Wednesday, October 26, 2016

Before Winter, and Then...





Before Winter, and Then...

…it seemed to me that there need not be
relic, remnant, margin, residue, memento,
bequest, memory, thought, track, or trace,
if only the darkness could be perfect
and permanent. 
                                  Marilynne Robinson
                                                Housekeeping


This is the way it works for her:
first the seed and then the sowing of the seed:
                the split husk and then the shove
                up through peat  (or vermiculite
                if it’s rumored to come on dry)
                and the vines reach sky-
                ward if they’ve been given a climb
                or scutt among the turned up
                stones and last year’s fish bones
                and if they've been trained to lean
                against the pole--
               
                and up they go and out no matter the press
                of the sky or choke of the root. 

And she’s among them every day, a nurse between
the beds, an ear for each new plume
                and a pocket notebook to keep it
                and a sharp pencil to mark all the agree
                or disagreements.  And once summer
                has wrung out it’s wardrobe on the neck
                of everyone, what’s got plump or even not
                with blush or glow will come undone
                like pins in the bun at the base of her
                scapula after the dance: it’s all kept

                tense until that first finger then two up
                through into the dark to loose the teased
               
security and one by one the locks fall…it’s like this:
come early or late, Autumn is the rush of it
                all: the plums and wheelbarrows
    in another country are her apples
    and bushel baskets and ladders she’ll climb
    into, a canopy of finding and each to her cheek
    she’ll ease into a linen bag and to descend
    two rungs at a time and walk a mile and a mile
    and a mile in her kitchen between sink
    and knife and paring, pot and water

and simmering to put it all up.  It makes me
wonder:

                under the surface of a winter lake, when in spring
                the green is its own mud brown beneath, and through
                the next three seasonS the surface can only show
                the sky the high track of everything passing by
                while the bottom settles it once and for all, a thick
                grip only it can need come winter because all its top-
                side green is decay, so to save it the lake, from the edges
                in, begins its own slow closing, a cold cold colder still
                than closing until the whole surface is snow and what’s frozen
                beneath it, and I imagine, it’s here that I see how a soul
                floats in a body without getting completely free. 
                It’s like a season of three: the growing up and out
                of the dark the climb and creep, the reach of a hand
                and then to save it all from that decay the madness of
                                sugar
                salt
                                vinegar
                pickle
               
                all ladled after their grate and slice their marriage
                into the glass row of winter infantry and the boil
                to seal them shut to cap them and seal them, their
                briny life stilled in their light.  Isn’t it like this
                in the winter lake?  Isn’t it like this in the living
                body?  Something of irreplaceable value sealed
                shut?  And shelf after shelf of labor to see?  And freezing
                February morning, the reach for it, the tap
                on the seal, to see it stayed, and then, decision made,
                the sweet under the rubber pry, the ssssssspt!

                Free!











Saturday, October 22, 2016

Loyalty




Loyalty

Michael Collins, ambushed at Beal na Blath,
                                                                …falls again
Willingly, lastly, forknowledgeably deep
Into the hay-floor that gave once in his childhood
Down through the bedded mouth of the loft trapdoor,
The loosening fodder-chute, the aftermath…
                                                                                                Seamus Heaney
                                                                                                “The Loose Box”


I don’t say anything about you other than
you were tall: 6’7”.  And you had that flatter

than most babies face my Aunt Clara would say
was whiskey sweet.  And you packed sardines

with acute ferocity, weaving each headless fish
into their can like some grass and ash basket

a cousin tried to teach you to make.  You spoke
as though you were born with a marble

in your mouth and it clicked against your palate
and words sometimes competed to get out, like kids

at the school recess bell and the bottle neck
of bodies pushing through the double doors

into mid-January’s false thaw.  I saw you
day after day a boy before you were a man

my grandmother’s cousin’s grandson and we played
in haunted attics and under skewered alder

branches and swam in that Bay of Fundy
and you taught me to hold my breath and held me

floating the way the salt in the water never could. 
I saw you day after day before you were a man. 

