkin

      diamonds, I had no fun at all crouching

      behind the museum’s display cases until

      the night guard carried us out by our ears.

      She told you, Treat your mouth less

      like a garbage chute. She told me, Forget

      what you think you know about space. But I

      only really know about its violence. I forget

      that the moon smells like spent gunpowder.

      I forget what would happen to your body

      in a black hole. I don’t forget your body.

      This would be unforgivable, and I have

      so many strikes against me already. I’m sorry

      I couldn’t hide my joy when you said lonely.

      It made me feel useful. I used to be aimless—

      swallowing marbles and clicking my way

      through cities, licking my thumbs to smooth

      the eyebrows of almost any man. Now, I

      demand a love that is stupid and beautiful,

      like a pilot turning off her engines midflight

      to listen for rain on wings. I want to find

      you a peach so ripe that even your breath

      would bruise it. I want to press its velvet

      heat against your cheek, make you edge

      into the bite until your mouth is too wet

      to ask questions. If something happens,

      let it. I admit I couldn’t hear the thief’s

      footsteps over the museum alarm, but

      I’m certain that if the diamonds jostling

      against ugly diamonds in his drawstring

      bag sounded like anything, they sounded

      like bells.

      DIORAMA OF OUR NEED TO

      ESCAPE THE COLD WE MAKE

      My beloved steadies my balance on the outer wall

      of the zoo. He says that even in their sleep, captive giraffes

      know they’re captive—They don’t make that midnight hum

      in the wild. He wants to connect these stemmy-necked

      leopards to my crooning, but it’s only noon. He reaches

      up, pokes his finger through the sun, and spirals it into

      an apple’s dizzy peel. Now red. Now waxy. He

      ribbons it through his lips. See, he says. His singed

      mouth. We’ve grown so big. It’s time we got out of here.

      I don’t want out, but I do grow cold, and the cold

      comes strong—and the dark. The streetlights

      are stubborn here—they decide when to light,

      it will not be decided for them. The humming swells

      so loud I can only focus on everything my beloved is not.

      He is not me from the future—his pockets aren’t

      filled with space dust. He is not God—he still needs

      my help unsnagging his hair from jacket zippers.

      Where are we going? He rips a hole into the side

      of the wall. He squeezes my hand, leading me in

      through the hollow and out beside a mountain, which

      has only us to confide in. It says, I am very thin

      and not fit to hold you. We climb it anyway. The mountain

      teeters and falls back, flattening the town below.

      My beloved calls it An Exceptional Wreck. He feeds flint

      to a hawk and sends it sparking over the fields. I don’t

      understand his bigness, or his dreamy definition of guilt,

      and I don’t argue. I used up my toothiness years ago—

      rendered myself kind. And besides, he’s teaching me

      confinement. How to feel the fences. When he

      pulls me toward the fire, he pulls me by my wrist.

      MAGIC

      SHOW

      The magician pulls handkerchiefs from her throat

      until the rope of knotted silk ends, and she—

      she keeps going, her tongue pressed down

      to make room for what comes next: swords,

      of course, each one longer t
    han the one before.

      Then a live Doberman that limps offstage, soaked

      and shivering. For a moment, the magician’s parted lips

      reveal only darkness, but she reaches in and brings

      forth a crystal chandelier with its candles still lit.

      I watch for years, surviving off what she coughs up:

      pheasants and scalloped potatoes on silver trays,

      deboned salmon slabs. I’m not sure if her belly

      shrinks because she takes everything out, or

      because she lets nothing in, but I’m grateful for her

      dedication. For the pastel Easter basket, the kettle

      of hawks instead of white doves, the fishbowl

      and ceramic scuba diver who stands atop glow-

      in-the-dark rocks, for the pay phone, the umbrellas,

      ribbed and open, the top layer of frozen lake,

      and the ice skates. For the twinkling music box,

      and the green sweater I thought I’d lost in Michigan.

      For the mattress and box spring I’m grateful,

      though I’m the last one in the audience, and I

      have seen enough. I tell her to stop, and she stops.

      As she packs, I ask about the first object she ever

      lifted from her mouth. She opens her traveling case

      and shows me the jar of wisdom teeth she keeps

      nestled between sequined vests. And this makes

      sense, like how Earth refuses to release its pull

      on the moon. Look, she says, look how full I was.

      SO YOU WANT TO

      LEAVE PURGATORY

      Here, take this knife. Walk down

      the road until you come across

      a red calf in its pasture. It will

      run toward you with a rope tied

      around its neck. Climb over

      the fence. Hold the rope like a leash.

