Poetry |

“The Arborists”

The Arborists

 

Achilles weeps over Hector’s body, the body he had

killed for glory, revenge, to open the door to his own

 

prophesized, glamorous death. He weeps not for Hector

but for his own father and, truly, for himself. Priam weeps

 

over his son’s gorgeous corpse, so gorgeous it won’t rot.

I wish I didn’t feel sorry for warriors, but I’m listening to

 

Derek Jacobi tell the story, his rich English voice filling my earbuds.

I approach the trees that line the Green, where men on ropes

 

climb with chain saws, trimming as they mount even higher

against the woolen sky. Their confidence in their task astounds.

 

I weep with Achilles while the arborists tie ropes to limbs

before they saw, to safely lower the hewn to the ground.

 

That gods immortal cannot age nor learn from their mistakes

breaks me every time, that one might not learn from suffering.

 

Later, while a drunk next door bangs the furniture

against the walls at midnight, doors open and close

 

on voices urgent, shrieking, disappearing down

the speed-bumped streets and curbsided bins that wait

 

for morning. O those young, leaping binmen, white

jumpsuits, impeccable gloves and hair, who will flicker

 

at dawn past lampposted sea birds, and O the collection

lorries, many-paneled vehicles that ladder the streets,

 

with starts and stops down each route to the river,

my trash to be piled on barges that will bear it

 

across many seas. I laugh at myself, binmen

as oracles, recycling as metaphor for my desire to start

 

over, or as metaphor for living. While I am terrified

by the depth of D’s sleep, which I cannot resist

 

interrogating, the heat of snore and drowse and

pillow snuffle, the dark cool outside the window,

 

the alleyway beacons, and the sterile offsiteness

of caution tape spillaging all our future griefs,

 

their management, and the ways we will all yet suffer.

 

 

 

[“The Arborists” appears here with the permission of the University Of Chicago Press, which will publish the poem in Connie Voisine’s collection The Bower.]

 

 

Contributor
Connie Voisine

Connie Voisine is a poet and teacher. She’s had poems published in The New Yorker, Poetry Magazine, Huizache and elsewhere. Her fourth collection of poems, The Bower, is forthcoming from the University of Chicago Press in 2019.

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