Read The Best American Poetry 2012 Online
Authors: David Lehman
      Anne Wiebe, Lois
Hexter, Jeunesse Ames,
  David McConnehey, Duncan Chu
and today's guests,
Mike Rahn & Clark Taft
visiting from the Fourth-Grade Class
from
The Antioch Review
MagdaleneâThe Seven Devils
Mary, called Magdalene, from whom seven devils had been cast out
âLuke 8:2
The first was that I was very busy.
The secondâI was different from you: whatever happened to you could
not happen to me, not like that.
The thirdâI worried.
The fourthâenvy, disguised as compassion.
The fifth was that I refused to consider the quality of life of the aphid,
the aphid disgusted me. But I couldn't stop thinking about it.
The mosquito tooâits face. And the antâits bifurcated body.
Ok the first was that I was so busy.
The second that I might make the wrong choice,
because I had decided to take that plane that day,
that flight, before noon, so as to arrive early
and, I shouldn't have wanted that.
The third was that if I walked past the certain place on the street
the house would blow up.
The fourth was that I was made of guts and blood with a thin layer
of skin lightly thrown over the whole thing.
The fifth was that the dead seemed more alive to me than the living
The sixthâif I touched my right arm I had to touch my left arm, and if I
touched the left arm a little harder than I'd first touched the right then I had
to retouch the left and then touch the right again so it would be even.
The seventhâI knew I was breathing the expelled breath of everything that
was alive and I couldn't stand it,
I wanted a sieve, a mask, a, I hate this wordâcheeseclothâ
to breathe through that would trap itâwhatever was inside everyone else that
entered me when I breathed in
No. That was the first one.
The second was that I was so busy. I had no time. How had this happened?
How had our lives gotten like this?
The third was that I couldn't eat food if I really saw itâdistinct, separate
from me in a bowl or on a plate.
Ok. The first was that I could never get to the end of the list.
The second was that the laundry was never finally done.
The third was that no one knew me, although they thought they did.
And that if people thought of me as little as I thought of them then what was
love?
The fourth was I didn't belong to anyone. I wouldn't allow myself to belong
to anyone.
Historians would assume my sin was sexual.
The fifth was that I knew none of us could ever know what we didn't know.
The sixth was that I projected onto others what I myself was feeling.
The seventh was the way my mother looked when she was dying.
The sound she madeâthe gurgling soundâso loud we had to speak louder
to hear each other over it.
And that I couldn't stop hearing itâyears laterâ
grocery shopping, crossing the streetâ
No, not the soundâit was her body's hunger
finally evidentâwhat our mother had hidden all her life.
For months I dreamt of knucklebones and roots,
the slabs of sidewalk pushed up like crooked teeth by what grew underneath.
The underneathâthat was the first devil. It was always with me.
And that I didn't think youâif I told youâwould understand any of thisâ
from
The American Poetry Review
Memphis
You like to pretend you will meet her again someday in Knoxville, Nashville, Memphis.
Tennesseeâstate of forgiveness, of makeup sex, of uneaten ribs. O Memphis!
Drink more, hit on waitress with tattoo & pierced navel, slouch toward gracelessness.
Imagine there are no consequences. What fails in your fantasies stays in Memphis.
Any home not your own offers a chance to shed skin & slither free from what is.
Ancient city covered with silt now, no earthen dam legible enough to protect Memphis.
You are so prepared to be disappointed by Graceland that you fall in love with it.
How have I failed to mention the music? That is, after all, why you come to Memphis.
Buy a shirt at B. B. King's, guzzle beer on Beale Street. Hell yeah, Elvis lives.
Just another plastic anagram. Why would anywhere be different? Why Memphis?
Sun sets over this river city: the transient slap & echo of blues. Water makes the best witness.
If you never stand still, there's nowhere you can't end up. Why not Memphis?
None of us ever falls where we belongâwe are ghosts on our way to someplace else.
This is especially true in the American South. Write me a letter from Memphis.
If you think you are happy, you need a more accurate measure. Nothing lasts. Ask Ramses.
Floods will always find you, water seeking other water. Even here, even Memphis.
from
The Southern Review
Aria
1.
Tonight at a party we will say farewell
to a close friend's breasts, top surgery for months
she's saved for. Bundled close on a back step,
we wave a Bic lighter and burn her bra.
At first struggling to catch nylon aflame,
in awe we watch as all but the sheer black
underwire melts before forming a deep
quiet hole in the snow.
      Sometimes the page
too goes quiet, a body that we've stopped
speaking with, a chest out of which music
will come if she's a drum flattened tight, if she's
pulled like canvas across a field, a frame
where curves don't show, exhalation without air.
Then this off-pitch soprano steals through.
2.
Then this off-pitch soprano steals through
a crack that's lit. A scarlet gap between
loose teeth. Interior trill. We're rustling open.
Out of a prohibited body why
long for melody? Just a thrust of air,
a little space with which to make this thistling
sound, stretch of atmosphere to piss through when
you're scared shitless.
Little sister, the sky
is falling and I don't mind, I don't mind,
a line a girl, a prophet half my age,
told me to listen for one summer when
I was gutless, a big-mouthed carp that drank
down liters of algae, silt, fragile shale
while black-winged ospreys plummeted from above.
3.
While black-winged ospreys plummeted from above,
we were born beneath. You know what I mean?
I'll tell you what the girls who never love
us back taught me: The strain within will tune
the torqued pitch. In 1902 the last
castrato sang “Ave Maria.”
His voiceâa bifurcated swell. So pure
a lady screams with ecstasy.
Voce
bianco!
Breath control. Hold each note. Extend
the timbre. Pump the chest, that balloon room,
and lift pink lips, chin so soft and beardless,
a flutter, a flourish, a cry stretching beyond
its range, cruising through four octaves, a warbler,
a starling with supernatural restraint.
4.
A starling with supernatural restraint,
a tender glissando on a scratched LP,
his flute could speak catbird and hermit thrush.
It was the year a war occurred or troops
were sent while homicide statistics rose;
I stopped teaching to walkout, my arms linked
to my students to show a mayor who didn't
show. Seven hundred youth leaned on adults
who leaned back. We had lost another smart kid
to a bullet in the Fillmore, Sunnyside,
the Tenderloin. To love without resource
or peace. When words were noise, a jazz cut was steel.