Read Sixfold Poetry Winter 2015 Page 8


                                  & his own answers in music that sounds like life.

  “Stop being such a goddamned sissy!

  Stand up for fine, strong music like this

  & use your ears like a man!”

  Berlioz Wins a Bride

  “If she for one moment could conceive all the poetry, all the infinity of a like love, she would fly to my arms though she were to die in my embrace.”

  —Hector Berlioz

  Berlioz, the beautiful hawkman

  fell in love with the Muse in the guise of Miss Smithson, the Irish actress—

  poor Miss Smithson,

  poor poor Miss Smithson.

  Berlioz pined for her unrequitedly.

  Berlioz raved for her Romantically.

  Berlioz purple prosed her drunkenly through the suburban fields of Paris,

  Chopin was concerned for him.

  Berlioz saw her embrace her leading man on the stage—

  oh fickle Muse, oh fickle fickle Muse!

  Oh migraine Muse!

  Berlioz ran from the theater weeping to pen his revenge on this black lady.

  High as a spiraling hawk on opiated hash

  Berlioz led her to the dock of Art

  where the ragamuffin orchestra judged her:

  catcalled its dissonant abuse 

  Whore! Slut! Scarlet woman!

  While Berlioz,

  self righteous impresario of the Fantastique,

  acting as both conductor and executioner,

  dark hair wild,

  hawk eyes mad

              started the march to the noose

  with a juggle on the tympani

  and ended it with the sweet snap of her importunate neck!

  But poor Miss Smithson not being Muse cold or Muse true

  being flesh and blood did yield to Hector’s rude nebulosities of love

  and did marry him

  and there did die in his embrace,

  or worse yet turned into an Irish shrew

  with an Irish obsession for the booze,

  and around and around they went

                                                  in an accelerando

  each with a silver plated pistol

  making a witches’ Sabbath of the marriage.

  He threw her scapula to the rats

  hungry for the gory in the music;

  she threw his Tuba Mirum to a goat dressed up as the Pope

  snarling, “There’s your patron!

  and here’s your Muse!”

  Hitching up her skirts to the naked partita

  doing a drunken bump and grind,

  “Your inspiration, my music box!”

  The two of them chopped up the instrument, 

  gutted the strings,

  pulled out the keys like rotted teeth,

  hacked off the gangrened pedals

  then splintered the body 

  but the thing kept playing

  and playing

  its walpurgisnacht

  its Totentanz

  until she died in the variations.

  Poor Miss Smithson,

  poor poor Miss Smithson.

  Let us imagine his Requiem is for her.

  Musak

  somewhere in the heartland of the nation, Kansas City say or maybe Omaha there is a secret underground installation   in this concrete complex buried beneath the stockyards Musak is rendered from music  take a song, any song with guts and balls   the white smocked Musak technicians cut it open, sluice out the guts, extract the heroic, send the remnant to a few symposia on the meaning of “love”   they pump the resulting comatose thing full of strings, attach a few angel wings, shoot it up with Hollow Man, then channel to an ad man composer or poet of hymns to sing to some king driven mad, centaur being flensed, flautist having donkey ears attached to his head or great weaver of Prometheans being turned into a spider

                                 “I think that I shall never see a poem as beautiful as a tree” is how the power of Orpheus came out of the processing plant  “pity this busy monster manunkind not”  the liver of Prometheus after Musak processing  “still falls the rain” the last string of the lyre used as a garrote  “Oh, tannenbaum!” squeaks the tiny voice of Attis from inside the tree   

                   lobotomized Eurydice  genderless upbeat schlock Semele so you boogaloo down the aisle not noticing what demon you’re buying as you’re shopping  101 Strings Does the Dismemberment soothes you into missing the earthquake rising from the casket beneath Kobe  

                   kill them  kill all the songs 

                                    or at the dentist’s having a root canal done on your resistance to aliens by the angels humming Mysterious Mountain

                                                     kill all the songs!

                                                                      or in the church where they put you to sleep with A Mighty Fortress so they can insert Le Sacre du Printemps up your Twentieth Century 

                   kill all the songs!

                                                     or on the psych ward taking your pill of Amahl so you can still give your gifts to the Kings

                                    kill all the songs! kill the poor things!

  the hawks with one wing! 

                   give them the lead gift 

                                    they’re not responsible 

  and did you know they have Spartacus arranged for the Mormon Tabernacle Choir?    while Shostakovich’s Fourth Symphony sings in its chains for Rogaine? 

                   kill all the songs!

