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    The Best American Poetry 2012

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    from The Southern Review

      JENNY JOHNSON

      Aria

      1.

      Tonight at a party we will say farewell

      to a close friend’s breasts, top surgery for months

      she’s saved for. Bundled close on a back step,

      we wave a Bic lighter and burn her bra.

      At first struggling to catch nylon aflame,

      in awe we watch as all but the sheer black

      underwire melts before forming a deep

      quiet hole in the snow.

      Sometimes the page

      too goes quiet, a body that we’ve stopped

      speaking with, a chest out of which music

      will come if she’s a drum flattened tight, if she’s

      pulled like canvas across a field, a frame

      where curves don’t show, exhalation without air.

      Then this off-pitch soprano steals through.

      2.

      Then this off-pitch soprano steals through

      a crack that’s lit. A scarlet gap between

      loose teeth. Interior trill. We’re rustling open.

      Out of a prohibited body why

      long for melody? Just a thrust of air,

      a little space with which to make this thistling

      sound, stretch of atmosphere to piss through when

      you’re scared shitless. Little sister, the sky

      is falling and I don’t mind, I don’t mind,

      a line a girl, a prophet half my age,

      told me to listen for one summer when

      I was gutless, a big-mouthed carp that drank

      down liters of algae, silt, fragile shale

      while black-winged ospreys plummeted from above.

      3.

      While black-winged ospreys plummeted from above,

      we were born beneath. You know what I mean?

      I’ll tell you what the girls who never love

      us back taught me: The strain within will tune

      the torqued pitch. In 1902 the last

      castrato sang “Ave Maria.”

      His voice—a bifurcated swell. So pure

      a lady screams with ecstasy. Voce

      bianco! Breath control. Hold each note. Extend

      the timbre. Pump the chest, that balloon room,

      and lift pink lips, chin so soft and beardless,

      a flutter, a flourish, a cry stretching beyond

      its range, cruising through four octaves, a warbler,

      a starling with supernatural restraint.

      4.

      A starling with supernatural restraint,

      a tender glissando on a scratched LP,

      his flute could speak catbird and hermit thrush.

      It was the year a war occurred or troops

      were sent while homicide statistics rose;

      I stopped teaching to walkout, my arms linked

      to my students to show a mayor who didn’t

      show. Seven hundred youth leaned on adults

      who leaned back. We had lost another smart kid

      to a bullet in the Fillmore, Sunnyside,

      the Tenderloin. To love without resource

      or peace. When words were noise, a jazz cut was steel.

      I listened for Dolphy’s pipes in the pitch dark:

      A far cry. Epistrophy. A refusal.

      5.

      A far cry. Epistrophy. A refusal.

      A nightingale is recorded in a field

      where finally we meet to touch and sleep.

      A nightingale attests

      as bombers buzz and whir

      overhead enroute to raid.

      We meet undercover of brush and dust.

      We meet to revise what we heard.

      The year I can’t tell you. The past restages

      the future. Palindrome we can’t resolve.

      But the coded trill a fever ascending,

      a Markov chain, discrete equation,

      generative pulse, sweet arrest,

      bronchial junction, harmonic jam.

      6.

      Bronchial junction, harmonic jam,

      her disco dancing shatters laser light.

      Her rock rap screamed through a plastic bullhorn

      could save my life. Now trauma is a remix,

      a beat played back, a circadian pulse we can’t shake,

      inherent in the meter we might speak,

      so with accompaniment I choose to heal

      at a show where every body that I press against

      lip syncs: I’ve got post binary gender chores . . .

      I’ve got to move. Oh, got to move. This box

      is least insufferable when I can feel

      your anger crystallize a few inches away,

      see revolutions in your hips and fists.

      I need a crown to have this dance interlude.

      7.

      I need a crown to have this dance interlude

      or more than one. Heating flapjacks you re-

      read “Danse Russe,” where a man alone and naked

      invents a ballet swinging his shirt around

      his head. Today you’re a dandier nude

      in argyle socks and not lonely as you

      slide down the hall echoing girly tunes

      through a mop handle: You make me feel like. . . .

      She-bop doo wop . . . an original butch

      domestic. The landlord is looking through

      the mini-blinds. Perched on a sycamore,

      a yellow throated warbler measures your

      schisms, fault lines, your taciturn vibrato.

      Tonight, as one crowd, we will bridge this choir.

      from Beloit Poetry Journal

      LAWRENCE JOSEPH

      So Where Are We?

      So where were we? The fiery

      avalanche headed right at us—falling,

      flailing bodies in mid-air—

      the neighborhood under thick gray powder—

      on every screen. I don’t know

      where you are, I don’t know what

      I’m going to do, I heard a man say;

      the man who had spoken was myself.

