Read The Best American Poetry 2012 Online
Authors: David Lehman
How to Tie a Knot
If I eat a diet of rain and nuts, walk to the P.O.
in a loincloth, file for divorce from the world of matter,
say
not-it!
to the sea oats,
not-it!
to the sky
above the disheveled palms,
not-it!
to the white or green oyster boats
and the men on the bridge with their fishing rods
that resemble so many giant whiskers,
if I repeat
this is not-it, this is not why I'm waiting here,
will I fill the universe with all that is not-it
and allow myself to grow very still in the center of
this fishing town in winter? Will I look out past the cat
sleeping in the windowsill and say
not-it
garbage can,
not-it
Long's Video Store, until I happen upon what
is not
not-it?
Will I wake up and
BEHOLD!
the “actual,” the “real,” the “awe-thentic,” the
IS?
Instead I walk down to the Island Quicky, take a pound
of bait shrimp in an ice-filled baggy, then walk to the beach
to catch my dinner. Now waiting is the work
I'm waiting for. Now the sand crane dive-bombs the surf
of his own enlightenment because everything
is bait and lust and hard-up for supper.
I came out here to pare things down,
wanted to be wind, simple as sand, to hear each note
in the infinite orchestra of waves fizzling out
beneath the rotting dock at five o'clock in the afternoon
when the voice that I call
I
is a one-man boat
slapping toward the shore of a waning illusion.
Hello, waves of salty and epiphanic distance. Good day,
bird who will eventually
go blind from slamming headfirst into the water.
What do you say, fat flounder out there
deep in your need, looking like sand speckled with shells,
lying so still you're hardly there, lungs lifting
with such small air, flesh both succulent and flakey
when baked with white wine, lemon and salt, your eyes
rolling toward their one want when the line jerks, and the reel
clicks, and the rod bends, and you give up
the ocean floor for a mouthful of land.
from
The Cincinnati Review
Poem
With deepest reverence,
I shop for bones.
And what is the candy
And the daylight
And the horse without hunger?
Too many ducts for us to think of,
And here we are punishing the
Lines above our faces.
Enormity is a hoof
With unanswerable sounds,
And the void is filled with fire.
My dream is to fall apart,
To cry for a century,
But I have not cried, not at all.
I keep my distance like the tines
Of a fork from one another,
Dressing, undressing the fabulous wounds.
But now, back to our story,
It has coffee in it, a naked river.
Blessed are we who rapture
An electric wire, blessed be
The falling things about our faces,
Blessed is the socket of an eye
That lights the body, because
In the end, in the very end, it's
Just you. You and you. And you.
from
New American Writing
Either Or
Death,
in the orderly procession
of random events on this gradually
expiring planet crooked in a negligible
arm of a minor galaxy adrift among
millions of others bursting apart in
the amnion of space,
will,
said Socrates,
be either a dreamless slumber without end
or a migration of the soul from one place
to another,
like the shadow of smoke rising
from the backroom woodstove that climbs
the trunk of the ash tree outside
my window and now that the sun is up
down come two red squirrels and a nuthatch.
Later we are promised snow.
So much for death today and long ago.
from
Ploughshares
Hollow Boom Soft Chime: The Thai Elephant Orchestra
A sound of far-off thunder from instruments
ten feet away: drums, a log,
a gong of salvage metal. Chimes
of little Issan bells, pipes in a row, sometimes
a querulous harmonica.
Inside the elephant orchestra's audience,
bubbles form, of shame and joy, and burst.
Did elephants look so sad and wise,
a tourist thinks, her camera cold in her pocket,
before we came to say they look sad and wise?
Did mastodons have merry, unwrinkled faces?
Hollow boom soft chime, stamp of a padded foot,
tingle of renaat, rattle of angklung.
This music pauses sometimes, but does not end.
Prathida gently strokes the bells with a mallet.
Poong and his mahout regard the gong.
Paitoon sways before two drums,
bumping them, keeping time with her switching tail.
Sales of recordings help pay for their thin enclosure
of trampled grass. They have never lived free.
Beside a dry African river
their wild brother lies, a punctured balloon,
torn nerves trailing from the stumps of his tusks.
Hollow boom soft chime, scuff of a broad foot,
sometimes, rarely, a blatting elephant voice.
They seldom attend the instruments
without being led to them, but, once they've begun,
often refuse to stop playing.
from
Poetry
The Autobiography of Khwaja Mustasim