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    After Rubén

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      touches her

      like this. This

      is a dream—well,

      not that exactly, but

      a message, spirit

      to spirit—this scene

      nothing she’s

      ever recalled

      in person

      II

      KEOUGH HALL

      November 9, 2016

      University of Notre Dame

      “deplorables

      knocking

      at your door”

      he shouted

      the day

      after—“build

      the wall—

      we’re

      building

      a wall

      around

      your room!”

      minutes

      felt

      like hours

      “cowards!”

      you managed,

      catching

      a glimpse

      by cracking

      your door:

      there were three

      of them

      scurrying

      down the hall,

      their faces

      obscured . . .

      your back

      against

      the wall, you slid

      to the floor—

      “Hail Mary . . .”

      you began

      whispering

      to yourself

      and back

      they came their

      laughter

      louder

      minutes

      felt

      like hours

      and the thumping

      in your chest—

      his fist

      pounding the door

      for Gregory Jenn (’18)

      THE INEVITABLE

      I envy that tree.

      It barely feels.

      Envy even more

      this stone

      that hasn’t felt

      for ages. Tell me

      of an affliction

      more acute

      than breathing,

      of something worse

      than knowing

      that we are, yet

      knowing nothing,

      unsure of which

      path to take.

      And what to make

      of this sense

      we’re on a wheel,

      uncanny hunch

      of bleaker things

      to come, the only truth

      one day we die?

      We endure this life,

      shadows, what we

      ignore and hardly

      suspect, skin that glows

      like a shimmering piece

      of fruit, visions

      of a wreath

      beside a tomb, all

      the while without

      a clue

      of where we began,

      where we go.

      after Rubén Darío’s “Lo fatal”

      TO GEORGE W. BUSH

      2006

      Should I quote the good

      book you claim to know;

      or perhaps our late bearded

      bard—might these be ways

      of reaching you? Primitive

      modern, simple complex—

      one part wily astute

      animal, three parts owner

      of a ranch: conglomeration

      is what you are, poised

      for another incursion.

      Lean, strong specimen

      of your breed, polite you

      hardly read when not

      in a saddle, or spreading manure.

      You see a building in flames

      as vital, progress a spewing

      volcano. And where you point

      and place your bullet

      you stake the future—yours

      and ours. And so:

      not so fast. O there’s

      no doubting the heft

      of this nation: it moves it

      shifts—a tremor travels

      down to the tip

      of the continent; you raise

      your voice and it’s

      bellowing we hear (The sky

      is mine), stars in the east

      sun in the west. People

      are clothes, their cars,

      Sunday attire at church,

      a harbor lady lighting

      the journey with a torch.

      But America, sir,

      is North, Central,

      and South—delicate

      wing of a beetle,

      thundering sheet

      of water (our cubs

      are crossing

      over). And though,

      O man of bluest eye

      you believe your truth,

      it is not—you are not

      the world

      after Rubén Darío’s “A Roosevelt”

      TENOCHTITLAN, 1523

      an erasaure of Andrés Montoya

      WIND & RAIN

      And that day years ago—no

      umbrella, the stroll

      lasting four hours, your socks

      soaked—doesn’t matter

      you thought: crossing, re-crossing

      the Thames on foot sheer

      pleasure, coming upon

      Leicester Square, that throng . . .

      —What happened?

      to a petite lady wearing glasses, but

      before she could speak

      a slick wall of coats

      slowly parts and there

      he was: plum-colored,

      rolling past on a stretcher . . .

      Moments later they cover his face.

      The rest of your walk

      a blur . . . —I think his heart

      gave, said a man wearing

      a tie, but those weren’t the ones

      that spoke to you, still do:

      poor chap, softly, her light-blue

      hair in your eyes . . . and his wife.

      I saw the ring. expecting him home

      for supper

      1985

      Long and black, the streaks

      of gray, aflutter in the light

      wind as she prepares to tell

      her story at the Federal Building:

      reaching into a tattered sack

      she pulls out a doll

      missing an eye, balding—

      singed face smudged with soot

      from the smoke her home took in

      as her village was being shelled.

