Thursday, September 10, 2009

To Childbearing Hips

I have wanted you; I have wanted you arc
though I am arkless, though I have no tide,
no ships. My body is miserable as a lunar calendar,
it hardly even comprehends melatonin. I wake up
before the sun does, and sometimes
I fall asleep with it high noon, light
not at rest, my body misshapen and senseless.

I have caressed myself attempting to massage you in,
working with a sculptor's busy hands
to curve myself, remold my flesh, take a cue
from Prometheus and learn mettle and to mess
with divine intentions. Diviner intentions. I am
almost God here in my lack of tan, my pale skin
reflecting the sun so strongly passersby burn from it

and I stay pale. Godawful my lack. I could never father
because always I feel children like a tumor
growing inside my abdomen, begging for space
to relent, begging for birds and anachronism,
fresh air is missed my womb is a dank place stilted.
I have a firefly in my stomach, thinking of you
it brightens and I grow restless. I have malapropism,

also Desire, also a tombstone erected premature
with name effaced and entirely blurred. In fact
the cenotaph's significance is of new beginning,
the old me dead, new me happier, perhaps Dahlias
born as cemetery flowers. But premature
because it hasn't happened "yet." As if with "yet"
I could indicate my eventual reminiscence--

Me sitting there in a wicker chair, on a shaded porch
in Tennessee, sipping mint julep, speaking to my wife
or husband: Darling, do you remember when I was a man?
But no. It can never happen, my tight skin restricted.
But no. Though I long for you and your sensual flamboyance,
though I arc for you I do not have your angles
or permission. I am a straight board, my body but wooden.

I miss you because you are not inevitable, yet. Yet you are seeded
if poorly nurtured. Yet you are of consequence. I look for you in the dirt
where maybe I could have grown up thoughtless. You are an ossuary garden.
You are my pollen allergy. You are of much consequence.

Sunday, August 9, 2009

Aching I Break From You

Like Dionysus grapeless and in want:
constricted by vines, without Bacchi,
a lonely heterogeneous hedonist
taking time off. Collecting his thoughts.
Feeling the lust bubble up and rupture
each blundering organ inside of him:
Daffodils in his stomach.

And all of your venison, ambrosia and tiny ankles
produces thirst . You are the corset of my lungs.
I have no time for thoughts.

