Read Sixfold Poetry Summer 2015 Page 9

Down by the river side, down by the river side, down by the river side

  The silver smooth of the needle shines like a tiny skyscraper.

  He meets its eye in resignation, watches it disappear into his arm.

  I’ve always been the type to avert the eyes,

  learned early not to look.

  I don’t remember the pinch of the needle sliding through skin

  I don’t remember the blood draining from vein to tube

  I don’t remember the waiting room or the walk back to the car

  all I remember is the Polaroid of him

  protocol for paternity testing, verify identity.

  I was ten

  and already a man had ripped apart the ribcage,

  sliced my heart open

  just to see.

  I ain’t gonna study war no more

  I ain’t gonna study war no more

  I ain’t gonna study war no more

  The nurses exit the room.

  For now, their job is done.

  Eyes closed, he claps his hands to the beat.

  We sing.

  Our Last Days

  I. Monday, April 14th

  Convalescent homes

  house blank stares where

  urine stank and ammonia air

  fistfight florescent lights

  straining to see

  the million memories

  suspended from the stucco ceiling

  prayers scattered everywhere like rogue shooting stars, 
dying as they soar.

  A backwards culture we must be

  leaving our elders to endless claustrophobic days and cherry Jell-O.

  II. Tuesday, May 20th

  My voice dangles mute from my neck

  as I wipe the running from his nose

  try to console the boy inside his eyes.

  Sometimes he recognizes me

  always meets my gaze at least once during the visit

  the illusive layered dimension is lifted

  together we march this sorrowful slow dance 
to music we cannot remember

  while earthly things like apologies and birthdays 
spin weightless around us.

  I want to relieve him. I cry into his chest,

  savor the gift of time like a peasant at the Queen’s feet.

  Wish him a good journey, free him from himself.

  III. Wednesday, June 11th

  Morning.

  We’re calling to inform you that the patient has expired.

  As if he were a quart of milk.

  I had seen him on Saturday, sang “His Eye is on the Sparrow,”

  held his warm hand, long brown fingers 
against the smaller beige version, mine.

  The three days between Saturday and Wednesday 
trampled me, a stampede of sorrow.

  Rushed to the mirror to look at him in my face.

  Angry fireflies

  Traumatic experiences do not dissolve in the wind,

  sweep away like dandelion petals

  they do not eat themselves for dinner

  disappear, a gruesome sliver

  they like to hang around

  pacing like an alligator in an elevator,

  a swarm of angry fireflies, 
spelling out the same story in the sky each night

  intrusive visitors who climb in through windows, defecate on dreams

  blues and greens is the song they sing

  when you are in a yellow mood

  admiring the moon

  they tip toe in through the back door and hijack your laughter

  lift your eyelids to paint a dull hue

  force you to look through fun house mirrors

  long after the circus has left town

  being angry with god will 
get you nowhere on a fast train

  after the halo of stars has stopped windmilling around your head

  and your face stings like a cement wall has kissed you hard and long

  and you try to get up but can not make your body move

  just when the world is coming back into focus

  and your ribs are kicked in

  the train will arrive shiny and smooth

  serving complimentary champagne and warm croissants

  the window seat view will be beautiful

  you will have time to replay every moment

  a swarm of broken and bent promise

  flashes of half-hearted dreams rotting in the wind

  you will lock yourself in the bathroom

  the woman in the mirror will greet you with a piercing gaze

  she will say you are meant to fall

  to understand the meaning of flight

  there is no bargaining

  look down at the blueprint map on your palm, make a choice

  healing is a profound art

  no one can free you but yourself

  the damn train is going nowhere

  and you might stay on that motherfucker for years if you’re not careful

  you may even drift to sleep, a cozy still

  they will bring you a pillow and a mint

  the tracks rocking in rhythm like a mantra

  the angels will not give up on you

  even when you have traveled miles and miles

  they will keep the faith of your return

  the porch light stays on so you know you are welcome

  inside where your life is waiting

  J. Lee Strickland

  Minoan Elegy

  Starting with Europa and with Zeus,

  the flowers and the beach, the rape and rapture.

  All the sordid excesses of gods

  that lead us, in the end, to what we are.

  Torches flare

  and break into the long oppressive night.

  The labyrinth walls, the floor, the vaulted heights

  are tortured into hardened shapes

  by leaping blades of light.

  The glare wounds eyes pulled wide

  by timeless time in lightless dark

  and Minotaur recoils (a move he instantly regrets).

  The brilliant feast is crumbs now snatched away

  as darkness falls again,

  broken by false ghostly shapes

  that dance across his eyes.

  If we could see him now what would we see?

  Skin bleached white by life in constant night.

  A massive taurine head perched on

  a lean, hard-muscled, naked frame.

