Read Sixfold Poetry Winter 2015 Page 2


  grateful for the reminder that some forms of intelligence break

  the world into pieces of beautiful ugliness,

  and some do not break the world at all.

  Now You See It

  My mother cups my uterus

  to her mouth and blows.

  The uterine balloon she hangs

  like a trophy in her bedroom,

  nailed to the far wall like an animal

  skin.

  At parties she fills it with wine,

  places a nozzle on it and pours.

  The guests are enchanted. They tell me

  what a good girl I am. How lucky

  to have a mother so intimate. I tell

  them that my mother loves

  tricks, loves the jigsaw puzzle

  of my spine, love to pull my heart

  from her ear and make it disappear

  into her mouth. What a mother, they say.

  What a magician.

  Soon, she’ll be able to make you

  disappear altogether.

  Freud’s Asparagus

  She tries to sublimate

  a hot Sunday at 8 a.m.,

  but he pounds at her door,

  repressed, Freudian

  and hungry.

  She cooks him sweet butter eggs

  and asparagus

  and he looks at her.

  “Sometimes an asparagus is just

  an asparagus,” she says, placing

  the green, feathery tip deep

  into her mouth.

  She hands him a swollen, red

  plum, a fat, hairy peach.

  She says, “Eat.”

  She says, “Read to me. Tell me of Plato’s

  Republic. I want to see a civilization come

  from between your lips.”

  They practice sword fighting

  in the garden. She has better footwork

  but his shaft is longer, bright red

  and she laughs at him.

  He pins her again and again in the garden

  with swollen red fruit and thick

  leaves and she laughs at him.

  He does not know what the woman wants.

  She leads him to the bath.

  “Here. Play with the toy boat—

  the small fringed sails, the wet hull . . .”

  He is nearly hysterical when she takes him

  (as she knew she would)

  and hours later, in the lingering flame of his sleeping body,

  she smokes.

  Jane Schulman

  Final Crescent

  Think of me on bruise-blue nights when

               moons wane to wisps

                            and you scan the eastern sky.

  Think of me as a crocus

               cracking through matted leaves.

  For I was born on ebbing days

               of Adar, when winds blew out-of-tune

                            and the moon a final crescent.

  My soul makes its way through

               the world with hesitant footfalls.

  Two of our sons were born in the month

               of Nissan. Prankish as lion cubs,

                            hearts of honeycomb and voile.

  I know my soul more by what it is not.

  When Krupa Played Those Drums

  Sometimes I can’t think in metaphors.

  Rocks are rocks. Tumors are tumors.

  Time in close present.

  10 tomorrow, CT scan.

  I lie in bed. Listen for signs of life.

  A cough. A snore.

  By 2 AM clack of Dad’s walker,

  slipper-shuffle to the kitchen

  for bourbon on ice.

  9 AM He falls. I boost

  from behind. He yanks

  with still-strong arms

  and he’s on the sofa.

  Victory when we don’t

  need to call 9-1-1.

  9:45 He slips on his loafers.

  Back in motion. We’re off for the test..

  5 PM He leans back in his chair,

  stares at a black TV.

  No Jeopardy. No C-Span.

  Not even Ella Fitzgerald on the stereo.

  What is it you think about, Dad,

  while you sit with the TV off?

  I go back to the good years

  when I’d just met your Mom

  and Gene Krupa played those drums

  till three in the morning.

  He doesn’t ask about

  the CT scan; I don’t say.

  Krupa, the way

  he beat out those heartbeats.

  Overheard on the F Train

  My iPod snatched from an unzipped purse,

  I’m left to listen, overexposed

  to snatches of dialogue unrehearsed.

  Ripped from my private universe,

  of Dylan, Marley, Billy Joel

  when my iPod’s snatched from an unzipped purse.

  “Haven’t you heard, Karl’s cancer’s worse,

  melanoma misdiagnosed.”

  Snatches of dialogue unrehearsed.

  “Leah just lost her job as a nurse

  and her crazy ex-husband’s out on parole”

  now my iPod’s snatched from an unzipped purse

  “My daughter’s pregnant with her fourth.

  You’d think she’d never heard of birth control.”

  Snatches of dialogue unrehearsed.

  A random act, what appeared a curse,

  scattered totems of lives unposed.

  My iPod snatched from an unzipped purse.

  Gift of snatches of dialogue unrehearsed.

  Back and Forth

  Dad hurled words across the table at Frank

  and me, empty hollow volleys. We’d toss back

  streptococcus or carnivorous.

