Read Elegy for a Broken Machine Online
Authors: Patrick Phillips
And how kind
it used to make us
when we’d laugh
and throw our heads back
and watch the dragon’s breath
float from our mouths,
all ravenous and doomed.
Which is why I quit, of course,
like almost everyone,
and stay inside these days
staring at my phone,
chewing toothpicks
and figuring the bill,
while out the window
the smokers gather
in their same old constellations,
like memories of ourselves.
Or like the remnants
of some decimated tribe,
come down out of the hills
to tell their stories
in the lightly falling rain—
to be, for a moment, simply there
and nowhere else,
faces glowing
each time they lift to their lips
the little flame.
and his helper, Miguel,
hit a pothole
on Atlantic last Wednesday:
a nub of raw cartilage
peeking out through the septum
as he told me himself
how the airbag’s explosives,
and the dashboard’s gray shrapnel,
had blown the nose clear off his face,
over which the young doctors
laid a patch of wet skin
I could see they had cut
from his forehead:
a few gray eyebrow hairs
sprouting through the black stitches
as, deep in a mask
of oozing and swelling,
his big watery eyes
looked into mine,
like some child on Halloween night.
*
What is the meaning?
Where is the message?
Why have I dragged you
and poor Alan
together like this,
after all he’s been through?
There is everything we think
we know in the world.
And then there’s this shit
that just happens:
that falls from the sky,
or sprouts in our lungs,
or flies up from a windshield
without warning,
the whole planet charged
with the power
to open our bodies,
the way lightning lays bare
the pink, meaty striations
of heartwood, deep in a tree.
*
That’s it. That is all
I was thinking,
or trying hard not to think,
when Alan rolled
onto his back
and stared up at the drain,
his sweet, ruined face
turning to stone
in the torch’s blue flame,
while I stood over him
saying, as one knows
one must say,
I am
sorry. I’m so sorry,
by which, we both knew,
I meant
Jesus Christ. Jesus
fucking Christ, Alan, almighty.
It came with those scratches
from all their belt buckles,
palm-dark with their sweat
like the stock of a gun:
an arc of pickmarks cut
clear through the lacquer
where all the players before me
once strummed—once
thumbed these same latches
where it sleeps in green velvet.
Once sang, as I sing, the old songs.
There’s no end, there’s no end
to this world, everlasting.
We crumble to dust in its arms.
The beauty of the fisher-wife
in that sepia-toned tintype
stopped me on the stairs,
cradling my beer
as I squinted at a sea
of tiny schooners bristling
the St. John’s quay:
where she stared back at me,
a toddler almost hidden
in the folds of her skirt hem,
each hand a silver blur.
At work. At work,
I slurred,
full of pity for the lost:
for her, for us,
for everyone, I thought,
as I blew a groggy kiss
across the century,
and staggered on.
The Chinese truck driver
throws the rope
like a lasso, with a practiced flick,
over the load:
where it hovers an instant,
then arcs like a willow
into the waiting,
gloved hand
of his brother.
What does it matter
that, sitting in traffic,
I glanced out the window
and found them that way?
So lean and sleek-muscled
in their sweat-stiffened t‑shirts:
offloading the pallets
just so they can load up
again in the morning,
and so on,
and so forth,
forever like that—
like Sisyphus
I might tell them
if I spoke Mandarin,
or had a Marlboro to offer,
or thought for a minute
they’d believe it
when I say that I know
how it feels
to break your own
back for a living.
Then again,
what’s the difference?
When every light
for a mile turns
green all at once,
no matter how much
I might like
to keep watching
the older one squint
and blow smoke
through his nose?
Something like sadness,
like joy, like a sudden
love for my life,
and for the body
in which I have lived it,
overtaking me all at once,
as a bus driver honks
and the setting
sun glints, so bright
off a windshield
I wince and look back
and it’s gone.
The only one the snipers spared,
as their helicopter hovered
above the temple wall,
was a lanky young initiate
who sloshed the amber liquid
from a jerry can onto his head
then bowed formally, deliberately,
to all those watching
inside the circle of their scopes,
as he opened his eyes and stood upright
and touched the stick of smoking
incense to his robe.
It’s easy to pretend
that we don’t love
the world.
But then there is
your freckled skin
. Then:
your back’s faint
latticework of bones
.
