Read Sixfold Poetry Summer 2015 Page 7


  that’s not so far from the common cause I feel

            for affordable care,

            a holy spirit I long for

                      as I sing in the silent night,

  or while I read the Times

            Don Quixote

            excuse me Walter Mitty

            guzzling at the fountainhead.

  I know   the hunger and thirst

                                to purify this flag.

  I’ve seen it all   in the Before I read.

  They’re telling me with everything money can buy

            I’ve lost      and my father’s   grandfather’s   great-grandfather’s

                      monumental struggles   trashed

                                targets of cheap shots   hollow points.

                      20-something punks smirk in crocodile shoes

                                boss PhD’s   review their speeches

                                investigate prosecutors   not investigating non-existent fraud

                                create new forms   scientifically crafted bullshit

                                          moving needles

                                                    finding legs

                                                              life   sacred   CREP-form.

                      

            I’ve lost      but

                      I could sell out my ass.

            They’d love that.

                      It’s not enough to win:

                      Everyone else has to lose

                                or else they just can’t feel good

                                          about themselves.

                      Everyone else has to ignore mere math   mere fact

                                and hail   bend over for   The Unseen Hand

                                          that gropes and violates.

                      Everyone else has to kiss   the oily lips   and beaches

                                of this petrochemical Savior

                                          Christ      You’ve Never Known

                                                           You Can’t Recognize.

  and now

  I can feel my soles already flying like angels,

            daily news slipped under my chin

            the crowd mocking my union authorization cards

            while the hoods whisper in my ear

            one last time:

                      Abjure.

  Barth Landor

  What Is Left

  What is left of being right

  when in the long run I am wrong?

  At first I was just right

  until at last I was just left.

  Is it wrong to exit stage left

  if the prompt is not in the script?

  Merely to do no wrong

  is a good way to be left,

  although even the right way to be good

  may still in the end be just wrong.

  I lie down on our bed’s right side

  while you go to sleep on the other’s.

  If your right hand knew what your ring hand left,

  then at least I am right that I am wrong.

  Dalgairn House

  Heaven came up for rent at thirty pounds a week

  with no deposit down. We were freshly wed

  and student-poor, and so we signed a lease

  on paradise: we made our ascent

  to the sunlit upper story of a Scottish

  mansion on a hill in the Kingdom of Fife.

  Brambles ripened in the hedgerows

  and strawberries sweetened in the fields.

  On the lawn that welcomed even pheasant,

  a small boy nursed a patch of herbs.

  All was fertile indoors, too:

  stacks of books grew read, and the ribbon

  of my little Olivetti seeded letters

  for a garden of words I gave to you.

  In the home beneath our feet, the noises

  of children rose to our ears like Kansas corn,

  while above the heads of our landlord family,

  you turned to tell me

  that one of our own had taken root in you.

  That idyll ended long ago.

  Garret companions in our salad days,

  honeymoon scholars gaining fluency

  in languages and love,

  in our vinegar years we turned into

  strangers even in our common tongue.

  One of us yielded and one of us failed to,

  both of us strayed and one of us stayed.

  When one of us found—or lost—one’s truer self,

  one of us wept as one of us left.

  So the calamity happened.

  But I tell you that this did, too:

  we made bramble jam from berries

  we gathered on country lanes.

  We had little to our names.

  We read psalms aloud before bed

  above the room of a child called Jimbo,

  that myopic and timid sibling

  of important older sisters,

  the pale boy who still lives in my mind

  (we moved after a year and never returned)

  In a fragile state of innocence.

  Abigail F. Taylor

  Never So Still

  See this wire-boned boy climbing

  to the mangoes? Papi below

  sings—Oh Dusty Venezuela!

  Picked fruit falls to his blistered feet.

  He bites into it, peel and all.

  Ruben eats in the tree. Sublime

  juice tickles his wrists. He, aglow

  with Papi’s New World tales, clumsy

  in an old half-toothed mouth, retreats

  to dreams: America! Baseball!

  Papi taught him this, to throw fast

  and hard. To love equally so.