  Little by little, I quit relying on words, chose

  near-silence instead. Syllables jagged crystals

  spit from my mouth. Starts and stops

  like stutterers’ struggles to let loose sounds.

  Still I’m tongue-tied, weighing each word

  for heft, holding each up to the light.

  No wonder my work now is shaping baba

  and mima into words, smoothing a child’s stutter,

  releasing the “gorilla voice” in a boy who only whispers.

  I strain to hear my own still voice beside

  the black-ring doves calling back and forth

  from the cottonwoods along the river.

  After

  I used to talk real good. I used

  to tell the best stories, the funniest jokes.

  But now. I’m shut down, trapped

  in my own head. Since the stroke,

  I know what I want to say but words

  get tangled and twisted all up. I think

  “coyote” and “crocus” comes out.

  “Excited” turns into “extinct.”

  My friends don’t have time to wait for me

  to spit out words. They keep filling in

  empty spaces. Half the time, I’d rather

  just be by myself—rocking and thinking,

  rocking and thinking. I’m a man of Babel,

  punished for my pride. Unravelled.

  Susan F. Glassmeyer

  Hercules Visits My Kitchen

  Tonight, waiting for scones to rise in the oven,

  the scent of warming yeast and cream

  filling the room, I sit down at the table

  and flip open the new Audubon to learn:

  Carrion beetles

  using organs of smell in their antennae

  can locate a mouse within an hour of its death

  and from as far away as two miles.

  After
flying to the carcass, they drop

  to the ground, crash through the litter,

  burrow under the body, and by heft

  of their magnificent orange backs

  lift the mouse remains like mini sons of Zeus,

  flip and roll it several feet to a final resting place

  where the beetles bulldoze the dirt

  and bury the mouse deep under the soil.

  (This, all done at night to prevent

  rival flies from laying their eggs.) The beetles

  then strip the mouse of its fur, covering

  the carrion ball with a jelly-like goo,

  a refuge of food for their own larvae

  to feed upon.

  There’s more I haven’t told you

  but the oven timer is ringing

  so I must grab my spatula to flip the hot scones

  into a pine grass basket to cool . . . breakfast

  fuel for my family rising hungry at dawn.

  Seeing Movement

  For small creatures such as we, the vastness is bearable only through love. — Carl Sagan

  In his workshirt dark from sweat

  the gardener lays down his hedger

  to kneel gingerly in thick ivy.

  With the hands of Kuan Yin

  he flutters the damaged bird up

  to his chest, whispering to it.

  While Holding a Shivering Toad in My Hands

  I thought about last night’s mouse

  rattling inside the live trap

  in the kitchen drawer.

  I can’t bring myself to kill

  mice anymore. Tried it once

  in Michigan. The cottage, quiet

  as a book when the snap trap

  sprung along the baseboard.

  That contraption flew into the air

  like a deranged bird pinching in half

  the stunned mouse who only wanted

  a dumb piece of cheese.

  I thought only women standing on chairs

  in cartoons screamed at mice

  running along the floor.

  I did not know a mouse would squeal

  when it died like that. I did not know

  I would scream.

  First Moon of a Blue Moon Month

  Tonight while she’s asleep

  come through the kitchen window above the stove.

  Follow the path of her belongings.

  Climb the stairs

  without making them creak.

  Enter the room of her refuge.

  Here she has tumbled with night into bed.

  Hover awhile.

  Let your roundness shimmer above her own.

  Be a chandelier to her longings.

  Study her lips,

  two languages for truth in her sleep.

  If you slip under the covers without waking her,

  she will lean into you until you are full again.

  She can never be touched too lightly.

  Parting Word

  An attendant props you up, cheerfully

  rolls you to a table for a last meal.

  Doesn’t that look good, sweetheart?

  It doesn’t. I offer roses and a bag

  of dark kisses though we both know

  they don’t make sense anymore.

  What took you so long, you ask, squinting

  at me through your good eye. I hold up

  your head in the hammock of my hand.

  Quiet resumes. No mention of love. You

  ask is my other hand on your leg? Yes.

  Melissa Tyndall

  For Our Children, Not Yet Born, I Preserve the Images of Animals

  They are nearly gone: the black-footed ferret,

  gloved and bandit-masked, last leopards

  fading into Russia’s northern forests. You’ll never

  see a nighthawk’s forked plumes and gaping mouth,

  watch the Dusky Darter swim Tennessee creek beds,

  hear the jumping meadow mouse chirp or its tail

  drum against the earth. One night, the woods will empty,

  the howl of the red wolf forgotten like a sudden storm—

  a strong wind that wails briefly, then dies

  in the dark. Here once were 600-pound cats,

  fanged and orange as cinders,

  and foxes—yes, Fox, your last name—

  with wide noses, rufous-colored ears,

  and long, black-tipped tails. I hold

  them here, until you arrive.