hmmm

When I was young and despised,
my mother’s most recent blame-receptacle
target-with-two-eyes, I seem to recall
the notion of home
being as flexible and particular
as California earth, though we lived
(mostly) eastwards. A house is a house
and I settled in each and every one,
put my flimsy anchors down, roots if you would,
except we were poorly planted, maybe
the soil itself was faulty, more like the San Andreas
divide than proper earth, or maybe we were
simply determined to be housed-but-homeless
perambulators carrying our belongings
from deluxe shack to superdeluxe shack
and then spending every dollar upgrading that.
Rather than settling down or setting up shop
we were becalmed in one house and the next
and then the three or four after that
and a stint in Canadian winter and my little
sister was born up there and we came back
(the only thing I can thank those movements for
is that my little sister was born the way she is:
all that snow and Canadian north
led my mother’s womb to make a child
inverse and warm—still my sister hates cold)
where we were from, or, where we could have been
stationary, where we circumnavigated, hopping
from one to another to yet another Massachusetts
suburbia: I grew up small and hated cruel people.
I grew up male and only felt female. I grew up
smarter than most and favored because of it,
the only potential inheritor of my mother’s (tom)boyhood
and my father’s goofy charm. Wrong! I had neither.
Wronged to be treated better and then expected
to be the product of better treatment, though overall
I had it easier. And the grease of ease isn’t something
easy itself, a slimy fattening gelatin of privilege that absorbs
willpower: odd because I put in so much effort
to make everyone proud and then (later—middle school
or long after—) I started covertly doing wrong
as many things as I could. Trying to learn tolerance
and my own stupid sod. I needed people. I needed to believe
in people and the innate willingness of people to suture
themselves, one another, lost and wandering strangers.
I wanted to be a lost and wandering stranger
and then to be helped. My sister moved out
because there was college for her and she hated
my mother. She failed college and still hated
my mother. I hated college for failing her and because
she didn’t care about me either, until she moved
out and back and over. All this arbitrariness of
siblinghood and bouncing around. Couldn’t we
have grown up in one house and gotten along? Couldn’t
she not have moved out to California, just after
I cared about her? Last month or so she tried to come home,
my mother groaned and set down ground rules.
About folding sheets and pushing in couches.
I vow never to make rules about couches. Let’s
not even talk about the absences
(that was my mother’s approach, the one
that I learned so well, hating my absent cousins.
The dead aunt. The drunk grandfather. The insane
grandmother. The hole in my mother. Actually
it’s true I was a happier child not knowing
but I given the choice I would never grow up
wanting to not know. I am a curious blot,
ugly and infantile, preserving my hatred in jars.
I am a perfect refrigerator in a room
with flickering power. I recollect as a child
being obsessed with apocalypses and time travel. Perhaps
this is normal. It wasn’t the physics that got me
but the bizarre questions, the paradoxes, even
the arbitrary threats and yarn that spun off timelines
and trails of genetic harm. I’ll punch you so hard
your grandfather bowls over. Up here I’d never notice
a dumb old man flinching in Florida. More importantly,
I was always upset at the people who thought
killing your grandfather before your parents were born
triggered a time-upset. No. Time straightens out
and follows the chain of command down. My grandfather flickers
and I stop existing, fade out. But these are just theoretical concepts, really
I’m interested in killing my unborn nieces and nephews,
sparing them the microwanderlust we all come programmed with:
never really going anywhere, just fidgeting awkwardly
for miles and hours. Not light-years, none of us get astral
or older. My sister tans, I freckle, my younger sister shivers
even in summer. The little one and I walked one night
to see an artist perform—a fire-dancer, a tightrope walker.
I only let my sister have one beer. I wonder if it hurts her,
to play the role she knows I want to see, the lone survivor,
the only human to come out of this generation as a person.
Not a half-mute screw-up able only to speak too much,
in infinite malapropism. I could make pyramids out of the evils
my tongue has done, and also a dozen malnourished
Semitic women. If I were in charge of Moses he would have drowned.
Or worse. He’d float down the river only to find
the creatures living there weren’t human and didn’t drink water.
Instead they’d be pale vegans eating sand. Despite
everything the sun had done, they’d be fair-skinned, cold-blooded
reptilians, blowing away in the wind, surviving marasmus
only to become part of a desert, gnawing, edging forward.
We move so often, covering dirt. And as the radius of home
expands and gets larger the soil become infertile and full of
hurt. We find we didn’t bring water bottles. Or mirrors. We waste away
there, fighting with camels to see who can last longer.
Maybe it will rain. I will become stuck here
like relentless cement, inflexible and utterly intolerant. I
would sooner immolate than enjoy
the kinds of lethargic movement I’ve been doing. Flopping
my arms around. It takes so much more effort to stay still.

Friday, August 7, 2009

mmm fragments

Burglary: Andrew’s ribcage was chipped
from all the breaking and entering I did,
trying to become one with his lungs (those bellows those
gelatinous airtank machinators) as they popped laughter
like enflamed firewood or pitch-anywhere tear gas

canisters.






I went fishing and ended up a blur—an obsolete
predator—my only catch a becalmed bucket of long-
rusted fish hooks. It is nice to come home with extra equipment
but that day the seafood won. I have no gills. When I returned
my garden had ceased photosynthesis: flowers beset by worms,
my soil’s blossoms were baiting the sun.

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Apprehension


Harping you. Learning
to live close,
in time forgiving.

Sunday, July 26, 2009

There were hobgoblins harming her all the way home.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Somebody else's stalker-ex

Andrew, the breaking and entering you tried to do
is not the crime you succeeded in completing, not
the intrusion that defined you, the one you got away with.

You drilled into my head, incised slits and pockets,
and absconded with my sense of security, the two of you
eloping as if you were the pen- and ultimate member

of some sick species of terrified and jealous beings.

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

brevity

Speech is only "short and to the point" when the sparse sounds are dense: the words you choose are not choice: your rarity is rarefaction, bee without hive or honey, flying on aimless wings.

Monday, July 6, 2009

left just alright

remember how the leftover
organic matter
stuck to the pan you scraped
with the hard metal spatula.

remember how the leftover
you I have
stuck to the sidewalk you sidled
away from.

you went straight and I stayed
perpendicular: definitively right-
angled to thunder and everything
everything that matters.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Two If By Sea

I held up two fingers for my father
who tested helicopters--a peace sign
to malign the naval carriers
he shipped aboard: they also launched bombers.

I hoped, however, that the rotors cycloned
upwards--my father's maintenance software
functioning and keeping him hovered.
He was super-aquatic: I worried about air.

Below, the waves splashed as normal
water is wont to do--pulled by the moon.
My father's night-flight experimented over
an ocean that was already tested and approved.

