Read The Best American Poetry 2013 Online
Authors: David Lehman
Like the lake turned to
steel by the twilit
sky. Like
the Flood in the toilet
to the housefly.
Like the sheet
thrown over
the secret love. Like
the sheet thrown over
the blood on the rug.
Or the pages
of the novel
scattered by the wind:
The end
at the beginning
in the middle again.
And the sudden sense.
The polished lens.
The revision
revisioned, as if
as if.
As if
the secretâ
had you told me when.
Who I thought
we were, every-
where we went.
from
New England Review
What happens when they leave
is that the houses fold up like paper dolls,
the children roll up their socks and sweaters
and tuck the dogs into little black suitcases.
Across the street the trees are unrooting,
the mailboxes rising up like dandelion stems,
and eventually we too float off,
the houses tucked neatly inside our purses, and the children
tumbling gleefully after us,
and beneath us the base has disappeared, the rows
of pink houses all the way to the oceanâgone,
and the whole city has slipped off the white earth
like a table being cleared for lunch.
We set up for a few weeks at a time
in places like Estonia or Laosâ
places where they still have legends,
where a town of women appearing in the middle of the night
is surprising but not unheard of. The locals come to watch
our strange carnival unpacking in some wheat field
outside Paldiskiâwe invite them in for coffee,
forgetting for a minute
that some of our own men won't come home again;
and sometimes, a wife or two won't either.
She'll meet someone else, say, and
it's one of those things we don't talk about,
how people fall in and out of love,
and also, what the chaplains are for.
And then, a few days before the planes fly in
we return. We roll out the sidewalks and make the beds,
tether the trees to the yard.
On the airfield, everything is as it should beâ
our matte red lipstick, the babies blanketed inside strollers.
Only, our husbands look at us a little sadly,
the way people do when they know
they have changed but don't want to say it.
Instead they say, What have you been doing all this time?
And we say, Oh you know, the dishes,
and they laugh and say,
Thank God some things stay the same.
from
Southwest Review
Flea market guy tells me the pornos are five dollars
each or three for ten and then leans in conspiratorially
to say “get you a bunch,” which is sound advice from
his perspective, I'm so sure, though I could watch them
all and still not know more than I do now. Friend tells me
he likes this woman we see in a bar, and when I point out
that she's wearing a ring, he says when women wear rings,
it just means they “do it”âof course, we'd have to ask
their handsome husbands about that, wouldn't we! Also,
was sex better in olden days? In the movies, people from
roughly the Dark Ages through Victorian times are always
wearing clothes when they do it, and the guys seem
to be having all the fun, if by “fun” you mean a fumbling
upskirts ram job that looks more like mixed martial arts
than making love, which, I realize, can take different
forms, depending on the preferences, time available,
and chemical states of the doer as well as the doee or,
in the most desirable version, the two co-doers,
who would thereby be co-doees as well. Still, repression's
got a lot going for it: from the repressed mind
comes beautiful stories, whereas from the liberated mind comes
websites that show women having sex with vegetables.
Want an example of a beautiful story? Take
Tristan
and Isolde
: Isolde of Ireland is betrothed to King
Mark of Cornwall, who sends his nephew, Tristan,
to Ireland to escort Isolde back to Cornwall. Big mistake!
They do it, King Mark finds out, everything
goes to hell in a handbasket. So what makes it a beautiful story?
Not because it ends happily, which it so doesn't,
but because everyone fulfills his or her nature, stays
in character, does what's right for them and nobody else.
“It is unbelievable that Tristan should ever be in a position
to marry Isolde,” writes Swiss critic Denis de Rougemont
in his monumental study
Love in the Western
World
, for “she typifies the woman a man does not marry . . .
once she became his wife she would no longer be what
she is, and he would no longer love her. Just think of
a Madame Tristan!” Wait, let me try. No, you're right,
Denisâcan't be done! But until things go all pear-shaped
for the lovers, there's a huge payoff: between
the beginning of the story, where everybody's just
walking around and shaking hands with one another,
and the end, which is filled with the usual shouting
and finger-pointing, not to mention poison draughts
and black-sailed death ships and blood-dripping
broadswords, there's the yummy part, where, in Denis
de Rougemont's words, Tristan and Isolde are
“exiled into ecstasy.” See, that would be excellent,
right, reader? You'd be exiled from your usual pleasures,
like dollar-off dry cleaning every Thursday and so-called
organic vegetables that are not grown by any method
verifiable by science but that you eat anyway. But you
wouldn't care. You'd be all ecstatic! Fashion maven Diana
Vreeland says, “Elegance is refusal.” She also said, “Pink
is the navy blue of India,” and I don't know what
that means, either. But it sounds good, right? Sounds like a secret.
from
Plume
The long-legged aphids, rich in their summertime,
The anchorite rolling around on the wet grass,
Amulet of a constellation, oh, it speaks louder
Than any church bell! I am here, at the tea table,
And the curio is very small. I drag the alphabet
To and fro, and drink non-alcoholic cocktails by
The muddy creek. Someone, tell me my life already,
Someone reliableâthe phone psychics all suck,
And besides, that's playing with demons. If I dis-
Connect my woolly body from what I am inured
To use, tell me what grief lingers in a medieval
Box, the universal liquor of a swinging child. I
Don't know where I'm headed, but the star-lit trees
Above my path never go out. They sing songs to me
In the daytime, and their music boxes are as snows
Falling. Sometimes I peek, as the aphids eat at the road.
from
Conduit
In the fifties people who were smart
And looked smart were called eggheads.
Adlai Stevenson, who was bald and went to Princeton,
Was the quintessential egghead, and so he lost
To Dwight Eisenhower, the president of Columbia.
Dave Brubeck was an egghead, with his horn-rimmed
Glasses and all those albums of jazz at colleges,
Though on NPR last week he claimed he wasn't smart.
I took piano lessons from his brother Howard
In the Thearle Music Building in San Diego in the fifties,
Which probably would have made me an egghead by contagion
If it hadn't been for Sputnik, which made being smart
Fashionable for a while (as long as you didn't
look
smart).
Beatniks weren't eggheads: eggheads were uptight
And buttoned down, wore black shoes instead of sandals
And didn't play bongo drums or read poetry in coffee houses.
What sent me on this memory trip was the realization
That stupidity was in style again, in style with a vengeanceâ
Not that it was ever out of style, or confined to politics
(“We need more show and less tell,” wrote an editor of
Poetry
About a poem of mine that he considered too abstract).
The new stupidity doesn't have a name or a characteristic look,
And it's not just
in
style, it
is
a style, a style of seeing everything as style,
Like Diesel jeans, or glasses and T-shirts, or a way of talking on TV:
Art as style, science as a style, and intelligence as a style too,
Perhaps the egghead style without the smarts. It's politics
Where stupidity and style combine to form the perfect storm,
As a host of stylized, earnest airheads emerge from the greenrooms
Of the Sunday morning talk shows, mouthing talking points
In chorus, playing their parts with panache and glowing with the glow
You get from a fact-free diet, urged on by a diminutive senator
Resembling a small, furious gerbil. If consistency is the hobgoblin
Of little minds, these minds are enormous, like enormous rooms.
It wasn't always like this. Maybe it wasn't much better,
But I used to like politics. I used to like arguing with Paul Arnson
On the Luther League bus, whatever it was we argued about.
It was more like a pastime, since if things were only getting better
Incrementally, at least they weren't steadily getting worse: