Read Sixfold Poetry Winter 2014 Page 2


  you send your shadow man. And I’ll remain

  here, hidden, choosing what I want to kill.

  Closer—I can bite you through to the brain.

  for Alan Rabinowitz

  Harold Schumacher

  Dying To Say It

  The decision was made—

  we went in and killed her—

  a squad of father, sister, uncle, aunt,

  doctor, nurse, chaplain, myself,

  and the finger of God.

  We went in and killed mom—

  all of us, none of us, stole

  the tubes from her dark veins,

  slipped off the switches of life,

  slid in the syringe of peace, but

  We all heard—

  the metronomic clicking stop,

  saw the green mountains pass by,

  shrinking on the screen like troops

  marching down sloping holes.

  We all heard—

  the sighing respirator stop

  and waited and watched

  in the silence,

  the deceiving silence.

  She breathed alone—alone—

  she breathed alone—

  she breathed—

  “ . . . cannot compare to the suffering

  of the present—with the glory to be,”

  verses the chaplain glued appropriately

  an anthology—

  she—

  We came before her throne

  with rites of passage.

  “Nita”—her brother whispered German in her ear.

  “Nita”—her sister whispered, unclear.

  The pendulum slowed like the sunset—

  small waves of golden white

  so faint, delicate, and slight,

  seeped back into darkness,

  the deep hole of creation

  where something hovered

  like breath and light.

  He was wounded early and deep,

  a boy’s feelings fired to ashes,

  who never trapped fireflies,

  watched eagles and sunsets,

  got crazy and laughed till he cried,

  never made birds of clay,

  never on a tender bet—

  my father,

  always in the next room,

  who hid between sheets of anger,

  dropped his first tears before her,

  like blood and lead. He said

  his words, falling like stars,

  “Goodbye—

  we had good lives together.”

  Winter’s Edges

  When the edges of winter appear, and

               the cardinals haven’t sung since early August,

  When the jays speak every second day, and

               the trees lose weight, training for the test,

  When the geese, calmed down, caw less, and

               the freeways are quiet after midnight,

  When will the next funeral be, and

               whose will it be, and

  Where will they be, the dead,

               unburied until the spring thaw,

  Their bodies lying in cinder block

               waiting rooms?

  You said you wanted to die

               that first winter we were married.

  You said so much, so many things,

               now buried in ground too frozen to break.

  The memories lie waiting in

               the stone house of many rooms,

  Not heard since some forgotten August

               until now at winter’s edges, but

  No spring thaw will ever come.

  When I hear the wind again, at night,

               blowing from brick-lined streets

  Trying to enter and sleep with me,

               sounding like prairie photos of North Dakota

  Where you and I were young,

               so young, too young,

  Speaking only every second day, at times,

               and the veins stood out on our necks,

  And the winds blew hard, and loud

               as blizzard-lost cattle,

  And the windows rattled, and the geese

               had gone to more pleasant places,

  I know the only weight we lost

               was our minds.

  God Next Time

  And will I ever see more of God except in the sunrise and the storm?

  Ever see more than the beauty of the flowers and fields, or

  a beautiful child in a grocery cart staring back at me,

  ever see more than a quiet sea on an early morning beach,

  or stunned still trees in the forest, or the swoosh of water on my boat’s bow?

  What is the face of God other than these, than the love of my wife,

  the love of my friends, a happy dog, the yellow bird in my feeder,

  the solitude of silence, the greens of Ireland’s springs,

  the shades, hues, and tints. Did the primitives experience more?

  And would I recognize him if I saw him, or her—this God they talk about?

  Would s/he be Jesus again, or a woman this time? Next time

  God might choose a female to show the world for sure

  that compassion is the way—softness, gentleness, composure, calm,

  the receptiveness of the vagina, the yielding of spread thighs,

  the Mary-ness of surrender, the warmth of the womb,

  the mother’s hovering spread wings.

  And what if the second coming really were a woman coming down

  out of the clouds, a glorious lovely woman of light?

  And who would our heroes be then, the next time around

  in the new creation, and who would we be

  if we followed her?

  Alejandro

  After the drunk tourists

  are done drinking in Mexico,

  going past my window at 5:00 AM

  waking me when the darkness

  is still holding fast,

  I quit arguing with myself

  about whether or not

  I have to piss,

  get up and do it, then

  to the kitchen for a liquid replacement

  and a look outside the window.

