Read The Best American Poetry 2012 Online
Authors: David Lehman
of his frown, his forehead; nay,
the pretty dimples of his chin and cheekâ
Would you not deem it breath'd? And that those veins
did verily bear blood?”
*
I had noticed that they took
certain patients' families into a room
during the operations. Separated them
from where the others waited,
so it was obvious when the doctors came
and led a group into the little room, and shut the door.
You could hear the muffled something, the scuttle
in the dark that signaled pain,
which was why I began to sing,
It's fine,
during the operation, cheerful, witless,
It's fine, it's fine,
so long as they don't take us into that little room
which is what they did, three hours later, the doctor
and his trout-faced resident.
We have some news,
the doctor said, and as the door shut my father
turned to me with a look that read,
I will never forgive you.
So many models, so many bits of grotesqueryâ
In the museum is Robert-François Damiens who,
in 1757, was ordered to have his flesh ripped
with pincers and, by proclamation, “on those places poured
molten lead, boiling oil, resin, wax,
body quartered by horses, his limbs consumed by fire.”
The portrait of this pain, in its own way, a kind of compliment.
To make this man's suffering significant because
prohibitive, because
it would be the most intense form of privacy imaginable.
They tortured a person
out of the body that they killed, and then they changed this:
Guillotin remodeling the blade to sculpt the new
blood-wet window through which his “patients”
would look. To turn each death anonymous, communalâ
“Passenger,” wrote Robespierre's epitaph, “lament not his fate,
for, were he living,
thou would'st be dead.” Insert yourself
inside this window. Crowds
pushing against soldiers, shrubbery, platforms, crowds
looking and feeling at another
just like themselves.
I am a man because I suffer,
the thin gas voice leaks inside the chamber, or is it,
I am a man because I make others
suffer in my place?
*
How much
enough
to call it evidence?
I thought my father would faint when he heard the results.
The insides seamed as if with. The diamond of the flesh turned into,
turned out of, it was hard to tell.
You have to imagine,
the doctors said.
To spend an afternoon combing these words. To walk
among the white pillars of the Temple of Poseidon
looking for the name some poet etched there once
as a kind of afterthought, rows and rows
of white stone, and no one could find it:
so many others had added names, dates, the pillars
had become a kind of cemetery,
but I was desperate for the remnant, the authority.
I needed to trace my fingers through the name, to step inside of it.
How deep the eye. How deep the knife, the hand, the imaginationâ
And once again we took off
coat and sweater, blouse and skirt. Someone came
and washed her scent off. The oils of her hair.
How much further and still be her?
They put a knife in. They took out lining
and consciousness, tissue, time, they took out speech,
then brought it back. And now
they give us another body, a littler one, and we start
the process over in reverse. The lenses, blouse, shoes, skirt,
makeup, hair oils. And added to it, the little
rubber breast padding for what's been lostâ
I should have looked, like Tussaud, with my glasses
and my lock of hair.
I should have stood stretching out my hand for the perspective,
knowing it was only a thought that night that I
was the killer, I had the knife in hand, I was taking out the heart
and tongue, I was cutting off the fingers, it was me doing it,
that blood, that distanceâ
Nothing scraped at the floorboards. Nothing blew down and whistled
in the street. And somewhere an image
in the mind's blank cavern: the body's senseless
clawing out of color, its muds and greens and pallid lights.
You cannot tell just what the body is
or where the corruption will take it:
it is like trying to pinpoint the soul
as it animates the body: it exists, like a painting does,
between the real and imagined, where the wax itself
comes back to life.
They asked us to look
and understand the stain, the shadow on the X-ray
but the shadow was too much a shape
to be an idea as yet. We looked, and the shadow
turned into fist, a face, it blossomed
like a Japanese lotus in a dish of water, it turned
beautiful and remote, black sun around which
the ghostly others lost duration, turned themselves in orbitâ
No,
the doctors said. And urged us to paint
the image thickly over, keep her untouched color
and shade, hue that recalls the vivid flesh
and just its opposite, to let dirt scrub into the cracksâ
After the operations, she is
not only human but the state
of working toward humanity, away from it,
while in my mind her face can be remolded to last
longer than wood, longer than stone, to last
as long as there is wax, her image always at the point
of just emerging. Let me look. Here
are the cells with their rotten codes.
Here are breasts, belly, the still-pink organs ripe and flush:
myself liquifying into the family's
deathless increase.
I can see the swelling
in armpit, groin, the milk glands ripened in the breast. Passenger:
I had no idea what it meant,
lingering alone, black-eyed in doorwaysâ
Take off the vest. Peel off the fragments
that are left, the sweat-stained
shoes and blouse, glasses, sweater: let us trace our fingers
through the names, let us add them to us, so that later
we can take it all away.
The drumroll is echoing in the chamber. It takes me down
where so many have gathered, crowds upon crowds
for the blood-wet window
through which each citizen must look.
The crowd shudders as the cord is cut. Shock
that travels through everybody. Makes a family out of every
body. Then isolates the patient.
They held my little X-ray up to the light and.
The king is dead. Do you believe it?
Passenger: touch this pillar for a sign.
Someone has to raise the head.
Someone has to imagine the other side.
from
Witness
Middle School
I went to Cesare Pavese Middle School.
The gymnasium was a chapel dedicated to loneliness
and no one played games.
There was a stained glass window over the principal's desk
and innumerable birds flew against it,
reciting Shelley with all their might,
but it was bulletproof, and besides,
our leaders were never immortal.
The classrooms were modeled after motel rooms,
replete with stains, and in remedial cases
saucers of milk on the floor for innumerable cats,
or kittens, depending on the time of year.
In them we were expected to examine ourselves and pass.
The principal himself once jumped off the roof
at noon, to show us school spirit.
Our mascot was Twist-Tie Man.
Our team The Bitter Herbs.
Our club The Reconsiderers.
It was an honor to have gone,
though a tad strict in retrospect.
You have probably heard that we all became janitors,
sitting in basements next to boilers
reading cheap paperback books of Italian poetry,
and never sweep a thing.
Yet the world runs fine.
from
Conduit
Girl with Gerbil
Out of the no-place
of her not-yet-need she dreams
herself. Unmoved face of the deep
her mirror,
she sees as much as says
I am that I am. I make me now what first
made me: love renewed, bound up,
embodiedâalways life come burning
back. I prepare my houseâ
if cardboard, straight and true, a shoebox
Kleenex-bedded, riddled through
with stately constellations.
In timeâin the growing
fullness of my timeâI'll know myself
in knowing another. Some other one
and only me.
from
The Cincinnati Review