      Next she retrieves what’s left

      of a book—a few pages

      the borders brown, coming

      apart in her hands: hesitant,

      she raises one, starts to read aloud:

      por la mañana sube el sol y calienta el día

      la tierra nos da dónde vivir y qué comer

      la vaca nos da leche para beber y hacer mantequilla

      It’s her daughter’s lesson

      the poem she read to her

      the day they struck—

      (in the morning the sun rises and warms the day

      the earth provides a place to live and what to eat

      the cow gives us milk to drink and churn butter with . . . )

      . . . mid-way through, her voice begins

      to shake—her words

      like refugees exposed to the night shiver,

      freeze: silence

      swallows us all . . .

      . . . her words, drifting

      casualities,

      gather and huddle

      in my throat.

      San Francisco

      POEM WITH A PHRASE OF ISHERWOOD

      2010, Arizona

      Cruelty is sensual and stirs you

      Governor, your name echoing the sludge

      beneath your cities’ streets. It spurs

      the pleasure you take

      whenever your mouth nears

      a mic, defending your law . . . your wall.

      Cruelty is sensual and stirs you

      Governor, we’ve noticed your face

      its contortions and delicate sneer

      times you’re asked to cut

      certain rib
    bons—visit a dusty place

      you’d rather avoid, out of the heat.

      Cruelty is sensual and stirs you

      Governor, the vision of your state

      something you treasure in secret

      though we’ve caught a glimpse

      in the jowls of your sheriff:

      bulldog who doubles as your heart.

      BAY AREA RAPID TRANSIT

      Her hair: cropped short as a punk’s, same

      gray as these connected cars; her pullover’s blue

      snug, the few holes along her sleeves

      flesh-colored sores. She’s cursing the crooks

      at City Hall—then go back to where you are from

      he says, off in a huff at Powell. On her feet now

      she spots another facing the light-streaked black,

      crosses the aisle, sits beside him. The puffy skin

      beneath her eyes: pinkish—I hate this place, she says

      holding an envelope in his face—could you

      help me with this address they cut

      me off those boys what they did to that girl

      outside my room on the stairs . . . And the joints

      of her fingers: bulbs—I was you know

      a typist in New York . . . O, she says, what’ll I

      do do you know this address what should I

      tell them I swear sometimes

      if maybe I just—her voice dissolving,

      mingling with the long sharp whistle

      the sound of the rails as the convoy

      begins to brake and then the sliding

      doors and steps off the train

      DECEMBER 31, 1965

      The hoped-for words went out

      And so, as dusk settled over the embattled

      Not since the first winter of World War I

      The idea of a holiday from death

      As if in anticipation of the lull

      Throughout the world, hopes rose

      Pope Paul VI exhorted

      President Johnson steadfastly refused

      “They are outsiders, just as I am,” snapped Truman

      The foursome, accused of burning their cards

      The Army meanwhile made clear that dissent was for civilians

      Howe was sentenced to two years

      In the bitter Harlem riots of 1964, as in the Watts

      Last week, under a 1901 New York law

      Epton was no ordinary agitator

      Long before the riots, according to a Negro detective who infiltrated the group

      As he made the rounds of Jersey City’s sprawling Medical

      “If there is a toe in town I haven’t stepped on

      “City jobs around here were just plain patronage plums

      “A man doesn’t carry that much fat around and live

      Wrapped perennially in a white linen suit

      At one celebrated Boykinalia

      There was salmon from Quebec

      The voters’ love for Boykin ran out in the 1962

      He is now 80 and after all those lovin’ years has an ailing heart

      A year before he was arrested for the nightrider slaying

      Klansman Collie Leroy Wilkins was riding around with a sawed-off

      Judge Allgood last week sentenced Wilkins to a year and a day

      TIME Magazine

      THE MAN AND THE WOLF

      His heart the texture of a rose,

      his tongue a swath of sky,

      his manner delicate—now

      chatting with what many call

      a beast: the look in the eyes rabid,

      black: on the skirts of the village

      devoured sheep and shepherd alike.

      Men skilled with iron were routed.

      Fangs shredded hunting dogs

      like baby lamb. So out he went

      looking for his den, found him

      outside it, from where the animal

      lunged at the sight of him, then saw

      the hand rise, heard him say:

      “Peace be with you, brother wolf.”

      The mammal knew that gesture,

      snapped out of it and froze:

      “Oh, it’s you.” “Why,”

      asked the man, “must you lead

      this life? The blood your snout

      spills; the grief and terror

      you mete out; peasants sobbing,

      who are children of God . . .

      Does this please you? Are you

      from hell, or perhaps consumed

      by some eternal ire?” And the wolf,

      subdued, said: “Winter is hard

      “and hunger worse in a freezing

      forest that yields nothing to eat.

      It’s true: I looked for livestock

      “to feed on, and did, and ate

      shepherds too. As for blood,

      the hunter on his horse gripping

      “his metal pursuing boar, bear,

      and deer—sheds more. I’ve seen scores

      of them inflict wounds, torture

      “God’s creatures. And hunger

      is not what drives them to hunt.”

      To which the man responded: “Evil

      exists in humans. We are born

      with sin. But the simple soul of a beast

      is pure. From this day on you’ll have

      enough to eat. And you will leave

      the people of this land, and their flocks,

      alone. May God appease that side

      of you.” “Okay, it’s a deal.”

      “As a gesture of faith extend

      your paw—let’s shake on it.”

      The wolf did as asked and lifted

      his foot. The man wrapped his

      fingers around it, gently squeezed.

      They headed for the village. People

      could hardly believe their eyes: the wolf

      strode behind the man in the robe

      like a family dog, his head bowed.

      Every man, woman, and child

      came closer, until the whole village

      had gathered in the plaza where

      the man began to speak: “Let me

      introduce a new neighbor,” he said,

      pointing to the wolf with an open

      hand. “Fear him not. He is

      our enemy no more. In return,

      I’m going to ask that each of us

      do our part and feed him. He is,

      after all, a creature of God.”

      The village responded as one:

      “So be it!” The wolf raised

      his head in acknowledgement,

      moving his tail from side to side,

      disappeared through the gates

      of a convent, the man ahead of him.

      For a time the wolf was at peace

      in that place. His ears would fill

      with psalms—his eyes with tears.

      He learned how to move with grace,

      to play pranks in the kitchen.

      When the man whispered his prayers,

      the wolf would pass his tongue across

      his sandals. Out into the street

      he’d go, through the valley, over hills,

      into homes, where people gave him things

      to eat. To them he seemed a docile hound.

      And then the man had to leave

      for a time. The sweet wolf, the good

      and gentle wolf vanished and went

      back into the hills. The howling began

      again. Once more people were filled

      with fear, villages nearby with dread.

      Weapons and valor were useless, the rage

      never letting up, as if something

      burned, smoldered inside the beast.

      The day the man returned, villagers

      sought him out, wept their complaints

      about the suffering inflicted—that

      infamous creature was at it again.

      A shadow passed over the man’s face.

      He headed for the hills to track

      him down—that but
    cher of a wolf.

      He found him at his cave. “In the name

      of the Father, who sees it all, what

      have you got to say for yourself?!”

      As if in pain, the animal spoke,

      his mouth foaming, his eyes nearly

      swollen shut. “Don’t come any closer . . .

      Peace and calm were my masters

      these days. Even with you gone

      I visited the village. When given

      scraps to eat, I chewed, swallowed

      in silence, with gratitude.

      But I began to see, in many homes,

      how people treat each other,

      embers of greed, intolerance, lies

      glowing subtly in countless faces.

      The weak were losers, the cruel winners.

      Brother made war on brother. Male

      and female were like dog and bitch,

      and then they began to beat me,

      considered me weak for licking

      their hands and feet. I believed

      you: all of creation were family—

      men my siblings, oxen too, the stars

      my sisters, my brothers worms.

      But they picked on me, drove

      me away. Their laughing was like

      scalding water, re-awakening

      a beast—suddenly a ‘bad’ wolf

      is what I was, yet better than most

      of them. And so the struggle

      to survive took over: to defend myself,

      to feed myself, like the bear does,

      like the boar, who, in order to live,

      must kill. So let me remain here,

      wild and free. And you, my friend,

      back to your people, your good

      and tender deeds.” The man

      didn’t say a word. Deep

      was his gaze. Then he walked away,

      tears on his cheek. His heart,

     

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