Read Sixfold Poetry Summer 2014 Page 4


  But the ptarmigan, the under-bird, the ground-feeder,

  The last one being carried off in the teeth of a fox,

  Says Me, I can still feel the wind.

  I can go-back and feel it.

  5.

  Some nights this winter a great-horned owl was wont to perch outside my bedroom window.

  I’d never once see him. But his call, working like boiling water over the ice-thick air,

  Caused me several times to think he was right beside me in bed.

  The Great-Horned Owl: As large as our largest hawks, and fierce-looking.

  So much fiercer than my ptarmigan bird, nights he hooted to me through the glass,

  I imagined him sky-stalking, with preternatural foresight, so that the motion of the stars

  To him, was as jewels scattering across a floor.

  Untrue, but the image struck me nevertheless, because I was smaller than he was.

  Because he could see me through the dark, and often told me so.

  Lee Kisling

  How the Music Came to My Father

  Sort of a miracle, you might say because

  I never saw or heard him practice. Just one day

  there he was playing an accordion in his baggy pants

  and white shirt looking like he was holding two bags

  of potatoes, squeezing the air in and out of them.

  The miracle of it—so sudden and unexpected—I now

  picture God reaching down his wavering finger to touch

  some other man with musical sensibilities, some father

  two doors down, but accidentally touching Glenn.

  And there he was, blessed, in our crackerbox house,

  playing some nickering old-world polka and a passed-over

  father down the street pulled his belt from his pants

  and went looking for his boys.

  The cosmic error was corrected eventually by

  whoever it is that fixes God’s mistakes. We went back

  to our yelling and the whippings and the accidental

  Myron Floren moment passed. The world I knew

  made sense again, and the holy finger must have

  only barely brushed against him—he never said this

  is going to hurt me more than it hurts you. And now

  he’s in a sort of band of accidental squeeze box angels

  on 42nd Street in heaven and there is a champagne bubble

  machine, and sometimes they go marching in their old

  army uniforms down that gold paved road,

  shaking with palsy, tickling the ivories,

  singing Leaning on the Everlasting Arms.

  Kindly Give Up

  Kindly give up these seats for the elderly and the daft,

  arthritic abuelos singing pharmacy songs.

  Kindly give them up.

  Where they have been you are going.

  Where they are going you are also going.

  Give them directions, not to there-

  they will find there easy enough, soon enough,

  to where else they are headed before there

  with always bags of stuff on the bus.

  Kindly give them your seats

  your help, your hand, your memory.

  Eyes magnified by thickening lenses, leopard spotted.

  Less admired certainties, less effective remedies.

  Less likely recoveries, less remembered memories.

  Like strollered babies eying their peers,

  they watch each other disappear.

  Landmarks of long lives, having passed by here before,

  creased old maps, now everything’s changed,

  what with the by-pass and one-way streets to the shiny

  spotless hospital on the hill where

         Once upon a time

                   cows stood.

  What is most depressing about cemeteries is the heavy yellow

  machinery—once just a couple of bums with shovels

  lowering themselves, making it last.

  Please give up thinking of their movement as mass transit.

  Picked-up pilgrims along the road, slowly boarded,

  carried to clinics, casinos and churchyards,

  deposited on corners. Speak to them

  in Polish, Spanish, or Serbo-Croat.

  Nod in understanding,

  yes, yes.

  Babies once, transported in arms, never alone,

  tiny fingers, pink toes wee wee allthewayhome,

  soothed, sheltered, spanked, adored. Kindly make

  a place for them, give up your seats, soon

  the return, to the corner of

  Here & Gone, en memoriam, the gray

  guests of honor.

  Borrowings

  Here is the imaginary library

  where you can borrow a father—a book

  you didn’t finish. Old books about fathers

  and grandfathers with brittle pages,

  pictures and maps of Kansas and Iowa

  may show signs of wear. They are anecdotal—

  the price of a horse, the hot weather in September.

  Here, the reading room.

  Empty chairs and morning sun

  slanting through the windows,

  the slow quiet turning of pages. Shhhh.

  No howl here—no keening, no Shall We Gather,

  but someone has written these books because

  someone needs to read them.

  I will be your father if you’ll be my daughter.

  a loaner to get you around the town;

  oh what a family we could be—

  understudies, bound to say

  sorry, I loved you,

  and goodbye.

  Write 50 Times

  (for Dave Moses)

  1. I will not chew gum in class. I will

  2. not chew gum in class. I will

  3. not gum in class chew. I will

  4. in class chew not gum. I will

  5. not sing The Marseillaise in class.