                                    give them the lead gift in the twilight

  kill the poor things!

                                    kill all the songs!

  Listening to Music

  in the evening I drink wine and listen to music

  To Copland

  Appalachian Spring

  “tis a gift to be simple” cranked up loud enough

                            so the rocks to hear it

  Billy the Kid

  bad and proud of it

  broke and entered the Muses’ Bank

  made off with the Genesis account

  Shostakovich

  the Tenth to keep Stalin dead

  Vaughn Williams’ Antarctic Symphony

  “to forgive wrongs darker than night or death

  to suffer woes hope thinks infinite”

  and sing it!

  not like chains

  but like spring!

  like, it is not cold here!

  it may be cold where you are

  shivering in your poetry prisons

  but it is not cold here!

  it is not cold where I have raised

  Prometheus from the bottom of Lake Nancy

  I refuse to freeze 

  beneath a blanket of meekness

  in front of a dead fireplace at some church

  with the Id Monster chained in the basement

  it is before in The Beginning here

  when it was good

  before Time with his scythe

  created that weeping wound

  covered by a big popple leaf

  I will not repent my life

  I will not forget my wife

  that I father things 

  that I have spoken to all the kings

  who harden their hearts when Orpheus sings

  it is cold on the golf course

  where you hide down in Florida!

  in Harpers where the poem shi
vers on the page

  pawing desperately through Emily Dickinson’s under things 

  searching for a body

  trying to build a fire

  in the frozen slush pile

  after a while the dog in your manger

  waiting for a fire builder

  will get up

  trot off through the woods

  toward the source of this music 

  the real spring

  Wagner

  Wagner, Mr. Marvel, decided to become a composer

  before he could play a single note

  so you know he had gall,

  balls

  with a capital “B.”

  It must have been playing that angel as a child that did it.

  Wagner lived off “impressionable” women for a while

  while his creditors plagued him like veritable Walkuries—

  he owes them an inspirational debt.

  Early on Wagner, like Napoleon, crowned himself

  Official Musical Mutant and Composer of the Future.

  It was all just in fun, of course

  to play Superman,

  steal other men’s wives

  while the queer King of Bavaria 

  kept you in silks, blank checks

  villas and Festspielhaus

  so you could fiddle with the Mythos

  the dead serious ostinati in the blood,

  Schopenhauer’s “proto images of the world”

  and not laugh when Berlioz quipped

  “Yes, Richard, but in Paris we call that digestion, letting a little wind.”

  But the polemics against the Jews

  the Aryan hysterics,

  the forever Flying Dutchman of your hate

  were not “farting,” Richard.

  As for the Siegfried

  we were all spellbound 

  by the acid trip swastikas in its eyes

  before Brunnhilde could destroy the place.

  Karen Kraco

  Stuck

     Infidelity

  For the months you’ve carried this

  you’ve had the wild look of a man

  who’s been ordered to drive a cab

  in a city he doesn’t know.

  You keep turning: right, right again

  but then wrong, wrong, wrong

  forgetting to remember that if only you’d ask

  I’d show you the map: you might find your way home.

     Impasse

  A mountain fills the room

  and neither of us understands the why

  of moving it. Wall-to-wall silence

  windows black       doors jammed

  cut off from the cities

  that twinkle in its valleys.

     Irreconcilable

  I weep for the speck of the egg

  that might have become feathers and cluck

  but still can relish the omelet. You, you

  crack the shell, see bright red, and swear

  off eating eggs for months.

  Steaming meals now cold

  company no longer invited

  silence seated

  in the place

  of grace.

  Postcard Poems: Animal Attitude

     Bull

  You stick your finger in a can of tuna

  then insist the orange cat likes you

  for who you are—as flimsy as the red silk cape

  you flash in front of your black lab

  so proud of your posture

  as you call in the picadors!

  You knew I was watching

  as you dressed down your duck—

  webbed footprints up and down

  the stairs, across the kitchen floor.

     Prairie Dog

  Your first line of defense—

  go underground. You burrow deep

  digging a tangle of tunnels

  so that at each choice of paths

  I wonder where you’ve gone.

