Read The Best American Poetry 2012 Online
Authors: David Lehman
Playacting
Early tribal cultures, while celebrating their rites of initiation or sacrifice, retained a very precise and subliminal awareness that the compulsive extremes to which they went . . . were in essence mere playacting, even though the performance could sometimes approach the point of death.
âW. G. Sebald,
Campo Santo
Something inside says
there will be a curtain,
maybe or maybe not
some bowing, probably
no roses, but certainly
a chance to unverse
or dehearse, after all
these acts. For some
fraction of the self
has always held out, the
evidence compounding
in a bank becoming
grander and more
marble: even our
most wholehearted
acts are partial.
Therefore this small
change, unspendable,
of a different metal,
accruing in a strange
account. What could it
be for but passage out?
from
The Threepenny Review
The Gods
I always seem to have tickets
in the third or fourth balcony
(a perch for irony;
a circle of hell the Brits
tend to call “The Gods”),
and peer down from a tier
of that empyrean
at some tuxedoed insect
scrabbling on a piano.
Some nights there's a concerto,
and ranks of sound amass
until it's raining upward
(violin-bows for lightning)
from a black thundercloud.
A railing has been installed
precisely at eye levelâ
which leads the gaze, frustrated,
still higher to the vault
of the gilt-encrusted ceiling,
where a vaguely understood
fresco that must be good
shows nymphs or angels wrapped
in windswept drapery.
Inscribed like the gray curls
around the distant bald spot
of the eminent conductor,
great namesâ
DA VINCI PLATO
WHITTIER DEBUSSY
â
form one long signature,
fascinatingly random,
at the marble base of the dome.
It's more the well-fed gods
of philanthropy who seem
enshrined in all their funny,
decent, noble, wrong
postulates, and who haunt
these pillared concert halls,
the tinkling foyers strung
with chandeliered ideals,
having selected which
dated virtuesâ
COURAGE
HONOR BROTHERHOOD
ârated
chiseling into stone;
having been quite sure
that virtue was a thing
all men sought, the sublime
a thought subliminally
fostered by mentioning
monumentally.
All men. Never a woman's
name, of course, although
off-shoulder pulchritude
gets featured overheadâ
and abstractions you might go
to women for, like
BEAUTY
JUSTICE LIBERTY
.
Yet at the intermission,
I generally descend
the spiral stairs unjustly
for a costly, vacant seat
I haven't paid for. Tonight
I've slipped into D9.
The lights dim. Warm applause
and, after a thrilling pause,
some stiff-necked vanities
for a moment float awayâ
all the gorgeous, nameless,
shifting discordances
of the world cry aloud; allowed
at last, I close my eyes.
from
The Common
The Afterlife
I dreamed I was in the afterlife, it was so crowded,
hordes of people, everyone seeking someone, staggering
every which way.
Who should I search for? The answer came quick: my mother.
I elbowed my way through strangers till I found her, worn,
like the day she died.
Mother, I cried, and threw my arms around her, but she
wasn't happy to see me. Her arms hung limp. Help me,
I said. You're my mother!
There are no mothers here, she said, just separate souls.
Everyone looks for their mother. I searched for mine, and found her
searching for her mother,
and so on, through the generations. Mothers, she said,
fathers, families, lovers are for the place you came from.
Here we're on our own.
Here is no help, no love, only the looking. This
is what death means, my child, this is how we pass
eternity, looking
for the love we no longer know how to give. I shuddered
myself awake. And yetâmy child, she said, my child.
Or did I only dream
that word, dream within a dream?
from
River Styx
Rain
Rain falls on the Western world,
The coldest spring in living memory everywhere.
Winter in mid-May means the darling buds of May uncurled
On an ice-cold morgue slab, smilingly shaking loose their beautiful hair.
London rains every day anyway.
Paris is freezing. It's May, but Rome is cold.
Motorcycles being tested at the factory in Varese north of Milan are gray
Victims screaming in place and can't get out and won't get sold.
It's the recession.
It's very weird in New York.
Teen vampires are the teen obsession,
Rosebud mouths who don't use a knife and fork.
Germany at first won't save Greece, but really has to.
It's hot hot in parts of Texas, but rain drowns Tennessee, people die.
It's the euro. It's the Greek debt. Greece knew
It had to stop lying, but
timeo Danaos,
they're Greeks, Greeks lie.
Canoeing in the Ozarks with Pierre Leval, the rain came down so hard
The river rose twenty-three feet in the pre-dawn hours and roared.
Came the dawn, there was improbably a lifeguard,
There was a three-legged dog, the jobless numbers soared.
Dreamers woke in the dark and drowned, with time to think this can't be true.
Incomprehensible is something these things do.
They bring the Dow Jones into the Ozarks and the Ozarks into the E.U.
A raving flash flood vomits out of a raindrop. The Western world is in the I.C.U.
Entire trees rocket past. One wouldn't stand a chance in the canoe.
A three-legged dog appears, then the guy it belongs to.
You instantly knew
You'd run into a hillbilly backwoods crazy, itching to kill you.
Berlin and Athens, as the Western world flickers,
Look up blinking in the rain and lick the rain and shiver and freeze.
They open black umbrellas and put on yellow slickers
And weep sugar like honeybees dying of the bee disease.
from
The New Yorker