Read Sixfold Poetry Summer 2015 Page 8


  those near to death like to a lover.

  I am walking the wood paneled halls

  of your small and immaculately kept home.

  I am rearranging the furniture.

  I am unstraightening pictures.

  Especially the one of you on your wedding day,

  The one where you look so beautiful,

  The windblown curls of yellow hair,

  Your bright blue eyes,

  a smile like abandon,

  Like luck.

  I know you’ve moved to a center,

  somewhere they can take care of you.

  I know the walls must be bare, the cupboards empty,

  the beds in storage.

  Tell me, what have the days been like?

  Do they let you wake early to walk the beach?

  Does the pale blue light that tips in

  through the bedroom window remind you of me?

  Do they let you sleep

  with the window propped?

  Does the coolness of the morning air almost

  stop your heart?

  In my mind, I take down your picture, press fingers

  sticky with Jiff to the glass over your lips.

  I hold it against me,

  hold onto you.

  You’ll have to wipe the smudges from the glass over the photograph.

  You’ll have to rehang it on this imaginary wall.

  Once you were a tern or a loon,

  Perhaps a frigate bird.

  Something that returns to the water.

  I rode on your back, all motion and wind,

  and the sea was in us.

  Salt water was in our veins.

  You are not coming back

  to tell me

  we are kindred.

  I’ve seen the gray mist of your eyes,

  the curve of your body, like bent feathers,

  like a drowned gull washed up on the beach.

  This is why I never come.

  I can’t bear to watch

  the stillness overtake you.

  Fox holes

  Are there no atheists in fox holes? Perhaps you don’t get into a fox hole unless you have something to believe in, but in my experience, most of the people in fox holes are in the process of giving up their gods.

  The world will continue without me, will continue to turn without us, my love, though the thought makes me feel a little sick to my stomach.

  I would like to believe that only you and I exist. I have believed such a thing. I believe both at once . . . in the world, and also in nothing beyond what I can taste.

  I am the juice that runs down your fingers, I am the sweat that pours from you, the extravagant feeling of fingers parting your hair, an extra set of hands to let the world slide through.

  Let us rejoice in each other, let us give thanks. Let us suffer in each other. Let us be tortured and meaningless and pass out of the world having mattered to no one, having no immortality beyond our mingled dirt.

  Robert Mammano

  the way the ground shakes

  or the holes in the walls

  where you would be able to see the guts of the house

  if the house had guts.

  it makes good sense that our limitations are so

  tight around our cute little necks

  and our ambitions are knick-knacks

  collected on end tables

  sit for years and are eventually

  thrown outdoors to get turned over

  ashes to ashes junk to middens.

  daylight from citrus oil

  lampshimmer tomorrow,

  the crunchy foot prints on the flash frozen grass

  the architecture of the water structures that come

                                                   out of your sigh.

                            I’ll watch till there is nothing to see,

              let my fingers linger in your hair—

  shivering whispers sew the buttons on the morning

  the intrigue has been woven and fastened like this

  for as long as the deep sky went blue

  and blue to true and just, just

  out of reach, your skin, so soft just under—

  how do our weak wonders rest

  their troubled feet and great heavy heads?

  the steady lonesomeness lovely

  almost passing as longing.

  the fever climbs about cloud cover high

  and stolen away

                            a bit longer you must.

  look at all them letters

  all the damned things flitting about,

  blustering and flummoxed

  colliding and colluding!

  just outside this window

  on all the awnings

  squatting and cosmic—

  I want to talk about what holds me.

  I want to talk about gravity,

  the newspaper from two days ago

  filled with rain stuffing the gutter.

  we continue to be surprised by violins,

  yell across the avenue

  as if we were in a crowd.

  we’re just pieces.

  there is nothing but life

  happening between us,

  but the sky

  the atmosphere

  and beyond our weather,

  the whole mess.

  consciousness is such a delicate accident.

  stars don’t cross .

  two lines

  expressed in tons

  of wood, gold, and concrete

  for twenty centuries.

