Read The Best American Poetry 2012 Online
Authors: David Lehman
for Brian Keating
Light was on its way
from nothing
to nowhere.
Light was all business
  Light was full speed
when it got interrupted.
Interrupted by what?
When it got tangled up
and broke
into opposite
  broke into brand-new things.
  What kinds of things?
 Â
Drinking Cup
  “Thinking of you!
Convenience Valet”
How could speed take shape?
*
Hush!
Do you want me to start over?
*
The fading laser pulse
  Information describing the fading laser pulse
is stored
  is encoded
in the spin states
of atoms.
God
is balancing his checkbook
  God is encrypting his account.
This is taking forever!
from
Poetry
For Furious Nursing Baby
Frothy and pink as a rabid pig youâ
a maulerâ
a lunatic stricken with
a madness induced by fleshâ
squeeze my skin
until blotched nicked. Your fingernails
are jagged
  and mouth-slick. Pinprick scabs
  jewel my breasts.
Your tongue
your wisest muscle
  is the wet engine
of discontent.
It self-fastens by a purse-bead of spit
while your elegant hands
flail conducting
orchestral milk
  and sometimes prime the pump.
Nipple in mouth
nipple in hand
you have your cake and eat it too.
Then when wrenched
loose you'll eat sorrow lossâ
one flexed hand twists
as you open your mouth
to eat your fist.
from
The Cincinnati Review
Outside
Stevie lives in a silo.
A silo lives where, mostly, Stevie is
or is not. Tipped overâa hollow vein.
The silo, I mean. For here home is out
there on the grass. If you want a drink or wash
your hands, just dip into that trunk, hot and cold
running branches feeding down. It's startling.
But sense is startling, too. See how those boots
flip skyward? Tongues lapping up dew on his
mâché dandelions. This is Stevie's dream
miniacreage on the family's old spread.
He's all spread out; he's humming when he makes
a working thingâhe won't let you inside.
“So,” he says. Today he's stacked two propane
tanks and ovensâtwo-burnersâunder a
red maple, and when you open a door
there's mismatched silver and hatchets and things
he's made to eat
and
art with. Studio
as wherever-you're-itching-at-the-time:
boards with big nails banged in and from the nails
hang gourds, baby-sized cups speckled yellow
(is that old egg?), a hundred kinds of who
knows what, the center being where you are
and are not. “I stay dry,” he says. “No bugs.”
Says, “Why do walls want windows?” He's put glass
around his trees instead, head-high, to look
at trees from outside out. One chair, sleeping bag
âwhat he keeps inside the wild corn binâ
plus a getaway, by which he means a tunnel.
“Oh oh,” he says, “they coming.” He can worm
his way all the way to the apple trees,
he trenched it out last fall, and lights the route
with flashlights and tinfoil clipped to clothesline.
That's a trip. And that's a curvy planter full
of nursery nipples and hand-dipped Ken dolls.
If you want to see an art made wholly
in an outside mind, come see Stevie's crib.
That's his ten-foot pink polyvinyl penis
teeter-totter beside the birdcage
for potatoes. “Take a ride,” he says. All eyesâ.
from
The Southern Review
Child Holding Potato
When my sister got her diagnosis,
I bought an airplane ticket
but to another city, where I stared
at paintings that seemed victorious
in their relation to time:
the beech from two hundred years ago,
its trunk a palette of mud
and gilt; the man with olive-black
gloves, the sky behind him
a glacier of blue light. In their calm
landscapes, the saints. Still dripping
the garden's dew, the bouquets.
Holding the rough gold orb
of a potato, the Child cradled
by the glowing Madonna. Then,
the paintings I looked at the longest:
the bowls of plums and peaches,
the lemons, the pomegranates
like red earths. In my mouth,
the raw starch. In my mouth, the dirt.
from
Memorious
At the End of Life, a Secret
Everything measured. A man twists
a tuft of your hair out for no reason
other than you are naked before him
and he is bored. Moments ago he was
weighing your gallbladder, and then
he was staring at the empty space where
your lungs were. Even dead, we still say
you are an organ donor, as if something
other than taxes outlasts death. Your feet
are regular feet. Two of them,
and there is no mark to suggest you were
an expert mathematician, that you were
the first runner-up in debate championships,
1956, Tapioca, Illinois. From the time your body
was carted before him, to the time your
dead body is being sent to the coffin,
every pound is accounted for, except 22 grams.
The man is a praying man & has figured
what it means. He says this is the soul, finally,
after the breath has gone. The soul: less than
4,000 dollars' worth of crackâ22 gramsâ
all that moves you through this world.