  Red and blue flashing policia trucks

  drive by slowly, and

  in their eerie stabbing strobing lights

  I see him—

  I’ve seen him twice this week

  in the dawn—

  Alejandro—

  the groundskeeper, sweeping

  the parking lot

  the sidewalks, even the street

  with a broom, a pan

  and a wheeled garbage can,

  sweeping with fervent thrusting strokes,

  like a forest-fire fighter

  like a lumber jack splitting logs,

  like a man beating down a concrete wall

  with a sledge,

  or a soldier pushing back

  bacterial armies.

  I wonder, standing by the window,

  I ask questions,

  I compare the contrasts in this world

  between Alejandro and others

  who hours later would drive

  in gadgeted computerized vehicles

  to their rare-wood desks,

  soft swiveled chairs with high backs

  and lumbar supports,

  to platters of glazed donuts,

  lattes, bonuses,

  profits, pensions, soft palms,

  and clean manicured fingernails.

  I go back to bed—

  thinking, I can’t sleep.

  I get up and look up

/>   three Spanish words,

  and memorize them. Exiting

  to the outer freshly-washed

  and scrubbed hallway,

  his bicycle locked to the wall,

  I see him in the courtyard,

  sweeping the grounds again!

  bean pods, twigs, and seeds,

  flower petals, and leaves,

  all of the falling

  Mexican winter fecundity.

  “Buenos dias, senor Alejandro.”

  “Buenos dias, senor.”

  “Como estas?”

  “Bien, gracias, y tu?”

  “Bien, muy bien.”

  Then with language skills

  of a two year old,

  I begin my memorized speech

  as I wave my arm across the yard

  like Crazy Horse defining

  his lands and his people,

  “Siempre”—(always)

  “Todo”—(everything)

  “Limpio”—(clean)

  “Muchas gracias.”

  Alejandro proudly beams

  so wide

  that I see the gold in his teeth.

  “Si,” he says.

  War

  I was in Melvin’s garage

  towards the end of his life

  when he told me.

  I don’t know why

  but I felt honored.

  Melvin is one of those

  no bullshit guys

  who always tells it

  the way he sees it.

  He doesn’t believe

  in lots of words,

  and certainly not

  embellishments.

  He is the world’s best

  and smartest mechanic,

  better than any doctor,

  not a body, or organ

  or limb, or vein

  he couldn’t fix.

  He gave me hell

  if I waited too long

  to service my truck.

  “That’s a carbureted engine,

  not fuel injected,

  gas can get into your oil

  and pretty soon your cylinders

  get etched, then you get problems.

  Gotta change that oil more often,

  ’specially in winter.

  Don’t wait so damn long

  next time.”

  I always paid Melvin with a check

  made out to cash

  at his request, and would say,

  “Here’s some tax-free income.”

  We both would smile,

  knowing he was a “screw ’em” guy

  when it came to income taxes,

  and how the government used his dollars

  to kill people.

  One day when I paid,

  this is what he said.

  “I was in the war, you know,

  in the Pacific theater.”

  “Yes. Weren’t damn near all you guys

  in town there?” I always threw in some

  cuss words—guy talk, you know.

  “Yup, me and Don enlisted together

  and fought together, it was hell,

  I tell ya. No fun. Seen it all.

  Arms hanging on tree branches,

  brains stuck on bark, eyeballs,

  chunks of skull with hair,

  hands, legs, feet, ears, cocks,

  strewn all over the place.

  Hell, even on my weapon,

  and my hands,

  and face,

  in my mouth,

  on my uniform,

  in my helmet—

  just wipe it off,

  spit it out

  and keep on shooting.

  What the hell can you do?

  It’s either you,

  or them

  gonna die.

  I did what I had to do,

  ya got no choice.

  Killing ain’t easy,

  you know.”

  “Don’t tell me about war.

  I’ve been there.

  It isn’t right, I tell ya, goddamnit,

  no matter what those bastards say,

  all a bunch of damn liars

  if you ask me.

  Someday they’re gonna pay,

  someday they’ll get theirs.”

  It was the most

  I ever heard him say,

  and I couldn’t get it

  out of my head

  Sunday morning

  when I was in the pulpit

  and Melvin was sitting

  behind the pews

  in his usher’s chair,

  looking out the window

  while I was preaching

  lofty concepts about love.

  When he came up front,

  the last to receive the host,

  we looked at each other,

  deep,

  and I said,

  “Melvin, this is the body

  of Christ,

  given for you.”