  “and by the way thanks for that”

  half-assed over the shoulder disputes

  lobbed like a split pomegranate in parting

  we were in the kitchen cutting onions

  and someone came in

  we pretended we were at our wit’s ends

  that strange region where men weep

  a tangle of ropes

  the path of least resistance is atrophy

  sometimes decisions waiting to be made

  make themselves

  evaporate opportunities

  and inaction knots an expiration

  no

  living past tense

  all the moments of knowing

  you wanted everything changed

  line up like constellations

  flickering moot way way up

  and I trace these stubborn lines

  ‘look a seed

  a bulb, a tuber’

  back toward the last times I wasn’t myself

  those nights

  when who knows who circulated

  through the little back alleys

  and sloppy veins

  crocheted byways

  underground amateur astrology

  root structures drunk moon shine

  risky

  I still find a stray hair

  here or there

  a polka dotted sock

  when my underwear drawer is almost empty

  and how many years since that smile glinted

  you won’t remember

  the handkerchief situation isn’t half as strange as it seems

  because this contraption scratches

  tilt your mouth

  and what voice chooses

  come clean for once

  bones after the flesh has rotted away

  a wolf big black bird with hunger

  a feather       a hair     a plume of smoke

  we’ll go on and on

  wondering how 2 people in complete agreement

  could argue so long

  “I’m not lazy       I just don’t see the point”

  imagine if we picked any direction

  and just went

  but sometimes these directions loop<
br />
  5 years in circles

  there used to be formulas for these sorts of things

  out of boredom

  something pretty is molded

  with my preachy voice

  that clears out subway cars

  mind the gaps

  how many “well             the names aren’t important”

  until the names disappear and the places follow

  leaving dull skeleton stories waltzing around

  I’m 2 stepping this 3 step dance

  “my first love was a boat”

  independent thought like buoys suspended

  rope worn round the wrists and ankles

  like cheap juvenile jewelry

  lately through this strange irrelevant term

  seems all my thoughts fall about

  neither here nor there

  I’ve been thinking about people living in their heads

  I like imagining them miniature

  pulling down eyelid curtains a warm glow still behind

  I wonder how they’d leave if they wanted to

  I know it’s fancy but I’ll bet the ants still get in

  maybe through chimney ears

  and march their numbers along the skull’s walls

  a few resolutions ago

  Nothing is set

  run around and around

  New Year’s eve

  we’ll drop our own ball.

  I’ll try not to play the accordion.

  My sweet, what?

  I am almost out of space.

  Oh what wonderful geese you have, ma’am

  and what a sigh.

  Even the mailman gets a raise

  and here I am still jobless,

  a big green apple.

  She left last night

  and they’re all praying for you

  green peppers . . . green peppers.

  Cross the ‘i’s and dot the ‘t’s

  let them talk about despicable so-and-so’s

  and we’ll throw in an orange wedge with our two cents.

  Read it to me in your real voice.

  Let us send messages on rays of light—

  No, no, give me primitive construction any day

  tic-tac fingers and swollen pulleys.

  “Ain’t no rest for the wicked.”

  a post-modern post-script:

  Nothing is set

  We moveable parts.

  Run around

  around

  and I breathe deep.

  Janet Smith

  Rocket Ship

  Emery Park had a pretend rocket ship.

  We walked there in the afternoon, and I,

  legs straight, palms flat, dropped down

  the metal slide onto the cold sand.

  My mother made me wear dresses;

  they fluttered up like frightened birds.

  I wanted to walk by myself, but I was seven.

  One man in a torn jacket stood by the fountain,

  hands in his pockets, eyeing the merry-go-round.

  “Don’t talk to him,” my mother said.

  I wouldn’t even talk to the girl my age,

  who held a sucker in her mouth as she

  slid down after me. That was dangerous.

  Later, we walked across the street

  to Crawford’s Market. I stuck my hot, dry

  hand deep into the barrel of hard candy.

  The store clerk glowered over her counter.

  Watch your children, a sign shaped like

  a pointing finger warned.

  I unwrapped the candy Mother bought me

  one by one, placed each on my tongue,

  and moved so the wrappers in my sweater

  pocket rustled. A red disk burned my mouth.

  I spat it on the sidewalk. That was wrong.

  We walked home past the park, and my mother

  grabbed my hand.. The rocket ship

  exploded with boys, yelling and hitting.

  Be Good

  I once was pointed to the corner

  of a room where the curtains swooned.

  Red-eyed, hands tight as buds, I held

  the pink tissue mother gave me.

  She and father agreed, I was bad.

  Dust motes drifting through daylight

  fell on my head.

  Puzzle box unlocked and smashed,

  I moved into a fragment of myself.