      What year? Which Southwest Asian war?

      Smoke from infants’ brains

      on fire from the phosphorus hours

      after they’re killed, killers

      reveling in the horror. The more obscene

      the better it works. The point

      at which a hundred thousand massacred

      is only a detail. Asset and credit bubbles

      about to burst. Too much consciousness

      of too much at once, a tangle of tenses

      and parallel thoughts, a series of feelings

      overlapping a sudden sensation

      felt and known, those chains of small facts

      repeated endlessly, in the depths

      of silent time. So where are we?

      My ear turns, like an animal’s. I listen.

      Like it or not, a digital you is out there.

      Half of that city’s buildings aren’t there.

      Who was there when something was, and a witness

      to it? The rich boy general conducts the Pakistani

      heroin trade on a satellite phone from his cave.

      On the top floor of the Federal Reserve

      in an office looking out onto Liberty

      at the South Tower’s onetime space,

      the Secretary of the Treasury concedes

      they got killed in terms of perceptions.

      Ten blocks away is the Church of the Transfiguration,

      in the back is a Byzantine Madonna—

      there is a God, a God who fits the drama

      in a very particular sense. What you said—

      the memory of a memory of a remembered

      memory, the color of a memory, violet and black.

      The lunar eclipse on the winter solstice,

      the moon a red and black and copper hue.

      The streets, the harbor, the light, the sky.

      The blue and cloudless intense and blue morning sky
    .

      from Granta

      FADY JOUDAH

      Tenor

      To break with the past

      Or break it with the past

      The enormous car-packed

      Parking lot flashes like a frozen body

      Of water a paparazzi sea

      After take off

      And because the pigeons laid eggs and could fly

      Because the kittens could survive

      Under the rubble wrapped

      In shirts of the dead

      And the half-empty school benches

      Where each boy sits next

      To his absence and holds him

      In the space between two palms

      Pressed to a face—

      This world this hospice

      from Beloit Poetry Journal

      JOY KATZ

      Death Is Something Entirely Else

      Department of Trance

      Department of Dream of Levitation

      Department of White Fathom

      Department of Winding

      Sometimes my son orders me lie down

      I like best when he orders me lie down close your eyes.

      Department of Paper Laid Gently

      (Department of Sound of Sheets of Paper

      he covers me with)

      then sings

      I like best the smallest sounds he makes then

      Department of This Won’t Sting

      Am I slipping away

      Department of Violet Static

      as if he were a distant station?

      Department of Satellite

      My child says you sleep

      Department of Infinitely Flexible Web

      and covers my face with blankness

      Department of Tap-Tapping the Vein

      Department of Eyelash

      I can’t speak

      or even blink

      or the page laid over my face will fall

      Department of Clear Tape in Whorls and Double Helixes on the Wall

      He says mama don’t look

      Department of You Won’t Feel a Thing

      I cannot behold

      Department of Pinprick

      He will not behold

      Department of Veils and Chimes

      Lungs Afloat in Ether

      I like this best

      Department of Spider Vein

      when I am most like dead

      and being with him then, Department of Notes

      Struck from Thin Glasses Successively at Random

      I must explain to my child that sleep

      is not the same as dead

      Department of Borderlessness

      so that he may not be afraid of

      Department of Fingertips Lightly on Eyelids

      so I can lie and listen

      not holding not carrying not working

      Department of Becalmed faint sound of him

      I am gone

      His song is the door back to the room

      I am composed of the notes

      from The Cincinnati Review

      JAMES KIMBRELL

      How to Tie a Knot

      If I eat a diet of rain and nuts, walk to the P.O.

      in a loincloth, file for divorce from the world of matter,

      say not-it! to the sea oats, not-it! to the sky

      above the disheveled palms, not-it! to the white or green oyster boats

      and the men on the bridge with their fishing rods

      that resemble so many giant whiskers,

      if I repeat this is not-it, this is not why I’m waiting here,

      will I fill the universe with all that is not-it

      and allow myself to grow very still in the center of

      this fishing town in winter? Will I look out past the cat

      sleeping in the windowsill and say not-it garbage can,

      not-it Long’s Video Store, until I happen upon what

      is not not-it? Will I wake up and BEHOLD!

      the “actual,” the “real,” the “awe-thentic,” the IS?

      Instead I walk down to the Island Quicky, take a pound

      of bait shrimp in an ice-filled baggy, then walk to the beach

      to catch my dinner. Now waiting is the work

      I’m waiting for. Now the sand crane dive-bombs the surf

      of his own enlightenment because everything

      is bait and lust and hard-up for supper.

      I came out here to pare things down,

      wanted to be wind, simple as sand, to hear each note

      in the infinite orchestra of waves fizzling out

      beneath the rotting dock at five o’clock in the afternoon

      when the voice that I call I is a one-man boat

      slapping toward the shore of a waning illusion.