  Ruben, at sixteen, poor, tired,

  and yearning, sent to shore to play

  the game. To honor frail Papi,

  who died between his first and last

  crash into home plate. There were low

  years when he fought to inspire

  the song of himself in bad ways,

  and listless days were choppy

  with old promises. Then Ruben

  swallowed up his grandfather’s soul,

  became that man of effortless

  joy. And he loved so vibrantly.

  He had a son and was happy.

  I met him in the taste of sin.

  His cross pressed to my breasts. His bold

  grin and my paid for recklessness.

  I miss our spare talks, privately

  passed like school notes, that were sadly

  never enough.

  At Ruben’s wake, his son sat quiet

  and lonely in the front pe
w. He

  marveled at the rosary breathed

  into his father. I wanted

  to say, he was never so still.

  While the Streetlamp Listened

  She took

  his callow face

  and tipped it, nearly kissed

  in the sacred glow of night. But

  dawn came.

                                        And he

                                        felt her age press

                                        into forbidden fruit

                                        and her husk of wine-dark hair. The

                                        lark sang.

  Wichita Falls

  Can you remember dawn’s dreary mist

  as it curled and settled into the trees?

  Autumn had a peculiar way of falling before leaves.

  There are no loons on this side of the world,

  but I think of their hallowed calls

  fighting against a separate, peaceful cold.

  She had paid for a cabin far off the road;

  a hope of stitching back together a loveless

  marriage she herself had caused to unfold.

  But you and I found comfort in pitching camp

  beneath a dripping candled moon.

  Do you think that he returned to her arms

  that night, their faithless kissing as joined up writing

  or like that morning mist hugging brittle bark?

  Perhaps they stayed as distant as the loons.

  Either way, we woke with dawn.

  Our dog, the only one to grin at such an hour,

  rutted through pine needles, then leaped

  into the thicket, while wind chimes

  took on the beat of unseen hooves.

  We, as children, were never allowed to stray.

  It was the duty of grownups to strangle themselves

  in the undergrowth of wayward passions.

  Still, we followed the dog.

  Despite the light, all of it slept:

  The brambles. The hollied hill. The pale red robin.

  Only the beck spoke over moss and stone.

  We found the dog laying at the water in lazy company.

  These fawns and young bucks, not quite into their points,

  drank with caution.

  As we called out, our echoes shepherded the deer

  to distant corners, while the dog bounded to us

  and licked flashes of bare skin.

  He took a way back to the dark cabin

  beyond the trees.

  You pressed last night’s coals to new tinder

  and we tried to scramble eggs on a dry skillet.

  A good fire had been made by your hands,

  but breakfast turned brown, improved only

  by a dashing of salt and the clear air.

  He stepped onto the closed off deck.

  His eyes blank against the breeze,

  so remarkably outside the man we knew.

  He saw us and dissolved into a familiar face,

  then returned inside to prepare something better

  than what we had eaten.

  Do you remember how we spoke like this was home?

  Our souls slumbered there with cold pine and warm fire.

  We understood the dog’s contentment to roll in sweet mud,

  follow the deer, and ignore the shrillness of women in winter.

  At peace in the wandering.

  And you told me the cabin had a design like jazz.

  Frozen in marrow. Harsh and vibrant.

  Had I known then how to tell you the rhythm of this wood,

  I would have shared everything.

  George Longenecker

  Polar Bears Drowning

  the news isn’t so bad today

  two crows perch on a large stone in the meadow

  then fly off looking for a few morsels

  but the pasture is barren

  the war isn’t going as badly as it could

  meanwhile I wait for the tax refund

  which a lot of people will get this year

  except people who have no income

  but it’s not so bad since they pay no taxes

  the two crows perch on the stone again

  haven’t there been worse wars

  I really don’t mind reading the news

  as much as most people

  many more people have died in other wars

  that’s good news

  this coffee isn’t too bad

  and the weather isn’t as bad today

  so the mail probably won’t be too late

  it’s not as bad here as in some countries

  polar bears drowning on page four

  probably the president will do something

  I think he cares about bears

  the war isn’t going so badly now

  the check will be in the mail

  if it comes today

  those crows haven’t moved

  but one flaps its black wings

  so it must be okay

  A Protest Rally for the 
Bold-faced Hyphen

  Protest the extinction

  of the Bold-faced Hyphen!