  A body fitting of the offspring of a god.

  And sadness . . .

  So great a sadness the beast in him

  must bear the whole.

  That, too, worthy of the gods

  if ever gods showed feeling for

  the sorrows that they wrought.

  In darkness he listens.

  The first low moans come

  mixed with whispered bits of speech

  as the sharp smell of fear reaches his nose.

  The voices are new. The ritual is old.

  He doesn’t know how old, for

  he cannot say, awake or in his dreams,

  how time goes by,

  the calculation linked to long ago

  when light and dark had equal weight,

  their alternations ticked the passing days.

  Now, like the only tick of some great clock,

  the torches flare and unseen hands thrust victims

  to their final night,

  to Minotaur a signal that

  the senseless dance of humankind

  continues just above.

  The moans grow more despairing

  as these lost souls slowly move apart.

  Each thinks to find a way back to the gate

  through which they came,

  but all are wrong.

  Fear and darkness confound every sense

  as tortured angles of the labyrinth

  do their part to trump the unaccustomed ear.

  The Bull-man’s nostrils flare.


  His ears keen to each separate, novel sound.

  He moves easily in the inky dark

  going toward the gate.

  He knows each scruple of the stone-strewn floor,

  each crevice of the chiseled walls.

  His hands trace knowing patterns as he walks.

  He knows already the fate

  of these sorry pawns of sacrifice.

  They, like all those come before, will stumble

  through the labyrinth’s twisted gut

  first thinking to discover some way out,

  then hoping to rejoin their doomed companions.

  Finally, failing all,

  just moving, moving to out-pace

  the brutal fear that eats at their insides.

  Perhaps a ravening monster would be

  mercy measured by this bleak prospect,

  but such a one will not be found

  within these damp, dark walls. Instead

  each will find a separate cul-de-sac

  among the labyrinth’s countless halls,

  there to wait upon the cruelest beasts

  of hunger and of thirst.

  A hundred twisted steps before the gate

  the Bull-man stops. There’s something different

  in this group, a novel hint that slices through

  the spreading cloud of fear.

  There’s one who has not moved.

  Minotaur smells the strong odor

  of a male

  and hears the even breathing, calm

  without a hint of panic.

  He senses the repose of one at easy rest.

  Then torchlight flares anew

  and burns his eyes

  as voices rise, a woman’s, then a man’s.

  He knows his sister’s voice

  though he’s not heard Ariadne since a child.

  “I have your sword and here, a shuttled thread

  that you’ll unwind as you go on.

  The other end I’ll fix here at the gate.

  Be careful.

  Daedalus himself was nearly lost

  among these walls,” she says and

  fear adds its harmonic to

  the quaver in her voice.

  The man replies, curt words of one

  intent upon a task.

  The light withdraws.

  Here the moment dreams foretold.

  He wonders if his lips will form a word.

  “Theseus,” he whispers with unpracticed tongue.

  “My brother, come to take my life.”

  The Pantheon is littered with the spawn

  of venal lust. Poseidon’s whelps, these two.

  Though innocent, they bear the tragic stamp,

  cursed to be clothed each in the other’s fate.

  He waits unmeasured time, unmoving.

  In Theseus’ stumbling, halting steps

  he hears no plan, just blind wandering

  marked here and there by muttered curses.

  He moves to intercept the human’s course.

  “Theseus, you have come at last.”

  “Who speaks with such strange accents?”

  Surprise quickens Theseus’ speech.

  “You are no Greek who calls me thus.”

  “I am the one you seek, Theseus.

  The one that you call Minos’ Bull.”

  “A monster who can mimic human speech?”

  “I am cursed to have a human part,

  to be not wholly one thing or another,

  but I speak.”

  “You speak? Then tell me. Where are the bones?

  I thought to find it strewn with bones.

  You keep a tidy house.”

  “I do not disrespect the dead

  that others choose to kill.

  I’ve honored them as decency

  and circumstance permit.”

  For Theseus the hunt is joined. He reaches

  toward the voice. His outstretched hand

  meets only rough-hewn stone.

  “Honor me and tell me how you

  come to know my name then, Freak?”

  “I have dreamt the smallest detail of this day,

  although I laugh to call it day.

  But, tell me, is it day or is it night

  beyond the gate?”

  “There was darkness everywhere when I came in,

  but why this talk?

  You could be feasting on the flesh

  of my compatriots.”

  He moves with care,

  His fingers on the clammy wall.

  “You and all your human cohort

  forget who I am.

  The beast in me is sickened by

  the thought of eating flesh.

  You press the worst of yourself

  into a mold and call it ‘Monster’

  but it is you, just you.

  A mirror works as well.”

  “I do not eat the flesh of my own kind.”