Day after day.  And then I didn’t.  Maybe once.  In
your father’s restaurant.  A bus-boy rushing by

shy, another person all those years later.  Stained
apron.  Glassy eyes.  Dirty dishpan.  I’d heard

you were in and out of city shelters.  You smiled. 
Same smile.  You went into the banging kitchen

and I never saw you again.  When I heard you’d been
murdered for putting your hand on a boy’s knee

in a public park I put my face in my hands and felt you
against my ribs in that salt water, your hands

under the small of my back, holding me up to the sun.
You never let go, even after I touched bottom.  I read

that the man who killed you was a stranger a vagrant
a booze-hound from South Dakota just passing

through who’d thumbed his way all the way to Maine
and this fate: five gallons of gasoline and a dug-out

under a bridge.  One match.  By the time you were found
you were smoke and bone and nothing but

a cast off shoe and a winter coat and a business
card with the hours of your AA meetings, your sponsor’s


number smudged by the snow.

Friday, October 21, 2016

Gossip: Both Sides of the Mouth




Gossip: Both Sides of the Mouth

For the Ones Who Claim Jesus But Scream “Barabbas! Give Us Barabbas!”


Planet earth like a teething ring suspended
Hangs by its world-chain.  Your pram waits in the corner.
Cows are let out.  They’re sluicing the milk-house floor.
                                                                                                Seamus Heaney
                                                                                                Bann Valley Eclogue



Tell me stories are borne another way and I’ll tell you
you never labored one day in your entire life.  Never
a shovel or a belching cow.  Never a bucket at your boot
filled with snow before you even make it to the barn.  Shit.

You’re only lips and tongue and a thin alley throat.  A street
corner at night to five a.m. whoring your lie for a pack
of smokes and a clumsy stroke.  A plucked game bird. 
A tabloid cryer.  A pew-stainer.  Gasoline in your gills

when good men walk out and past you and sigh at what
you might have been.  You hack and cry and light yourself
on fire you ride their coat-tails and when you arrive
you wrap yourself around them like a contamination vest.

You try to snuff them out.  You reach into their jeans
and squeeze.  Jesus you seem sweet, the way, before all this
you’d sneak peaks at the grocery store, at the man
and his wife and their happy life and you’d almost

shit yourself wanting it.  You’d swallow gobstoppers
and near to choke yourself to see him rescue you.  You go down
to the cold linoleum and open your shirt and spill your privacy
into the isle with you and let the tantrum you’ve given birth to

run wild pulling everything off the shelf, every can of soup
every bar of soap every block of cheese every banana ripped
out of its bunch every bottle of top shelf merlot and loaf
of bread and quart of milk the whole store’s strewn

with you.  Your loose untamable Satan.  How did you make it
this far?  Whose clothes hid your growing belly?  The story?
It’s back at the corner of the house.  While you, and in the blizzard
waiting, stake a claim on surveyed land, while you, unbooted

and barehanded open the door to make your path to the barn
the snow you never prepared for falls and falls and falls. 
It belongs to no one, even after landing.  Wind’s still gusting.
Goading you.  Up by the side of the barn the drift’s hitting the roof.

You break through the crust with the wrong socks on.  Fuck
if you know how to live a story.  You can’t even lift your foot half-way

into the yard.  

Wednesday, October 19, 2016

Who Knew New Grass

Who Knew New Grass?