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Regretting Youth

Mostly I lament the tame and nondescript
moments: the playground splinters; the generic card
I bought my aunt for her birthday, and mailed a day late; the extra time I spent
studying for compulsory, state-wide examinations.

Wildfire, you dug a hole for yourself, with your late nights
and incorrigible alcoholism. And yet that cavernous
impression you left in earth became a den—it was warm
where you were, your walls were solid.

By the hearth you remain. Where was I then, where am I
now?—outside in cold, lying in snow, my back tarnished
with melted flakes. Here in stiff air I flail my arms,
successful as all hell, trying to impress angels.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Cave-in, no echo

Boy with the name and face I don’t remember,
you can stop shouting, I can still hear you.

– Simon Armitage, “The Shout”


I thought about it and thought I heard it—
the shout of a dead man resounding in
muted echo, a murmur like the tinnitus
haunting the ears of my deaf great-uncle.

Uncle Harry heard the suck and build-up
before drums, just the whoosh of the percussion,
mallets falling and throttling air—never striking.
His ears were hollow, lacking anvil to transmit

throbs. I thought the deceased’s yelp resembled
this—the blast of emasculate bellows, coals
already put out, fire unfannable. I thought about it
and thought I could apprehend that sound.

It was more like a pistol: angry retort
with genesis too swift and mechanical
to be heard, or understood as music. The air
was absent: lungs, drums, woodwinds

decadent. Hardly tinnitus and more like
a ton of bricks—constantly falling, burying
a chimney-sweep in his work. He expected
to be coated in ash, and not hard-fired clay.

Cacophony was no echo, nor was it phonic—
the shout of a dead man incomprehensible,
tortured, whimpered, howled. It stole my hollows,
my ears always suffering, precisely caved-in.

Monday, June 8, 2009

Infidelity

Arsenic was a dust rock-men could grow used to,
their mettle processing the poison, depositing it
in crevices and coeloms. It did not produce the same
harm in them as it did in fireworks and bark-women—
realgar was mined to color clothing and explosions.

Roots slitting into the cave seemed to exorcise
toxins, sucking them, quelling their pollution. And yet—
though the trees that grew from bad earth
towered over the others, they were flushed by stone.
Pressed hard against rock, their insides reddened.

Quiet were women who grew with roots. Seeming
to be stable, cave walls moved when the ground shook
or when new plants cracked them. It was rare to find
flora that clambered like tunnels through mountains.
Stone-men were addicted to dust, that subtle poison.

pedestratum

her mangoes grow and the good things also:
she is kind and beautiful and somewhat pedestrian.

yes this marvel this humble two-footed thing
walks on dirt without floating, she leaves
average footprints.

sometimes she trips in puddles. she laments
shallow bubbles (enjoys popping them, hates
how they have to explode) that appear in gas spills:
fragile ramparts—fish scale—iridescent outgrowths

sprouting up from an oil slick. she is pedestrian,
she slips. now she too is covered in viscous—
it is not unattractive, it colors her curves
and makes them stick. on a minefield

she would lose her toes. this might impede her
normal: though she is much more. it takes a certain
commitment to walk on the earth. she shoves her feet
in the seashore: they lay eggs, become turtles.

Sunday, June 7, 2009

burn from a lightbulb

she admits the glass
she has squeezed too tight—

somehow she cannot bring herself
to speak about it, this accident,
to anything animate. instead she caresses

herself. her splintered hand. she tweaks
the platelets of glass, embedded—
her hand sparks, it whimpers

pangs it cannot bury in nerves.
she admits glass but only to glass.
she hides from her parents

the silly thing she did (squeezing
a lightbulb, tainting her hand,
letting it heal over. burn from

a little bulb’s touch, yes, but mostly
from breaking it. sowing beneath skin;
letting it grow in her.)

second song of la jeanne

above dark earth my body is a pyre
trim rosaceous fire I upright and firm

a woman shall not wear war’s iron armor,
that which pertaineth unto a man—

first in winter a steel strap set to sunder
in May slick layers that tighten cackle burst

my skin fine jaws that clutch the guilt of sinners
I slice them up the Lord he is my shepherd

and we mortals shish kebab our bodies staked
up on wooden platforms man such easy murder.

one unit

how much passion powder
possesses one clove garlic
bitten into

how much for that wellness
core curing bodies’ aches
spicing diseases

how much growth and effort
for one clove—a parceled plant-life
—division of bulbous, a bundle—

do any of us know what it took
to nurture that vegetable fraction
what it took to ensnare it

(to get you well?)