  The Greek’s response is clipped.

  He wants the beacon of that other voice

  To light his path.

  “On this day you will kill your own brother

  who you call Beast and Monster.

  Do you think the goat or lamb,

  the wild bird of the field, the mountain stag

  are any less your brethren than I?”

  “Brethren? Bah! Your talk is babble, Beast.

  I have no brothers.

  I am my father’s only child.”

  The Bull-man laughs, a strange and fractured laugh.

  “Your father cannot keep his girdle tied.

  His progeny are spread from Attica

  to far-off Tyre.

  His blood informs a mighty, ragged tribe.”

  “Your pointless riddles bore me, Monster.

  Tell me something plain.” His tone is mocking.

  “If you do not foul your virtuous lips

  with human sacrifice what do you eat?”

  “There are roots that break through from above.

  I graze on them and . . .” he hesitates

  and wonders at the pain of speech that plods

  so far behind the lightning of his thoughts.

  “I am otherwise provided for.”

  “By who? That fornicating beast-lover

  you call Mother?”

  “Do not provoke me, Theseus, with

  your market-place vulgarities.

  Poseidon raped my mother

  just as he raped yours.”

  The voice so close it is as if

  the stones beneath his fingers speak,

  And yet his way is blocked.

  “Aegeus is my father!” Theseus shouts.

  “Poseidon is your father

  as he is mine.

  You forget I am a beast of those

  who smell their kin and love them.

  We do not stalk our kin and kill them.

  Your nose is plugged with fairy-tales.

  Breathe for once and try to smell the truth.”

  “Enough talk!” The air is hot with Theseus’ rage.

  “I’ve come to kill you.

  Let me be done with that.”

  “You’ve come to set me free.”

  “If death is freedom, freedom you shall have,

  and so will I the Greek bones here avenge.”

  Theseus’ anger makes him careless

  and he stumbles once again.

  “Your sword is poorly aimed for that blood-task.

  The blame you would abate lies higher up.”

  “With Minos and his copulating cow?”

  “Higher still, my brother.”

  It is Minotaur who moves this time,

  bringing new acoustics to his speech.

  “The gods spill all this blood for their dark sport,

  then goad us into spilling more and more.

  The killing will not end

  until you make yourself. Throw off the stamp

  of petty
tyrant-gods that you call fate

  and recognize your own will is your power.”

  Gods tremble when they hear these words.

  Their power hangs on ignorance. If such

  a tool as Theseus learns to choose his fate

  their temples built on faith begin to fall.

  Theseus has turned around.

  He loses contact with the walls,

  trying to assess the vector of the voice.

  “Your poetry is touching for a beast

  but empty babble to my ear.

  What meaning can it have to make myself?

  The gods make everything.

  We are but their thinking turned to flesh.

  Just as now, I think I hear you talking.

  This talk I seem to hear from you

  is but the crazed imaginings

  of a mind twisted by this curséd dark.

  I’ll be glad to see the end of this.”

  He tries to get a hand on stone

  but even that is gone.

  “The end of this will not make you glad, Theseus.

  Your life, however long, will be for its

  full length cursed by what you do this day.”

  “Cursed? By what? Killing you?

  I’ve killed many in my life.”

  He grips his sword hilt.

  “You will be but one more.”

  “Cursed with truth, my Brother.

  Surrounded by the fantasies of others

  you will be cursed with truth.”

  “So, Beast, you know, too, what is to come?”

  “Here in the labyrinth time is naught to me,

  past and future all the same

  and equal to imagination’s sight.

  I see what was and what is to be

  with equal clarity.”

  Theseus, forced to crawl, has recovered

  the comfort of the wall and moves again.

  “Entertain me, Beast. Give me some bit

  from your vast store of prophecy.”

  “Men always wish they knew the future

  ’til they see it writ . . .”

  “Come, Monster, just a sporting hint?”

  The Minotaur draws a great breath, a sigh

  and says,

  “Before you see your Attic soil again

  Ariadne, who loves you

  beyond all reason, will be left by you,

  abandoned on some bleak stretch of beach.

  And, too, the one who calls you son will die

  because of your own thoughtlessness.”

  “You say these things but to provoke my wrath.

  I’ll not leave Ariadne!

  I have pledged myself to her.”

  “Think of the snow that caps

  your sacred Mount Olymbos (here

  Minotaur stops to savor that

  one word so fitting to his tongue and lips).

  Your pledge is like that snow,

  beautiful to see but try to hold

  it in your hands and it is gone.

  You will leave Ariadne.

  By the sorcery of your own mind you will hear

  my voice in hers, my imagined touch

  in her touch. My hideous face

  will spoil her beauty.

  And you will see my death in her eyes.