When impact is
                instant when it is
                in the bone like a post hole digger
                raised high as the sky
                of wrists and torso
                to come down into it all
                at one precious point
                and the surface is pierced
                and the soil is suffered
                separated falling into the jaws
                to be lifted out and sent
                sod side up
                to its new uprooted thirst
                                
The first time
                you touch a girl it’s this
                hydraulic rift from shoulder
                to elbow to wrist to finger-
                tip
                in the cautious but not
                hot air it’s up
                and not meant to hover
                under the weight
                and the burning is loud
                as a basement draft
                pulled up the wall by only opening
                the door who knew
                in the box of old books
                beside the furnace a careless
                flint is ricocheted
                off the old tool he’d used years ago
                to set the boundaries
                rust thin now and dormant
               
                who knew touching
                who knew raising

                who knew new grass
                who knew he slow slow
                                then quick coming down
                                and the blades buried        

                                unseen
                                cracking
                                on impact 

Tuesday, October 18, 2016

Fall Sweater




Fall Sweater


Dry clean or hand wash
use warm water
do not rub wring spin or bleach
dry flat
warm iron

Particular to the garment and fiber:
cotton or wool or silk, on a tag
at the back of the neck--for the sweater

from Carraig Donn--and maybe
because it took to the earth
in a different way, was plucked

and chewed and ruminated, was first
sod, yes, like cotton, was spit, yes, like
silk, but when the black belly, when

the catacombs of viscera, when
the squeeze and the sheer weight
of its final removal, a whole

coat or two maybe in this case, a
cream colored sweater so much at home
the way it’s worn and so thoroughly

warm, it belongs
on my skin the way it belonged
on the sheep’s skin.   Is it blasphemous

to want it in cotton?  Because
honestly the itch is more than I can take.
I’ve gotten used to the weight but I know

I know I’ll never wear it bare.  But I want to!
And caring to starts with taking it
down at the start of the fall--

lacking all the ceremony of how it should be
stored to prevent the lips of moths…but God!
it’s on my mind now and needs cleaning

like the days remaining before you died
how you could never get, to your liking,
clean enough or warm enough, how cotton

was not enough and for sure not silk,
and I had this sweater for you, even though
it’s heavy and itchy, and I pulled it

up to your chin like I were tucking you in
for the night and look down at you in a moon
or the glow from the open door

and see it fuse into you it’s animal self
and you’d cough a little and spit and that’s
the small stain on the back of the collar,

just above the cleaning instructions
and for all the while you wore it I left it
there and now, now that you’ve died

and are buried my only like to you is this bile
stain and how absolutely at home it is there
how it took to the wool the way grain

takes to oak.  What you’ve pulled up out of you.
What grew from you.  What was cut
and spun.  What was knit then spit

to keep me warm.


What If, All Along, You’ve Been Hating the Wrong Man



What If, All Along, You’ve Been Hating the Wrong Man



There is so much to be grateful for, words are poor things.

                                                                                    Home
                                                                                    Marilynne Robinson

What if you’re hating the wrong man?

What if Jesus, the Jesus you know is the God
            your father knew and you hate them both
            because they are the same
            paradox?

What if the Jesus you heard in church is the Jesus
            your brother cups in his hands, priest’s oysters
            he’ll call them later because clutch is money
            and he'll be ok until he’s twenty and is told
            to be ashamed but it takes a while, a long while
            because it all tasted so good and still does
            even though there are no other men now.

What if it didn’t start with a priest, maybe it never was
            a priest, maybe it was just discovery discovery
            as though all along it had been waiting on nothing
            special but came as a simple light a thin sliver
            picked out of the bare foot that makes a man
            stop and pause and pull it away and walk on

but not before he looks up not before he sees a shape
            lift itself up a man among men who desires
            who is gentle who will love him who has been
            waiting to love him but neither knew it and won’t
            know it until the stone until the dark until the priest
            until the brother after you refused the job

all those years ago who sent your beloved charge instead
            and never not really how could he after all that
            forgive you?