  Postcards from the Amer River

  A trip to Alaska prompted the first—

  backed with near-blue landscapes,

  silver-tipped ice whorls, concentric shells.

  Last summer, your script spilled past

  lined margins, threatened the spiny

  bones of sea animals, birds in watercolor,

  beachfront sunsets brushed in gold,

  lavender and dusty pinks, trapped

  the way icebergs entomb volcanic

  fragments, carry it for years, before

  the black rock ripples, peeling back snow,

  upheaving it into crags along the water

  the local paper described as God-sized

  snowmen melting. At Christmas,

  your letters come thrust against Dutch

  postmarks. You write of beer and spiced

  black teas ripe with honey and cinnamon

  and bayberries; how climate or distance

  can reframe a place, remove doglocks,

  allow migration. Words rise in waves

  like relief-maps, from this new country,

  set us adrift in reverse, cotton us to memory.

  At the first hint of spring, the grass will green

  again, grow back into itself, shake off the frost

  and black smut whips. In Tennessee,

  green foxtails, wild and weedy,

  will shatter and scatter their seeds,

  and I’ll feel the need to write to

  you, but there’s nothing I want to say.

  Haptics

  Scientists say we never truly touch—

  despite any sensation we might feel,

  our electrons begin to push away

  the moment we move toward each other.

  This is the unquestionable nature

  of our universe and its elements,

  and we’re no more than a collection of

  atoms encased by an invisible

  force field that allows us to overlap

  temporarily, but repels those who

  venture too close. It absorbs the shock of

  others, protects us from risk. Science claims

  contact is just an illusion caused when

  our energies brush against each other.

  They argue touch is no more existent

  than a memory of you—how blue your

  eyes look in the dark, the way your long,

  dark hair falls into your face when you lean

  over the neck of my guitar. No more real than

  morning after bruises, evidence of teeth

  on my breasts, hands on my throat—than

  the recollection of the first time we met.

  You cross the room, talk about the summer

  storm that rages for hours. You smile. Then,

  a low rumble of thunder, a hot vein

  of lightning, the rain like a high hat beat

  just on the other side of the window.

  Film Studies

  Ever the Southern gentleman

  in your indie film,

  you ask before kissing her

  on the front porch.

  I wonder, if we kissed,

  if you’d do it this way

  off-screen. Later, you lift

  her onto the sink of a hotel

  bathroom, your hands running up

  her thighs and under her skirt.

  I imagine myself in her place—

  countertop to
pantyhose off,

  in one of two double beds, wonder

  if your face would look as it did

  when you said you loved her.

  But the first time you lean in

  is during a lull in conversation

  on the deck of an East Nashville

  bar, the string of lights twinkling,

  the fans humming, spinning

  like a film reel. I find myself wishing,

  not for the crescendo of night sounds,

  or our flash forward, but for a loop

  of this instant, for the infinite

  playback—to preserve the still

  moment no movie can capture.

  Aubade

  After the separation, the first man

  to sleep in my bed does just that—sleeps,

  fills the vacant side. His long, blonde hair, even

  longer than mine, spills across the pillow,

  fine as cornsilk strands. Our bodies mirror

  each other, hearts flailing against our ribs.

  During the night, he pulls my arm over

  his torso, grips my thigh to draw my leg

  between his, presses my front to his back.

  When he shifts, a tribal tattoo licks past

  the collar of his white T-shirt and up

  his neck. I know the ink runs the other

  way, too, almost dips into his waistband,

  and it conjures up the memory of him

  peeling a shirt over his broad shoulders—

  how, after a party, he pushed me down

  gently, pinned me back-flat on the carpet.

  How he laid on top of me, grew harder

  when we kissed, and he fisted the fabric

  of my shorts when those kisses dipped

  under my shirt, his hair grazing my flesh—

  but we stop ourselves.

  He wants to pursue

  friendship only, he claims, but that’s undone

  each time our eyes meet across the bartop

  and he refuses to look away, nights

  we lean against each other on the couch,

  our fingers interlaced. Is this what friends

  do? He walks the apartment and cleans up

  bottles, empty glasses, locks the front door,

  turns off any forgotten lights. I lift

  up the corner of my blanket for him,

  an invitation he accepts