  Once, I did catch up, and instead

  of turning to face me, you sat back

  on your haunches, blocking the passage,

  your arguments lost to me

  in the hollowness ahead.

  You’ll pop up again, I know,

  but you won’t find me

  waiting at your hole.

     Roadrunner

  How much farther

  can you stretch your stress?

  Take your taut chicken-neck pulse

  then chill. Yesterday, you looked

  over your shoulder, ran

  without choosing to run

  and when you stopped short

  no one, not even you, knew.

     Whale

  What remains unseen

  haunts us more

  than that flash of black fin

  as the water parts.

  You surface only

  to slip out of my hands

  when you sink so deep

  that it’s too risky to follow.

  Watch that bobber drown,

  then spring up, wobbling wildly

  when it loses the life

  to which it’s tethered.

     Jackalope

  You photoshop an effigy of yourself

  onto places you’d like to visit

  send postcards from everywhere

  except where you’ve been

  use some other number

  to call the people you love.

  When I finally trace you

  a total stranger answers, asks

  How’s he been?

  Rough Dreams

  Just when you thought it was safe, the cat

  in the corner bats rattlesnakes across the room,

  and your parakeet, free, sings off-key.

  The man for whom you’ve secretly longed

  moves closer, strokes your cheek, and nyuk, nyuk, nyuks

  like one of the Three Stooges. Get up.

  What’s that banging at the door?

  A neighbor, with an invitation for your goat.

  Main course, his mother-in-law’s windshield wiper blades.

  While you negotiate who will be responsible

  for the hoofprints on the hood—you, him, or the goat—

  the phone rings.

  It’s your brother, dead two years today,

  wondering what you’re going to do

  with the clothes still hanging

  in the closet: a brown tweed jacket,

  his two favorite shirts.

  Shaker Village at Pleasant Hill

  The last remaining Shaker at Pleasant Hill,

  Sister Mary Settles, died in 1923.

  One baritone sows overtones

  of every register.

 

  Brothers here.

                             Sisters there.

                                                      Simple Gifts

                word for word

                                          note for note

  a’s and o’s shaped true

              to the way they sang them.

  He stamps their beat back

                into the original floorboards.

  Steps toward us with open arms,

                broadcasting the smile of every Shaker

                                          who ever danced in this hall.

  Nods greetings to each guest on each bench

                as he walks down the aisle, singing verses

  in rhythm that works on us, row by row.

                One by one we offer shy, tight smiles.

  A woman in front moans along, monotone.

  The couple beside me sways from side to side.

/>   Costume. His rough woven vest is costume, I say,

  but I watch two Shakers take his outstretched hands,

  then two more, theirs, until the hundreds who we’re told

  circled and whirled in this empty room grab hands, winding

  their way around until we either find ourselves against the wall

  or choose to join in.

                                                   My foot begins to tap,

  longing to belong to this larger thunder.

  Three miles away, a farmer lifts his head.

  Rafael Miguel Montes

  Gas Mask

  She’s asked me to clean up again.

  Asked me to vacuum and dust and mop and,

  time permitting,

  pull the matted hair stuck to the toilet.

  Stiffbrush the mold in the shower stall.

  She’s asked me this hundreds of Sundays in a row.

  As if I might forget.

  Perhaps even one day rebel.

  I want to damn the toilet all to hell,

  make the shower unfit for humans or dogs.

  Watch the tiles get black and yellow,

  as mold and piss fight for control.

  I want this house to smell like a rodeo latrine.

  I want my cats stumbling around towers of yellow papers,

  torn magazines held up by house corners.

  See their furry bodies tangle with bags and bags of Fritos,

  a cardboard fort of old pizza boxes,

  other cats—caught and killed by my walls of garbage.

  I need a team of men in gasmasks gasping “Shit!”

  and a tiny woman, in an unthreatening cream suit,

  talking about anxiety and “letting go.”

  Want to have my children crying and screaming,

  tell me about a “special” home they plan for me to go,

  and how this is the last time and giving up.

  Have the youngest one feel guilted into helping.

  I want to forget the hair and the dust and the smell,

  those things returning every Sunday for me.

  I just want to write this poem, now.

  I want to clean myself first.

  Broom

  In just five quick nights, the cinnamon broom

  you nailed to the bedroom door

  stopped working.

  After that excited first unwrap,

  we were certain Christmas had come to town.

  It was mid-August and we thought we heard carolers.