Read The Best American Poetry 2012 Online
Authors: David Lehman
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 touchâ
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
someone 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
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 usâhah! 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 blimpâyou would write a poem
About it, ignoring the Greater Good,
The hard facts of gravity. You deserve to be
Flattened by the Greater Goodâpigs 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 goodâ
Change now or we will have to Take Measuresâ
If you know what I mean, which you doâ
& now let's hear one of your fucked-up poems:
Let's hear you refute this truth any way you can.
from
Boston Review
Daffodil
A poet could not but be gay
âWilliam Wordsworth
Don't you know, sweetheart,
less is more?
Giving yourself away
so quickly
with your eager trumpetâ
April's rentboy
in your flock of clones,
unreasonably cheerful, cellulose,
as yellow as a crow's footâ
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 cowâ
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
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
Where Do We Go After We Die