I’m not saying this
makes up for suffering,
or trying to believe
that each day’s little ladder
of sunlight creeping
across the bed at dawn
somehow redeems it
for the thousand ways
in which we’ll be forsaken.
Maybe, sweet sleeper,
breathing next to me
as I scratch and scrawl
these endless notes,
I’m not saying anything
but what the sparrows out
our window sing,
high in their rotten oak.
Let them be vain.
Let them be jealous.
Let them, on their own earth,
await their own heaven.
Let them know they will die.
And all those they love.
Let them, wherever
they are, be alone.
And when they call out
in prayers, in the terrible dark,
let us be present, and watching,
and silent as stars.
I will die in Brooklyn, in January,
as snowflakes swarm the streetlamps
and whiten the cornices
of the sleeping brownstones.
It will be a Sunday like today
because, just now,
when I looked up, it seemed
that no one had ever
remembered or imagined
a thing so beautiful and lonely
as the pale blue city.
No one will stare up
at a light in the window
where I write this,
as taxis drag their chains
over the pavement,
as hulking garbage trucks
sling salt into the gutters.
Patrick Phillips is dead.
In January, in Brooklyn,
crowds of people stood
on subway platforms
watching snow
fall through the earth.
Yellow traffic lights
blinked on and off,
and only the old man
pushing a grocery cart
piled high with empty cans
stopped long enough
to raise his paper bag,
then took a swig, out of respect,
as a Cadillac turned slowly
in the slush, and slowly
made its way down Fulton.
Scatter my ashes at Six Mile Creek.
Where the slickrock turns to greenglide.
Where the blue striders streak.
Drag Billy Mashburn’s old johnboat
down the slope by the shore
as the sun dies and the moon climbs.
As light trails each dipped oar.
Scatter them there, where the ancient cans bleach.
Where the silt bed’s green blanket
drapes the ten thousand things.
With the leaf husk, with the pollen,
let them dust the cool creek,
and sink to that darkness
where the great darkness sleeps.
Grateful acknowledgment is made to the following publications, where a number of these poems first appeared:
American Poetry Review:
“The Body,” “Elegy After Midnight,” “Elegy for a Broken Machine,” “Elegy for Smoking,” “Four Haiku,” “Mattress,” “Old Love,” “Once,” and “The Shoebox Hades”
Ecotone:
“The Singing”
Narrative:
“Elegy at the Trinity Pub,” “Elegy with a Bronze Station Wagon,” “My Grandmother,” and “The Night Nurse Comes”
New England Review:
“Elegy After a Suicide,” “Elegy Outside the ICU,” “Elegy with Oil in the Bilge,” “Spell Against Gods,” “Variations on a Text by Donald Justice,” and “Will”
Slate:
“Alan the Plumber”
Tikkun:
“Aubade”
Virginia Quarterly Review:
“The Man,” “Mercy,” “Vesper Sparrow,” and “Work-Clothes Quilt”
“The Guitar” received the Lyric Poetry Award from the Poetry Society of America and first appeared at
www.poetrysociety.org
.
“Spell Against Gods” received a 2011 Pushcart Prize and appeared in
Pushcart Prize XXXVI: Best of the Small Presses.
“Elegy with Oil in the Bilge” was reprinted in Ted Kooser’s newspaper column, “American Life in Poetry,” July 2012.
I am deeply grateful to the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, and Drew University for giving me the time and peace to write. Special thanks to Ted Genoways, Tom Sleigh, and Joelle Biele for their friendship and encouragement. Thanks also to Deborah Garrison and everyone at Knopf, and to the many other friends who read these poems in manuscript—especially Ellen Brazier, Michael Collier, Brian Dempster, Jennifer Grotz, James Hoch, and C. Dale Young.
Patrick Phillips is the author of two poetry collections,
Boy
and
Chattahoochee,
which won the 2005 Kate Tufts Discovery Award. His honors include both Guggenheim and National Endowment for the Arts fellowships, the Lyric Poetry Award from the Poetry Society of America, a Discovery/
The Nation
Prize from the 92nd Street Y, and the Translation Prize of the American-Scandinavian Foundation. He lives in Brooklyn and teaches at Drew University.
Also by Patrick Phillips
Poetry
Boy
Chattahoochee
Translations
When We Leave Each Other: Selected Poems of Henrik Nordbrandt