  6. I will not, just incidentally, ever work for the telephone company.

  7. And I will NEVER put my hand in my shirt like Napoleon Bonaparte.

  7. Well yes, I suppose it all started with the gum chewing.

  8. And some things just happen, of course.

  9. I will remain gum-free, attentive, and responsible,

  9a. but possibly not in class.

  10. I will not chew gum at my Uncle Inor’s funeral.

  11. Tomorrow afternoon at 2 pm. Thanks for asking.

  12. I will not chew more than one stick of gum in class.

  13. I will not, as a rule, respond well to petty discipline in class.

  14. I mean, who the hell really cares about gum chewing?

  15. With all due respect.

  16. Or bloody prime numbers. Or King Whatsit. Or wretched poems.

  19. Like going to school ever did you any good.

  22. Bongo the Clown probably makes more money than you

  29. and he drives a red Camaro.

  34. Christopher Columbus chewed gum and he discovered Virginia or someplace.

  37. Actually, chewing gum is a sedative.

  38. It helps me concentrate.

  39. It’s a health issue really—I could get a prescription.

  41. You don’t want to see me when I haven’t had a chew for a few hours.

  43. Thousands of people work in the chewing gum industry.

  44. Good decent Americans with mortgages and car payments.

  45. Next I suppose we won’t be permitted to sleep in class.

  46. What’s this class about, anyway?

  48. We the People demand to have the right to chew gum!

  49. Give me liberty or give me some gum!

  50. E chewibus pluribus gumbus!

  Jose A. Alcantara

  Finding the God Particle

  When we are
finally standing face to face

  and flesh to flesh, remind me that I want

  more than your body, more than your mind.

  Remind me that I want the infinite sweep of you

  the full onrushing charge of you

  the m-c-squared of you, the big bang of you.

  Remind me to give you the indivisible parts of me

  the strange quarks of me, the charm of me

  the up and down of me.

  And though 95% of everything else is darkness

  let us be nothing but a tangle of vibrating strings

  caught in the claws of a curious cat.

  Alone

  I fell asleep by the river again.

  Thirty-eight degrees. The Stranger

  in my lap. How is it that the same sun

  that gives this sweet lethargy

  brings another man to murder?

  A single shot, a pause, then four more.

  As I watch the ducks drop into the eddies

  I know the sun is not to blame, nor the moon,

  the fires, the droughts, or the surging tides.

  We act. We do what we want.

  Sometimes we get away with it.

  Sometimes we pay a price.

  A Day in the Life

  It’s her birthday.

  She opens a tiny black box

  bound in a blue bow.

  A billion billion stars tumble out

  some yellow, some red

  some big, some small.

  They fall, in all directions

  into a bottomless black bowl

  where they burn burn burn

  until she makes a wish

  and with her cold breath

  blows them out.

  David A. Bart

  Veteran’s Park

  I walked there at daybreak

  to view the colossal bronze

  of a young ensign, bereft, his rifle

  capped with another’s helmet.

  May thirty-first. This was once

  observed as Decoration Day

  but today there are no starry pennants

  or tri-colored sashes pinned across

  men and women who rise from folding

  chairs to gingerly salute. This place is empty,

  almost. A teenager is learning to drive.

  Sparrows make their ablutions in the sand.

  And there. My dead father, standing away,

  teeth and glasses restored since I saw him last.

  But it’s someone else, of course,

  some other elder serviceman

  yet to be taken Over There.

  Bicycle parts and a broken cement

  culvert lay in the creek—mortar and caisson.

  Struck by its lanyard, a flag pole is ringing.

  Somewhere a lawnmower idles—

  my father’s song—the droning made dulcet

  by distance and wind and how I like to imagine

  it is the sound made by the morning star.

  This Week

  Our daughter lost her incisor.

  It rattled in the plastic bite-size

  treasure chest her school supplies.

        Baptists examine their thirty

        foot steeple taken down

        for repair.  It rests on its side

        across the parking lot.

  Instead of sleeping on it

  she buried her tooth in the yard.

  Soiled fingernails, a red gap

  between thorn canines,

  like a novice vampire

  interring a fang.

        Without its mitre, the house

        of God resembles any other

        middle class dwelling.

        On the church roof, spotlights

        hit a white spire of moths.

  My wife found only sleeping hands

  tucked under the pillow.

  Regardless, the tooth fairy left a dollar.