Love

Growing up, my mother
broke her leg. her father
was in the other room, stayed there.

Sadship (below water)

The Dawn Treader named as much only because it sinks at any other time

—hush the child

is sleeping. your mouth flaps
will summon locusts, unbury
your silences, dried-up and weary,

allow them to falter less heavily. the earth
layer rests. should you. do not scrape the shovel
as you go to uncover, quiet, a heart digs
with caution. and rhythm. extract

the pulse from the beat, take the tempo
but leave the bass drum behind.
remember violets. pergolas. the drape

flowers and grace. the vine hangings.
how fragile the moment of rest
cyclical but breakable
always. prohibit botanists from studying

the unlikely event. what hangs
in the balance—its existence.
shattered mask of closed-eye unconscious
brings grievances to redress. a child’s

wail. even the knock of wooden footsteps
will give up the ghost, of silence
and sleep. exorcise often, if you want

to disturb spirits. here we keep our mouths
shut. we pray only for rest.

A couple evening shudders

Walking the bridge at night in Prague,
riding the trolleys—buses—trams—
I had your coat. It was left like you
an Australian visitor to the five-story
dance club. Checked in. We went together and you
got lost in the mouths of myriad tourists.

We didn’t agree on much except
we hated the Sicilian man whose grease
stuck to the air he accompanied us in.
We did well to lose him first
and then you lost me and your jacket
somewhere in light-up tiles, pounding music.

At four or five a.m. the lights shut off,
bodies sieved out the bottleneck exit
with some dropping off to pick up
their clothing and drunkenly “forget”
to leave tips. If they tip in Europe.
I am not fluent in subcurrents of Czech.

Cold in November: the first snow I’d seen
over the Atlantic was that light and white-webbed
drift that descended my skin. Decocting pimples
as I disembarked a small airplane. The night
I lost you—snowless—but frighteningly cold
reminded me of this. For no reason. It was dark

and frigid unlike the arrival moment. Perhaps
the poignancy of both shudders struck me. Later,
I missed the changing of the astral clock
though I heard it from afar, many days of my visit,
and sometimes from anear. From an almost saw;
a frustration.

Hear where I am now, an almost saw of Prague
making mulled wine in Boston to warm my stomach.
I recollect you a lost Australian wandering:
we went to the little red stands for tourists
and for a few coins (what is the currency called?)
we bought spiced drink, gluhwein as the Germans call it.

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Curved as your nails are, from being shut in a door

You have tried to talk to you six times, and six times you have failed. The first time, you mutter I’ve got to remember, got to remember… hoping that the echo of sound through your own bones will lodge somewhere, the temporal bone, or perhaps the incus. The words stick in your head and ear but block them up as wax: what goes ‘in one ear’ in fact originates on the inside, has no reason to proceed outwards, or to pass through to the brain where it could be more securely stored.

I don’t know what you are trying to recall, father, as you stand there, assembling computer parts, resetting micro-switches on an already-dusty motherboard. You’ve just purchased a new slew of electronics, and hovering over them, a near-sighted tinker, you fret over instructions commuted from paper to brain cells, a manual you have repeated enough times to know by heart, but now misplaced twice: the book is gone, its contents also missing.

The computer will tell time, and so I reason you are a watchmaker. What time will tell you I am not sure: you have hidden the secrets of your head in strange pockets, places where even you, a manipulator of tiny gears, may not be able to fit your fingers, regardless of the strange places those arcing digits have explored.

another fragment

pastoral of grown organs



they fathom a lung and make it function


in the glass casement
it huffs and puffs and fills

Kindness

Archdioseizures, metal coeloms,
parhelia, muted affection, metastases:

You have misapprehended my lack of acid
approached my null hydrochlora and fauna
as normalcy

I am a basic being
do not compound me or assume
my absence indicates enigmata

or deeply-mulled feelings
(there is nothing fermenting
if anything lack of anything spoiling)

No, I am simply squandered regions
excessive reflections
limbs of a plague-bearing tree

I am elemental I can be read as wild
in fact I crave the domestic emotions of books
and human apathy

stirring in my weak breeze

Sunday, May 24, 2009

1st stanza of of of

The zinc-worker melted a hot bath,
galvanized metal. He dipped limbs
in protective coating, a silver-white layer
to ward off corrosion. Sturdy beams simmered
until their surface started to spangle—trim crystals
sparkled, the metallurgist extracted steel.

Saturday, May 23, 2009

I will irritate you into an obtuse angle

your skin inflected infected with my askew