      Hello, waves of salty and epiphanic distance. Good day,

      bird who will eventually

      go blind from slamming headfirst into the water.

      What do you say, fat flounder out there

      deep in your need, looking like sand speckled with shells,

      lying so still you’re hardly there, lungs lifting

      with such small air, flesh both succulent and flakey

      when baked with white wine, lemon and salt, your eyes

      rolling toward their one want when the line jerks, and the reel

      clicks, and the rod bends, and you give up

      the ocean floor for a mouthful of land.

      from The Cincinnati Review

      NOELLE KOCOT

      Poem

      With deepest reverence,

      I shop for bones.

      And what is the candy

      And the daylight

      And the horse without hunger?

      Too many ducts for us to think of,

      And here we are punishing the

      Lines above our faces.

      Enormity is a hoof

      With unanswerable sounds,

      And the void is filled with fire.

      My dream is to fall apart,

      To cry for a century,

      But I have not cried, not at all.

      I keep my distance like the tines

      Of a fork from one another,

      Dressing, undressing the fabulous wounds.

      But now, back to our story,

      It has coffee in it, a naked river.

      Blessed are we who rapture

      An electric wire, blessed be

      The falling things about our faces,

      Blessed is the socket of an eye

      That lights the body, because

      In the end, in the very end, it’s

      Just you. You and you. And you.

      from New American Writing

      MAXINE KUMIN

      Either Or

      Death, in the orderly procession

      of random events on this gradually

      expiring planet crooked in a negligible

      arm of a minor galaxy adrift among

      millions of others bursting apart in

      the amnion of space, will, said Socrates,

      be either a dreamless slumber without end

      or a migration of the soul from one place

      to another, like the shadow of smoke rising

      from the backroom woodstove that climbs

      the trunk of the ash tree outside

      my window and now that the sun is up

      down come two red squirrels and a nuthatch.

      Later we are promised snow.

      So much for death today and long ago.

      from Ploughshares

      SARAH LINDSAY

      Hollow Boom Soft Chime: The Thai Elephant Orchestra

      A sound of far-off thunder from instruments

      ten feet away: drums, a log,

      a gong of salvage metal. Chimes

      of little Issan bells, pipes in a row, sometimes

      a querulous harmonica.

      Inside the elephant orchestra’s audience,

      bubbles form, of shame and joy, and burst.

      Did elephants look so sad and wise,

      a tourist thinks, her camera cold in her p
    ocket,

      before we came to say they look sad and wise?

      Did mastodons have merry, unwrinkled faces?

      Hollow boom soft chime, stamp of a padded foot,

      tingle of renaat, rattle of angklung.

      This music pauses sometimes, but does not end.

      Prathida gently strokes the bells with a mallet.

      Poong and his mahout regard the gong.

      Paitoon sways before two drums,

      bumping them, keeping time with her switching tail.

      Sales of recordings help pay for their thin enclosure

      of trampled grass. They have never lived free.

      Beside a dry African river

      their wild brother lies, a punctured balloon,

      torn nerves trailing from the stumps of his tusks.

      Hollow boom soft chime, scuff of a broad foot,

      sometimes, rarely, a blatting elephant voice.

      They seldom attend the instruments

      without being led to them, but, once they’ve begun,

      often refuse to stop playing.

      from Poetry

      AMIT MAJMUDAR

      The Autobiography of Khwaja Mustasim

      I stood for twenty years a chess piece in Córdoba, the black rook.

      I was a parrot fed melon seeds by the eleventh caliph.

      I sparked to life in a Damascus forge, no bigger than my own pupil.

      I was the mosquito whose malarial kiss conquered Alexander.

      I bound books in Bukhara, burned them in Balkh.

      In my four hundred and sixteenth year I came to Qom.

      I tasted Paradise early as an ant in the sugar bin of Mehmet Pasha’s chief chef.

      I was a Hindu slave stonemason who built the Blue Mosque without believing.

      I rode as a louse under Burton’s turban when he sneaked into Mecca.

      I butchered halal in Jalalabad.

      I had been a vulture just ten years when I looked down and saw Karbala set for me like a table.

      I walked that lush Hafiz home and held his head while he puked.

      I was one of those four palm trees smart-bomb-shaken behind the reporter’s khaki vest.

      I threw out the English-language newspaper that went on to hide the roadside bomb.

      The nails in which were taken from my brother’s coffin.

      My sister’s widowing sighed sand in a thousand Kalashnikovs.

      I buzzed by a tube light, and three intelligence officers, magazines rolled, hunted me in vain.

      Here I am at last, born in a city whose name, on General Elphinstone’s 1842 map, was misspelt “Heart.”

     

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