        After work I drive

        past the church.

        Sideways, the steeple

        points the way home.

  The Game

  The drill team built a half-time prop,

  some sort of rickety fuselage parked

  in front of Wildcats spelled with Solo

  cups pushed into chain link fence.

  Wind carries the clatter of drum practice

  across the street to this coffee house

  buzzing with after-school girls.

  A petite scholar pouts for a boy on her laptop,

  hands cupping her au lait, taking the brew

  like a philter. Bedheads peruse an art book

  trying hard to be unimpressed by 1000 nudes.

  When an unfamiliar classmate enters

  they turn but pretend they don’t see her,

  even though they are dying to be noticed.

  There is a father sitting with his very little girl

  who’s eager to greet them all but it’s time

  to leave for the game. As he helps put on her coat

  he recites, with each button, an oracle

  assuring his daughter that every closure

  will bring something unexpected and new:

  a gift

  a ghost

  a friend

  a foe

  a letter to come

  a journey to go

  Green Ghost

  Her hand made spontaneous scribble

  of things to come. On the grocery list

  our grandmother wrote no not him

  not the one. Moments later Oswald

  shot the president.

  She miscarried seven times.

  She claimed their spirits awoke

  and could be heard after dark.

  At dusk she smelled cigarettes,

  said the revenant of a smoking paramour

  had come to her kitchen window.

  She once pursued a sad infatuation

  to Mexico, returned with a photo

  of the catholic priest and a devil mask

  she hung above her bed.

  She put grandchildren in the guest bed

  to sleep but we stayed awake to play

  the board game stored underneath.

  The glowing phantom spinner pointed

  its finger at whoever had a turn but

  we never learned to play. We just watched

  Green Ghost spin phosphorescent

  then jumped into bed before our grandmother

  looked in, dabbing her red-rimmed eyes,

  muttering about missing pieces,

  the lack of rules and small voices

  in the night.

  December 13th

  She wears a pair of pink strap-on

  marabou wings and whatever she’s staring at

  is something most of us hope we never see.

  I recognize her from Cora street’s wildflower

  median. She knelt there for days last summer

  and announced Do Not Mow—

  repeating the posted phrase as if to teach

  a bird to talk. She looks like she grew up

  from a fifth grade classmate I remember,

  one who skipped cracks to save her mothers

  back, a girl with boy’s glasses and breasts

  too soon. Shoppers skirt the sidewalk

  where she stands this evening in a stained

  white formal, a store window at her back

  as if she’s part of the display. Her perpetual grin

  reminds me why mannequin smiles show no teeth.

  This displaced bridesmaid shuffles into the street

  where her damp hair gleams red with Christmas light

  and she becomes someone else. A serene ingenue,

  ecstatic in her ordeal—Saint Lucy, unaware

&
nbsp; she has been crowned and the crown is fire.

  Greg Grummer

  War Reportage

  The war began about six feet from victory

  and crawled there over the eyes of a child.

  In the beginning soldiers walked up the road,

  never minding that as they did so the road got them

  pregnant with map in their own private Gethsemane.

  Then a mother, crucified on coming unwantedness,

  bled son from the poem nailed into her trees.

  Therefore, one by one, the Europes came to explain themselves.

  After that we hoisted up crows and made love in stones.

  Satan picked up the throat of the town

  and drank from it until there was no more sleep.

  The town died then woke up again because of its smell.

  “That’s when Satan returned, sir,

  and ate what happened in the field.”

  But here in the camera one can see

  where bleeding and bleeding, and where “so on.”

  One can see where two men revenged themselves on a dog,

  where a moiety revenged itself on a people, and where a ditch

  revenged itself on a shovel by spitting up church.

  But then you knew all that, from the gap

  between fingers and from the distance between wolves.

  You knew it, but you forgot it somehow.

  The Night Before the Battle in Which I’m Killed

  Someday it won’t be moonlight

  coming down to this field

  but it will be the actual moon.

  The moon will fill the land with its priests,

  igniting ditches and water

  buffalo with desperate passions.

  Trees will strain with the hatefulness of the moon,

  snapping under its high tiredness.

  The moon’s pilgrimage down to this field

  will split the brains of crows and carp

  will die with that kind of light in their eyes.

  Someday the moon will present itself,

  along with its card, as the last actor of grief

  in this waiting room of bones and milk.

  The world’s infantry will be as surprised

  to be visited by the moon as pigs entered by demons

                    and driven off a cliff.