      You haven’t eaten in years. Think—

      are you being tested? Yes, everything

      here is a test. Stop baring teeth

      upon teeth and leave the calf

      to its grazing. Lift your arms toward

      the sky and receive nothing. Keep

      walking and think about the rope

      around that calf’s neck. Consider

      how fast its throat will be choked

      by its own growing. Walk until you

      understand what the knife was for.

      Now forget it. Here, take this knife.

      ROYAL I

      My specific heart, know that I am king here.

      I have my sword, my seat, and my passions

      pinned to the royal bulletin board for all

      to see. I’m a kind king, no skink’s ever shed

      his blue tail in fear of me. I perform my tasks

      bravely—just yesterday I sewed the flappy

      lakes into place without thimble or worry

      of prick. I’ve granted everyone the freedom

      to eat dinner in bed, and I’ve rid the realm

      of rats by reading their tiny diaries out loud

      until they ran into the forests, red-cheeked

      and babbling. I’m understandably busy,

      so if I decide I no longer have time or want

      for children, I expect an Alright, your brightness,

      and for you to stop building our miniatures

      out of pipe cleaners and meltwater. I’m kind.

      I’m making love easy for everyone. It feels

      exactly as the movies proclaimed. As king,

      it’s my duty to be one with the universe,

      but I hate how the galaxies hover over me,

      expecting mistakes. And, my love, I might

      make a few. It’s essential for me to trust, to tell

      you that, if I lose my calm—if there comes a day

      where I walk into a room and everyone finds

      a corner to hide in, I’ll need you to be ready to

      de-thorn the throne. My weaknesses are many

      and stubborn. If you must strike, do so at night,

      when I’m outside and alone and looking up.

      NOTES

      The first line of “Saccadic Masking” comes from Coulson Turnbull’s Life and Teachings of Giordano Bruno (Gnostic Press, 1913).

      The title “You Be You, and I’ll Be Busy” is inspired by the title of the poem “I’ll Be Me and You Be Goethe” by Heather Christle, which can be found in her collection What Is Amazing (Wesleyan, 2012).

      In “Diorama of Ghosts,” the lines “when the dust is swept / the broom is stored / behind the door again” come from Saint Bernadette Soubirous who said, “The Virgin used me as a broom to remove the dust. When the work is done, the broom is put behind the door again.”

      The firehouse light mentioned in “On Distance” is known as the Centennial Light. It is located in Livermore, California.

      The final line of “God Stops By” comes from Rabbi Simcha Bunim Bonhart of Przysucha. One of his famous teachings is about how everyone should carry two notes with them. One note should read, “For my sake was the world created,” while the other note should read, “I am but dust and ashes.”

      In “Turn Me Over, I’m Done on This Side,” the lines “The sea has its own soul, / and you have to ask permission to take a piece of it” come from Chiara Vigo, the last sea silk weaver. In a 2015 BBC News Magazine interview with Max Paradiso, Vigo says, “The sea has its own soul and you have to ask for permission to get a piece of it.”

      In “I’ve Been Trying to Feel Bad for Everyone,” the painting referenced is The Virgin and Child with Saint Benedict from the Priory of St. Hippolytus of Vivoin. It’s located at the Musée de Tesse in Le Mans, France.

      “God’s Secretary, Overworked” is inspired by the poem “The Frustrated Angel” by Jay Hopler, which is included in his book Green Squall (Yale, 2006).

      ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

      I would like to thank the editors of the following publications where these poems first appeared, often in earlier versions:

      Adroit Journal: “Diorama of Ghosts”

      American Poetry Review: “I Love Those Who Can Walk Slow Over Glass and Still Keep,” “In the Hands of Borrowers, Objects Are Twice as Likely to Break”

      Black Warrior Review: “Royal I”

      Colorado Review: “I’ve Been Trying to Feel Bad for Everyone”

      decomP: “Magic Show”

      DIAGRAM: “Saccadic Masking”

      Florida Review: “God’s Secretary, Overworked”

      Indiana Review: “So You Want to Leave Purgatory”

      The Journal: “Turn Me Over, I’m Done on This Side”

      Los Angeles Review of Books: “You Be You, and I’ll Be Busy,” “No One Cares Until You’re the Last of Something”

      Muzzle Magazine: “St. Francis Disrobes”

      Ninth Letter: “The River Reflects Nothing”

      Passages North: “When They Find the Ark”

      Pleiades: “Diorama of Our Need to Escape the Cold We Make”

      Ploughshares: “Pavlov Was the Son of a Priest”

     


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