  The once-numerous hyphen

  is all but extinct.

  I have seen them

  flying together in pairs,

  making a mad dash

  to safety—

  fly, fly away quickly,

  before you too become extinct

  and forgotten—

  or held captive and misused,

  for that is the apostrophe’s fate—

  held prisoner in plurals,

  on road signs,

  in mis-punctuated ads.

  Mourn the apostrophe’s demise.

  Solidarity!

  Save the apostrophe

  Save the hyphen

  Free them from their sentences

  Now!

  Free the apostrophe

  Now!

  Save the Bold-faced Hyphen

  Now!

  The Garter Snake

  lies coiled on quartzite

  high on Worcester Mountain

  it’s barely warm enough

  for a reptile to emerge

  onto its favorite stone

  coiled facing west

  in April sun

  waiting for flies

  for months he’s waited

  sheltered in a granite crevice

  covered by three feet of snow

  now he’s ready for sun

  who knows why people hate snakes

  but human hatred runs deep as Genesis

  hard as quartzite veins in stone

  this year new people to hate

  with the same old swords, nooses and missiles

  his long beige stripe is still

  his brown scales barely quiver

  he watches me but doesn’t

  even flick his tongue

  when hate’s all around

  and it gets too cold

  I’d like to leave it all

  crawl into a crevice

  with the garter snake

  maybe someday when the sun’s warm again

  slither out across stone

  onto the mountain

  Alligators

  Around the bend in the canal

  we startle an enormous alligator

  sunning, awakened by the clack

  of our canoe paddles, he splashes

  into dark water and slides beneath the canoe.

  My heart beats faster—you were scared

  she says—well he was only six feet away—

  but other alligators ignore us, barely

  turning their cloudy eyes, unwilling

  to relinquish their sunny places.


  Alligators are accustomed to daily

  canoeists paddling the Loxahatchee,

  maybe they know it’s Sunday and surely

  they know east, where the first sun warms

  their cold hides as they slither to the bank

  to bask—I offer him coffee from my thermos—

  Coffee with sugar, alligator?

  Sugar plantations and suburbs

  have drained the Everglades and the Loxahatchee

  nearly killing off the Seminole and the alligators

  who now emblazon football pennants, sweatshirts

  and coffee mugs: Gators! Seminoles!

  The alligator basks and smiles,

  he knows who’s drifting to extinction first—

  we canoe around the bend where five

  more alligators sleep in the sun.

  I Want To Be Your Tom

  Each night I climb your fence

  I want to yowl at the moon

  to growl and hiss at any other male

  to crawl into your bed

  I want to purr and lick inside your ears

  to sniff you all over

  to look in your eyes

  to smell you so strongly there’s no other scent

  I want to lay with you and put my paws around you

  to lap you until you cry mrow tdrow

  to feel you in heat, to feel you purr and yelp

  I want you to dig your claws into my fur

  And if you’ll have me across your fence

  I want us to have ten kittens

  I hope you dodge every car and dog

  I want us to curl up together and purr when our fur is gray

  Ben Cromwell

  Sometimes a Flock of Birds

  for Gwendolyn 3/11/14

  I don’t believe in God

  because if he exists,

  he’s an asshole

  for giving me cancer

  among other things.

  But I love you more

  than one animal should

  be able to love another.

  Sometimes a cloud passes

  revealing the mountains

  minted in new snow,

  and the sun shines down

  on us for the first time

  lighting your sleeping face.

  Sometimes a flock of birds

  breaks from the treetops

  and flies pellmell into

  the blue distance.

  My arms are indelibly marked

  with your weight,

  your shape.

  Whatever is in me,

  whatever I am at root,

  whatever I hope

  might one day be revealed;

  You are.

  Assisted Living

  I don’t want this to be too sentimental,

  so fuck you, Grandma.

  I’ve been thinking about the dead,