Posts Tagged ‘charged’

The Sunday Before Easter

May 10th, 2010

The Sunday Before Easter
Askold Melnyczuk

Dreadful it is
how here and there
endlessly God disperses
whatever lives.
-Holderlin

I

I prayed each twilight with the crickets
as a boy to another boy, rapt
in his mother’s blue-gowned arms:

Otche Nash.

Concentration is prayer;
poetry the private psalm.

Sunday before Easter,
before dawn revives
the city with its debonair
starlings, startled by weather

to wooing, behind
my desk, from where
in the window I can see your double
I pray the only way I can.

I tell you my stories
because they are mysteries.

II

because
the little god who dwells within,
reflecting God, creating
worlds with names, remembers.

My country, formerly the sun,
became the oil-slicked water;

sapped pine barrens and barren
suburbia;

the “Venice of New Jersey”
since it flooded every year;

at times mountains
and ignitable, polluted air

feel familiar
as the silk of your bed,
the blue-gold silk of your breasts.

III

Lviv, Peremyshl, Berchtesgaden:
there God flared in
his latest conflagration, disguised
or agonized
green;

booted, buckled,
moustache trim, chin
shaved clean as an apple,

proud of himself,
his shining discipline,
the moral courage to shelve
tobacco, moonlight, women.

He puffed himself especially
on his talent for division,
like that evolutionary
wonder, the amoeba;

for rising early, spitting
in his own glum sun,
showering in splinters
of ice-water without wincing,

marching in unison
with himself, raising legs
muscled as if modeled by Rodin.

And he was proud
of his spired libraries
outstripping Alexandria

where the dead speak and the living are silent.

He often visited museums
ransomed by lions,
accompanied by an interpreter
from the far city of Babel.

God torched houses.
He castrated boys, inspired
women burning for food
to murder their husbands.

He turned his people back to light.

I saw none of this.
But I remember.

IV

I remember and rehearse it
for you, whose perfect breasts
still cannot balance
the scales of justice.

These fairy tales mother
lent me for lullabies.
What once delivered me to sleep
now keeps me up

long after the emaciated hands
of the clock unclasp
and splay to quarter-cross
and the cat, and you, snore.

I tell you because
I come from a country
which no longer exists

and my name will not give me away.

V

Because it happens again
at a different address:
the Lord himself lashes
himself.

Rex for April 5

April 5th, 2010

Rex for April 5

The puppy store got new puppies today,
lean as the shredded newspaper they’re peeing on.
They’re playing tug of war with a rolled up bandana,
2-on-1 although you can tell the terrier
really isn’t trying. He’s just holding on
for the ride. Their mouths are so skimpy
I imagine they’re milk snakes whose bite
can’t penetrate even human skin, or else
the whiffled grip of a newborn son.
I want so much to be a father someday.
They fight with a whole body shake
so violent I can see their ribs rattle
beneath their skin. Some day, pup,
you’ll be big and can latch onto flesh
and your master will hang a Beware of Dog
sign as you stamp along your lawn
and pee into the corners. Until then,
enjoy your meekness, your undecided strength.
The puppies you replaced,
who were in this display case last week,
are gone. Adopted, I hope, or else
destroyed. It’s not your fault, even if
you could understand Original Sin,
of blemishes from the start. But use it
anyway, as a fund of strength,
the responsibility of someone else’s sacrifice,
the way Chinese babies, if they’re daughters,
are discarded and how we, really I,
have to live gloriously enough
for more than myself.

Advice for Haitian Boys

February 22nd, 2010

Advice for Haitian Boys
“Something like 40 to 50 percent of the population at Port-au-Prince is kids.”

Girls’ skirts will open for nothing, for a song
just loud and long enough to minus out
the scratch of zipper teeth and second thoughts.
Don’t bother with names. By morning, you should be gone.

When brothers die, drink more rum than you can afford.
Cry, if you need. Piss circles around the bodies
and brawl anyone who abuses your right to grieve.
There are no excuses to outsurvive the adored.

Sometimes loss comes vaster. Whole cities fall,
bloodlines sever. There will always be some stranger
to shoo away the dust and flood paint thinner
on the stains. You won’t have to do a thing at all.

O that a man’s reach should not exceed his grasp.
Don’t plan ahead, don’t think it through. Don’t ask.

Advice for Haitian Boys

February 22nd, 2010

Advice for Haitian Boys
“Something like 40 to 50 percent of the population at Port-au-Prince is kids.”

Go chase the skirts of women down;
tell each she is the crown you have to have
to raise whole kingdoms up from barren ground
but while she sleeps, search out tomorrow’s love.

When your best friend and blood sworn brother dies
throw flowers and a prayer upon his head
then turn around and drink until you’re blind.
There’s no excuse to outsurvive the dead.

And when you lose a city or much vaster,
dance wildly in the absent space it left.
Trust me it only looks like a disaster;
it meant to carry you from this life to the next.

The moon shows 9 faces and then repeats.
Why waste our time with what we saw last week?

Dogfight

October 5th, 2009

Dogfight (small revisions)

They gash their shoulders just
from standing so close to one another.
This seeping blood and the circuit
of their circle keep out the ruckus of Compton nights.
They bark into their fists though words
only come out as blunt and riotous.
Their breaths, their cigarettes, the dirt they kick
form a tangle of smokes, each black and thick.

They throw their bones straight down,
practiced at memorizing which body belongs
to which pile before they’re swept up and lain again.
It’s always a different permutation, a different odds,
but all the same dollar bills from yesterday.
There’s no work, no new pay, so they trade
this paper, sometimes favors from their women.

They punch air in victory, punch shoulders
to give good luck, punch the insides of
their pockets to ward off winter,
punch down their bets, punch out lights
if anyone touches it before the fight’s over,
punch losers in the back of the neck.

The men in the middle fight naked.
If they draw blood, it’s with their teeth
and they taste it –
salty and metallic like a gold coin.
1 handler, a terrier, announces
Check out my human! He’s as fucking big
as a cock! Another, a mastiff,
boasts his human is a pure bred spic.

When the humans are dead and gone
the dogs will throw dice instead and move on.

Dogfight

October 5th, 2009

They gash their shoulders just
from standing so close to one another.
This seeping blood and the circuit
of their circle keep out the ice of Compton nights.
They bark into their fists though words
only come out as blunt and riotous.
Their breaths, their cigarettes, the dirt they kick
form a tangle of smokes, each black and thick.

They throw their bones straight down,
practiced at memorizing which body belongs
to which pile before they’re swept up and lain again.
It’s always a different permutation, a different odds,
but all the same dollar bills from yesterday –
their fathers’ treasures once hidden in the ground.
There’s no work, no new pay, so they trade
this paper, sometimes favors from their women.

They punch air in victory, punch shoulders
to give good luck, punch the insides of
their pockets to ward off winter,
punch down their bets, punch out lights
if anyone touches it before the fight’s over,
punch losers in the back of the neck.

The men in the middle fight naked.
If they draw blood, it’s with their teeth
and they taste it –
salty and metallic like a gold coin.
1 handler, a terrier, announces
Check out my human! He’s as fucking big
as a cock! Another, a mastiff,
boasts his human is a pure bred spic
with violence in his veins and all that good shit.
He’s got a heart tattooed on his cheek
and his name is Suicide King.

It’s the Ark undone,
an extinction
1 pair at a time
and when the humans are dead and gone
the dogs will throw dice
instead.