Read The Best American Poetry 2014 Online
Authors: David Lehman
Song birds enter the morning
the predawn before the fires,
you know, when the night floats away
like vapor on a lake,
or like kisses in the woods.
Songs that even creation
might not remember.
Continuous, threaded, as if
a cherry pit were stuck
in the throat
to produce the trumpet of the branches.
So varies, yet never, changing
through all the days, since
reptiles fell to earth.
I give up the reason for the sound
I give up the creature of sound
and the creator of the creatures
and of us and of dawn and
air and of vacuum
and human inhumanity.
I give up the song.
I give up the place.
from
The Nation
At the end of the road from concept to corpse,
sucked out to sea and washed up againâ
with uprooted trees, crumpled cars, and collapsed housesâ
facedown in dirt, and tied to a telephone pole,
as if trying to raise herself still, though one leg is broken,
to look around at the grotesque unbelievable landscape,
the color around her eyes, nose, and mane (the dapples of roan,
a mix of white and red hairs) now powdery grayâ
O, wondrous horse; O, delicate horseâdead, deadâ
with a bridle still buckled around her cheeksâ“She was more smarter than me,
she just wait,” a boy sobs, clutching a hand to his mouth
and stroking the majestic rowing legs,
stiff now, that could not outrun
the heavy, black, frothing water.
from
The Threepenny Review
I spun the helmet on the ground and waited for it to stop. When it didn't stop, and probably two days had passed, I stood up and began snapping my fingers, just the one hand, my right hand, and I was kind of squatting a little, just bending my knees a bit, and tapping my right foot, and smiling I guess, like I was listening to something, something catchy. And after two more days of this, this finger-snapping, and after seeing that the helmet would continue to spin in the driveway, at this point I began to dance backward toward town, down the long dirt road toward the pavement that would take me to the highway that would eventually take me to town, always dancing and snapping, always moving backward, mile after mile, smiling, really getting down, never looking over my shoulder, falling and getting up, falling and getting up, traveling backward toward town, snapping, smiling, really covering some ground.
from
jubilat
At a Chamber Music Master Class
Use every centimeter of the hair.
That phrase needs elasticity, breathing room.
We need to hear the decoration more.
Her part has so many notes, it's almost a crime.
Tread lightly hereâhe's on his weakest string.
You can be perkier in the lower half of the bow.
Don't be so punctual; you're right but you're wrong.
Trios are three soloists. Soft doesn't mean slow.
Adjust your arm instead of the violin.
Attack, back off, and then attack again.
Let the sound of the chord decay before you go on.
When you have a rest, take it. You want your touch
to make the piano say, “Ah,” not “Ouch.”
Keep your hand rounded, as if it held a peach.
from
New Letters
Of all the forms of beingâ
I like a table
And
I like a lake.
The excitement of an upandcoming
Mistake:
Do not send word to your lover
If you cannot decide which one.
Involvement, like war, is a form
Of divination. Think
About what you saidâor didn'tâ
That's why it hurts to swallow.
My first words in French?
Cruche, olivier, fenêtre
.
Et, peut-être,
Pilier, tour
.
Yeah, for a while they were “involved”â
Then they “delved” into
“Abjure.”
Uncertainty more exciting than sex!
We could do serious, but
My lover was NO FUN.
O creamy cloud, indecision, I love you. I love you. I love you.
So badly. So slowly,
I want to enter you
From behind.
O ignorant protagonist
The lineaments of my faceâ
We had an interval,
A ludicrous,
“Us,” the most fleeting
Of all.
I was
A tachiste, a revenant;
He a revanchist.
Yeah, what felt at what saw.
Listen: the next time you cry it won't be
At a train station
In Franceâyou died at that sceneâ
To leave is to leave
Well enough.
I am soâ
Not lonely.
Worn and dark was my . . .
Bright blue my . . .
Sometimes you just wanna press Send, thinking
If this is what ends it all, so I am.
I will send you Glück's purple bathing suitâ
even if it kills us.
That's how I tell the storyâ“We were involved for a whileâlong was
Our distanceâand, mostlyâwrongâfinally
I sent him Louise Glück's âPurple Bathing Suit'â
Never to hear from him again.”
The train schedule was an étude.
Was I no longer eager
To study my lover?
In my lap Coleridge's constancy to an ideal object.
In the end:
A newly cleared
Table.
And, if cleanly forgotten, a little lost
Lake.
from
Green Mountains Review
for Marcus Mosiah Garvey
Even here on the south side of this city
of wind and blood, news is good for negroes.
A fat-faced, true African man, one of
those black men you know never ever
had a doubt that he is a man and strong,
too; one of those magic men
who know what God must feel like
standing over an army of angels; one
of those men who's stood at the edge
of the new century and seen a wide
world of what could be; a man who,
when he heard what Dubois said
about the color line thought right off
that this is going to be a century
where everybody will be talking
about niggers like they are new money,
and he, sure as hell, is going
to shine and shine. A man
with two big hands and a head
full of words who knows the freedom
of nothing to lose; a man who
knows the long legacy of rebels,
those maroons whispering Akan
in the hillsâknife men, cutlass men,
roots men, Congo men;
those yellow-eyed quiet men
who look at death like it is
a good idea that someone came up
with; a man who learned by
touching the split chest of a white
man, his heart still thumping,
everything inside him slick
with blood and water, his ribs
pulled aside where the doctor
tried; that all white men
ain't nothing but flesh, old rotting
flesh like everybody elseâ
a man who's done the math
and knows that for fifty years,
his people have been waiting
for something bigger than themselves.
Well, news has it that this man
is causing trouble in Harlem
and the world won't be the same
when he's done with it. Even
here, the excitement of it is
rushing through the blues joints
and people are strutting about like
they
have been marching, like
they
been waving flags, like
they
shouting
the name of freedom beside
the round-faced black man,
with his proud high voice
showering imperatives on the folks
who gather to hear him talk
with his sweet island singing.
Black man sweating, dressed
clean with high collar and good
shoes. Yeah, this is good news
walking, cause we all need a daddy,
a man with a good firm voice,
a man who knows what we must
do to change this wearying world,
a man with a head full of dreams
of ships, seven miles of them
coming into that gaping Hudson
mouth, red, gold and green flags
flapping in the airâseven miles
of ships as far as the eye can see,
coming in, coming in, coming in.
from
Hayden's Ferry Review