Read The Best American Poetry 2015 Online
Authors: David Lehman
I knocked out Sleeping Beauty, fucking cocked
her on the jaw. She fell into the briar.
Pussy. I found her prince. I up and socked
him, too. I called each one of them a liar.
I damned the spindle's hundred years of sleep
because I rarely sleep. I cursed the birds
who took their heads from out beneath their heap
of wings. When lovers look, they need no words.
And when a hound came running after me,
a Redbone with a smile bearing its teeth
so white, I woke up with the majesty
of a princess who's lying underneath
a spell of something better still to come.
My eyes were blurry, my mouth dry and dumb.
from
Tupelo Quarterly
In a black        tank top
my man           can say
just about        anything.
Stuff like,       Â
let's watch
football
, or       Â
this shrimp
is overcooked
or
see how many pull-ups I
can do.
In a black tank top, he looks fifteen
years younger, looks like all those silly boys
I knew in school. When he gets home from
playing ball, I want to crawl inside the bed
of his parents' beat-up red pick-up truck &
make out until his almost beard scratches
at me, leaves dappled marks on my cheeks
& throat for friends to stare at for days. In a
black tank top, I can watch him talk about
beams, joists, & trusses for hours cause the
shadows of his arm press against the ribbed
cotton like a boy presses a girl up against a
steely locker, hard before Mrs. Toner's home
room. I want to shout,Â
Damn son! Looking
like that should be illegal
. And,
Break me off
some of that
. Instead I try to be the shy little
thing, smile & blush like the good girls do. In
a black tank top, though, my man always gets
me to offer a hand to pull it off. He trembles:
a boy undoing his first real belt.
from
Rattle
Today my brother brought over a piece of the ark
wrapped in a white plastic grocery bag.
He set the bag on my dining table, unknotted it,
peeled it away, revealing a foot-long fracture of wood.
He took a step back and gestured toward it
with his arms and open palmsâ
It's the ark
, he said.
You mean Noah's ark?
I asked.
What other ark is there?
he answered.
Read the inscription
, he told me,
it tells what's going to happen at the end.
What end?
I wanted to know.
He laughed,
What do you mean, “what end”?
The end end.
Then he lifted it out. The plastic bag rattled.
His fingers were silkened by pipe blisters.
He held the jagged piece of wood so gently.
I had forgotten my brother could be gentle.
He set it on the table the way people on television
set things when they're afraid those things might blow up
or go offâhe set it right next to my empty coffee cup.
It was no arkâ
it was the broken end of a picture frame
with a floral design carved into its surface.
He put his head in his handsâ
I shouldn't show you thisâ
God, why did I show her this?
It's ancientâO, God
,
this is so old.
Fine
, I gave in,
Where did you get it?
The girl
, he said.
O, the girl.
What girl?
I asked.
You'll wish you never knew
, he told me.
I watched him drag his wrecked fingers
over the chipped flower-work of the woodâ
You should read it. But, O, you can't take itâ
no matter how many books you've read.
He was wrong. I could take the ark.
I could even take his marvelously fucked fingers.
The way they almost glittered.
It was the animalsâthe animals I could not takeâ
they came up the walkway into my house,
cracked the doorframe with their hooves and hips,
marched past me, into my kitchen, into my brother,
tails snaking across my feet before disappearing
like retracting vacuum cords into the hollows
of my brother's clavicles, tusks scraping the walls,
reaching out for himâwildebeests, pigs,
the oryxes with their black matching horns,
javelinas, jaguars, pumas, raptors. The ocelots
with their mathematical faces. So many kinds of goat.
So many kinds of creature.
I wanted to follow them, to get to the bottom of it,
but my brother stopped meâ
This is serious
, he said.
You have to understand.
It can save you.
So I sat down, with my brother wrecked open like that,
and two-by-two the fantastical beasts
parading him. I sat, as the water fell against my ankles,
built itself up around me, filled my coffee cup
before floating it away from the table.
My brotherâteeming with shadowsâ
a hull of bones, lit only by tooth and tusk,
lifting his ark high in the air.
from
Poetry
such a beautiful
day
and I'm not
fornicating
âAdÃlia Lopes
I have goose bumps
from the breeze
coming into the window
which is a kind of fornication
but who am I kidding
a breeze is not even a kiss
especially a breeze
strained through a screen
I would have a better chance
out on the street
where I could perhaps meet
someone who wanted
to fornicate
with me or someone like me
and I could pretend
I suppose
even to be someone else
give a fake name
so the man would never
find me again
it is a little scary to say
to a stranger,
Hey, do you
want to fornicate?
especially if you are a woman
and you want to fornicate
with a man
what kind of a man
would say yes to such a request
maybe a violent one
maybe no decent man at all
since the request is pretty bold
and I suppose I would
look crazy
men are leery of crazy women
and I can't blame them
I could promise a man
that I wouldn't
stalk him or call him ever
that I am just in it
for the fornication
but would he believe me
even I don't really believe me
because what if the fornication
was a success and I woke up
the next morning
another beautiful day
and I wasn't satisfied
with just the memory
of fornication
and wanted another round
or what if it was lousy
outside
and since I'd given a fake name
insisting I didn't want to know his
I had to look for a new fornicator
this time while lugging an umbrella
this time I could look for a woman
with the same sad look I have
when I want to fornicate
and if she agreed
we could step out of the rain
into her apartment
it might not be as scary
as approaching another man
or as big a leap over a puddle
Anne Sexton wrote
Once I was beautiful. Now I am myself . . .
then AdÃlia Lopes wrote
once I was beautiful now I'm myself
then I wrote
fornication is for all the beautiful
and unbeautiful selves
on both beautiful
and unbeautiful days
not that I knew what I meant
it's just that sometimes
it's easy to feel unbeautiful
when you have unmet desires
or embarrassed that you have
such desires at all
I once wrote about a lover
who would pet his cat
more than me
and my friend said
this poem is too vulnerable
I feel as though I should throw a coat
over this poem
she was right of course
and I tore it up
I only remember it today
because in her author's photo
AdÃlia Lopes holds a cat
I am allergic to cats
the lover had to wash his hands
those many years ago
before he could touch me
Kurt Vonnegut wrote
that every character needs
to want something
even if that something
is only a glass of water
I want to fornicate
I get up from my chair
and press my face against
the cool screen
until there is a dirty grid on my cheek
as though I've slept
in fifty tiny beds
from
The Literary Review
for Amiri Baraka
 Old Ark,
how funky it was, all those animals, two of every kind,
and all that waste, the human shit somebody had to clean up.
Somebody, some love you hugged before fear,
the fear of an in-sani-nation, the No Blues, ruined your bowels.