  A holy mystery was happening,

  because killing

  isn’t easy,

  you know.

  Someday.

  Someday.

  Heather Erin Herbert

  Georgia’s Advent

  We laughed about it two years back

  when I first saw cotton, white hot in the field.

  Cicadas were sizzling in August heat

  as my heart jumped up at blankets of snow.

  I drove my car off the backwoods road

  to find my thrill melted in heatstroke air.

  You thumped the table with your hand, Philly-boy,

  when I told you what I thought I’d seen,

  belched over your Coke can, winking and teasing:

  How’d you get mixed up between snow and cotton?

  Such a Northern-girl, you know you’re in Georgia?

  We need to get you out for a change.

  In fall, I drive us out past the fields.

  We sing together, you’re tuneless but joyful.

  It’s four o’clock, florid, last sky-blues, gold.

  We talk about hometowns, how down south is different,

  share coffee and stories,

  the pink sun in my mirrors.

  My nails turn wood-smoke grey on the wheel,

  I pull my sleeves down at the end of our songs.

  You point at cotton through shadows of pecans,

  then smile at me, saying: It looks just like our snow.

  Looks almost like Christmas.

  It looks almost like home.

  That Old Spark

  That first time, lightning hit the tallest pine tree,

  the one I could see from school

  and say, “That one is mine.”

  The charge ran from branch to roof to wire.

  A long blue spark shot out at my feet,

  leaving a dark scar on the hardwood.

  My mother threw us in the car, and

  begged us not to touch its metal sides.

  We watched firemen come

  to cut smoldering plaster from the walls.

  The second time, we woke, the four of us,

  and watched the night scud over with clouds

  from the opening in our platform tent.

  We rubbed our arms, asking each other,

  “Are you cold? I have goose bumps.”

  As fine hairs stood on our cheeks

  the world exploded over us, steaming,

  flying, hot shards of wood,

  the least of our problems, really,

  as half the tree landed across our canvas.

  The third time, days later, we ran for cover

  down the side of a New York mountain.

  Over tree roots, over rock bridges,

  through curved dirt sluiceways,

  shortly to be filled with water.

  The last gasp dash across the open field.

  We ran, one at a time. Young, fast, lithe,

  my turn came, and the jolt gave me wings,
r />   throwing me from the charred circle that

  washed from the grass as I shook myself.

  The fourth time, that same field, a week later.

  They say that lightning doesn’t strike

  the same place twice. They’re wrong.

  The fifth time, watching flashing night from the kitchen,

  my two eldest children eating dinner beside me.

  I counted the space between lightning and thunder,

  adrenaline and safety,

  until there wasn’t time between them to count.

  The oven screamed that its circuits were cooked,

  well done, while the house suddenly heaved

  back to purring life, and light. My youngest slept on,

  still sprawled across the oak floor

  where Sesame Street had left her.

  The sixth time I said it wasn’t that bad,

  and slipped my sandals into my fist

  so I could run through the rain in bare feet.

  As I stood outside the store I twisted my bags

  closed, pulled my bra in place, took my glasses off,

  and raised one foot,

  as lightning shattered the sign above my head.

  And I dove inside, the dark shop loud with voices,

  apologizing to the clerk next to me. “My bad,”

  I said, “that was probably my fault.”

  The seventh time happens on nights I sleep

  without the covers, and in the nude.

  I maintain it’s the goose bumps on my back

  that start my old dream reel flickering.

  Hairs stand up, and my body knows

  that my bright friend has come to visit.

  I’ve died so many times in bed.

  My husband thinks I’m always cold,

  blankets to my chin, even in summer,

  but it’s because in my dreams, I want to live.

  Bittersweet

  For years

  I’ve said I could give my heart

  to a man who gave me a box of crayons.

  There’s something precious

  about ninety-six

  clean blooms of color,

  in bouquets of violet

  and leaf green.

  And for years I waited.

  He gave a gold ring

  that I paid for, a little,

  which broke in our fifth year.

  He gave cups of umber tea.

  Gave me five children,

  three of whom lived, beautiful,

  with deep cornflower eyes

  and carnation cheeks.

  He gave a brick red house to hold me still,

  and palettes of laundry

  in a never-ending landscape

  of sky blues and pinks.

  But with all these things,

  I wanted crayons, the waxy,

  sour scent of a new fall,

  a new page, a new start,

  fresh and bright as the first day of school.