Poetry |

“What Do You Make of That?” “We All Know We Don’t Have Enough Lifeboats” & “Autumn, Mississippi”

What Do You Make of That?

 

I make of it disaster. I make of it

a small ship sinking. A red-gleam

 

apple, underside soft brown,

maggoted. I make of it poison

 

sumac. The thick stillness

that precedes a tin roof torn off.

 

I make of it last ocean swim,

last orangest tulip, last Malbec

 

unfettered by last. I make of it

a loom on which I daily weave

 

my own undoing, the wefts

what ifs, the warps the when.

 

I make of it a sharp pine needle

at my back, urging me forward.

 

I make of it, sometimes,

propulsion, Lake Lucerne

 

in June, the tickets booked.

I make of it yes. I make of it maybe

 

never again, so. I make of it but now.

I make of it the corn maze

 

in October, the sad dry stalks

but my god that sky

 

behind them. And I make of it

how I love that sky more —

 

hot blue, so bright it stings —

the further in I go.

 

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

 

We All Know We Don’t Have Nearly Enough Lifeboats

 

I am tired of the air conditioning.

I have opened the terrible candied almonds.

A mile down the road from my silent neighborhood

the bars are full of bright shirts, hot breath.

I am watching my country point

to its own dying body and yell Hoax!

Always, everyone is predictable — the practiced

defenses, the war metaphors. I want

someone to surprise me. I want a letter

to work, a phone call, an election. I know

by now that rage can’t turn the ship,

but maybe it can flood the ocean

with a new ocean, lift the hulking vessel

so it glides right over the ice.

Give the ship a chance to make it

out toward open sea. Give it a chance

again to be wrecked by something

other than its own tenacity.

 

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

 

Autumn, Mississippi

 

What I want is a red

so vast and quaking

I stumble before it.

A yellow to envelop me.

I want to be abducted,

ribcaged by ruby.

Down here, I am starved

for dying leaves,

the pines too stately

in their green furs,

the magnolias glossy

and unchanging.

How much color

are we allotted in a life?

The evergreens

are tricksters: preserve

yourself, they whisper.

But I want elms

clanging with gold,

maples scarlet-raucous.

I want a landscape

as loud as my mind.

Teach me to be reckless

with my ardor.

To cover the earth

with my falling

and innumerable hearts.

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