Read The Best American Poetry 2012 Online
Authors: David Lehman
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 selfâ
Yea,
Though I walk through the valley
â
And actions lose their agencyâ
It came to pass
â
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
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
from
Poetry
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.
Memoryâmoon-drawn, tidal.
The moon's celadon glaze dulls in the morning's cold kiln.
from
The Cincinnati Review
Samara
1.
At first they're yellow butterflies
whirling outside the windowâ
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 theoryâ
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
â
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
(though if you eliminate dogs and pie and swimming
feels about right to meâ
oh shut up, Lucia. The rule is: you can't nullify the world
in the middle of your singing.)
4.
In the Autonomous Vehicle Laboratory
Roboseed is flying.
It is not a sorrow though its motor makes an annoying sound.
The doctoral students have calculated
the correct thrust-to-weight ratio and heave dynamics.
On YouTube you can watch it flying in the moonlight
outside the engineering building with the fake Ionic columns.
I said “sorrow” for the fear that in the future all the beauties
will be replaced by replicas that have more glare and blare and bling.
Roboseed, roborose, roboheart, robosoulâ
this way there'll be no blight
on any of the cherished encapsulations
when the blight was what we loved.
5.
They grow in chains from the Bigleaf Maple, chains
that lengthen until they break.
In June,
when the days are long and the sky is full
and the swept pile thickens
with the ones grown brown and brittle,
oh see how I've underestimated the persistence
of the lace in their one wing.
6.
Is there no slim chance I will feel it
when some molecule of me
(annealed by fire, like coal or glass)
is drawn up in the phloem of a maple
(please scatter my ashes under a maple)
so my speck can blip out
on a stem sprouting out of the fork of a branch,
the afterthought of a flower
that was the afterthought of a bud,
transformed now into a seed with a wing,
like the one I wore on the tip of my nose
back when I was green.
from
The American Poetry Review
Improvisation on Yiddish