  Later they allowed me to set foot

  where the lamps shone upon doilies

  bright as lilies. Be good, they said.

  The dark boughs of my woods still

  thrash upon themselves.

  Pockets

  My mother sewed the pockets

  of coats. She called it piecework.

  After her shift, she slept on top

  of the bedspread in her clothes

  so as not to mess the covers.

  Then the bed was straightened.

  We went to a coffee shop called Earl’s.

  The meals came with cake or rice

  pudding. She wore bright lipstick,

  hairdo arrowed with bobby pins,

  an ironed blouse with the dime store

  brooch like a medal on her chest.

  Practical daylight fell upon her things—

  the nylon scarf, the curlers and the pins,

  the pennies saved inside a jelly jar—

  but it was the beige slip that slid

  like a rattlesnake off the chair

  onto the floor that scared me. She said

  a slip stopped boys from looking

  at the outline between your legs.

  Smooth and supple as flayed skin,

  the beige slip told me how my mother

  became the red-lipped ghost. Listen,

  she’d say, here’s a coupon, a hairnet,

  a pad, a needle and some thread.

  The dresser and the nightstand

  each adorned with scarves depicting

  rosebuds, bluebirds, a shepherdess,

  and a leering doe with red lips.

  Where was the interior life?

  So many pockets, and nothing

  but bare hands to hide. I was told

  to never touch the sharp scissors

  she had honed. She wore dresses

  with no sleeves in summer, arms freckled,

  warm, and fat as rising loaves.

  The change on the dresser

  never added up. The nylon briefs

  and bras lay cool and folded

  in a narrow drawer that stuck.

  She smiled at me as if her mouth

  held straight pins. Here’s a hanky,

  a spare key, a dime for emergencies.

  Stop eating cookies or you won’t eat

  your dinner. There’s no one

  now to accuse or defend her,

  except me—her most loyal prisoner.

  It Surprises You

  It could be a cold Wednesday.

  Moving your feet along the ground,

  shouldering through the air

  is pleasure. Your heart fastens

  on a house you always pass

  that now needs looking at.

  You love the nape of your own neck.

  When you were seven and wandered

  from your parents’ sight,

  this was how you saw the world:

  every edge hardened with reality.

  That’s why you drew lines

  around the pictures before you filled

  them in in your coloring book.

  You begged for a pet, even a fish

  or a bird, because you loved the world

  and needed a body to put that in.

  One day you stared out your bedroom

  window: roofs, stars, moon,

  the crowns of trees reached for you.

  You were already falling.

  The days dream us and the nights

  wake in
our ears. Today, sitting

  at a desk or driving a car,

  you wonder, what was all that childhood

  longing about? When you enter

  the black room of your aloneness,

  nothing bad happens after all.

  Nobody walks more solitary

  than a child. You could ask now

  for a piece of that slow waiting

  that married you to your hunger.

  An hour might spring on you with

  a daydream hidden in its claws,

  your old loneliness in its mouth.

  Fireworks over Chain Lake

  One July 4th I stayed at your house

  on Chain Lake. We opened

  two bottles of pinot noir and put

  swimsuits on. Across the water,

  fireworks exploded like cannons

  aimed upon us. I woke at 3 AM

  to rain splashing against the house.

  You were asleep downstairs

  in your wet swimsuit with the TV on.

  When the first bursts exploded,

  light fell like pollen on our heads.

  We jumped up and down on the dock,

  drunk and shouting. Why have we

  waited so long to be found good enough?

  As children we loved any tree,

  any mountain, any sky.

  Others appeared. They yelled for us.

  We hid. We went hungry.

  Gina Loring

  Dementia

  the women. the women. the women.

  the babies. the babies. the babies.

  How lucky not to remember

  the mountain of missed milestones.

  The spirit spark dusted over and dimmed.

  How lucky to melt into yourself like that,

  the entire muddy footprint path erased.

  In lucid moments

  few and far between

  when the room comes into focus,

  you remember me.

  A stranger with your eyes.

  You know

  the straw I hold to your lips

  the lullabies I sing low

  the monologue prayer hymns I write in your palm:

  redemption.

  His

  Here to see your father?

  I ask how she knows.

  You look just like him.

  She waves her clipboard,

  motions for me to follow.

  It takes three nurses to administer the medication today.

  He is a restless windstorm trying to break free.

  Daddy, I say, sing with me.

  I’m gonna lay down my sword and shield