            

Monday, October 17, 2016

After Extubation




After Extubation

But she left us and broke the family and the sorrow was released
and we saw its wings and saw it fly a thousand ways into the hills…
                                                                                                                                Homecoming
                                                                                                                                Marilynne Robinson

I’ve known all along her accumulation of used
and tired things was a staving off of all
the used and tired things she’d thought
she’d left behind forever but were really dragged

in a sack that never lacked for holes and yet
performed miracle after miracle  by nothing ever
being kicked or elbowed or pushed out or through
for space or love or neglect.  In deed, her sorrow was this

sack she dared and mended when the dark closed in
and she needed it’s ironic space.  It was like the space
a baby makes between the wall of the uterus
and the placenta, a constant relying but never

throughout all those rapid  heartbeats living like
it could all end the moment it prolapses
and all the lights and sounds, like the abrupt
shutting down at carnival are suddenly stuffed

into a hole and closed, just closed, forever.  I suppose
she gathered her sorrows that way, her whole life
dragging.  And the day she opened it the creatures
all her stuff had become at first wouldn’t move.  Couldn't.

They were by now something else entirely
and the light hurt them enough to shrink them.  
Still, they knew her by her smell and recovered
enough when she reached in to bite her but only

out of being cold, because the space was small,
and as she pulled away the blanket of her life
got large and she waited and watched as it drifted
up on a wind and all of it, every small legged thing,

nosed in her lap like puppies just born, wet and eyeless,
and soon throughout the days of intubation, a knee was gained
and soon an ankle, as they made their way out, off
into the wide wide furiously wide free dying.

Wednesday, October 12, 2016

Poverty--A Triptych-- (Panel 2)




Poverty--A Triptych--
(Panel 2)

Because the partridge breast was shaped like a heart
when cupped whole, and it’s open cavity was
a tiny grotto the saints             may have known rapture in,
I forgave the lice and mites and all kind in the wing
span of the one grouse my father lent me.
When it was finally my turn to tack the spread of feathers
            to my wall (all the rest went to my sister who rubbed
            each plume against her cheek like they were
            fingers, like she were counting, making lists, eyes
            closed) instead I meant to keep it safe in the paper
            box I hid all my treasures in.
This time it was only one wing--the other sprayed through
            with birdshot my father said and because he’d plucked
            it on the road and gutted and cut the heart and liver
            at his buddy’s house, all that could be saved
            was this one small wing. 
It’s hard to imagine a bird flying with only half its balance
            but I did and I made it work with pitch and precision
            and string and a secret stage where all the half
            animals I’d ever known would hop or crawl or limp
            across the floor and spotlight their qualities.
                        Legless rabbits who could lay eggs.
                        Wet kittens knit and knit and knit mittens.
                        Piglets rolled out blueprints and stacked bricks.
                        Dogs took up the dishes and washed them
                                    in milkmoon light. 
            And the grand finale, the strut of birds, their wings
                        entwined like women arm in arm, spread
                        straight and lift their legs
                        at the cue and dance until it was enough
                        to lift them off the floor entire, right up
                        and out into the world, the sky, the pure
                        pure unhunted blue sky.           

Thursday, October 6, 2016

Poverty--a Triptych-- (panel 1)





Poverty--A Triptych--
       (panel 1)


Poverty is grass attacked at the flank,
            thrummed to the root, choked to
                        so low a barrenness only snow
                                    will know enough to mourn
                                                what was once the whole
                                                            of Persia and now, after

two weeks, is thin, the tongue of a young
            mother who alone and on her own smokes
                        a slow jerky of her lung, into the lung
                                    of her new son who blinks in the blur
                                                of blue gray two packs a day and later

with his other brothers, occasional sister
            will make his way out to the mud next         
                        spring, barefoot and breath-heavy, and not
                                    know, ever, why his milk is blue or why dogs
                                                move slower in August unless they’re off
                                                            the chain and then bolt fast away to piss

on the green tuft thrust up by and through
            the throat of the mailbox pole-hole, the only
                        color that ever forgives here, that waits
                                    at the edge of things, like foxes, like hunger
                                                at best the only adult in the house and too
                                                            the only baby, born old every day, tottering

to the cupboard, to the window over the sink
            needing a wash, to look out at the kids smear
                        themselves, and eat, occasionally, their pretend
                                    pies, look at the sky, look at the drive, look at
                                                all of it as far as their ends can take them,
                                                            the frayed fade of Mama’s red bandana,


her now brown, once white, fraying lace bra.