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    The Book of Goodbyes

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    that one time

      you got drunk

      and fucked around

      with some of his friends

      and he cracked 6 beers

      and felt old and drove

      to the cemetery

      and pissed on yr father’s grave

      here he comes round

      the corner—

      Are you writing about her?

      I hope you’re not

      writing about her

      If we went shopping

      I mean today dammit

      you could ask why

      I’m sleeping with him

      then push me

      into the hangers

      I’m not supposed

      to try you on anymore

      The dead walk into poems

      all the time

      Nobody complains

      INTERMISSION

      TINY AND COURAGEOUS FINCHES

      Iguazú Falls, the Argentine side, a cave,

      behind the water, two tiny and courageous

      finches, Bitto and Marcel, spend the day

      flying in and flying out.

      Bitto is most proud, daily caw, paid

      vacation and space to think aloud.

      He likes knowing where everyone is

      and that where they are, he is far from.

      He keeps his finch friends, outside,

      keeps a wife, Lydia, who works domestics.

      Marcel comes to the job stoically,

      not as proud as Bitto, with not

      as many friends. He is big, rigid,

      balks at the thought of changing

      for anyone, an ounce. He likes to read

      the classics, Hesiod, with rules,

      everything no nonsense, such as—

      “Take precautions, do not dawdle,

      have some brains, be honest.”

      Why were they, from all finches, picked?

      Bitto thinks it due to he was a great

      rambler once and rambled to Uruguay

      and rambled on back. Marcel thinks

      it due to he was exiled, he was a great

      pain in the ass once, and in front

      of the Minister, called Kate a flaccid,

      incompetent whore and told her

      to get lost in the Arbolis.

      This was his way of saying: I love you

      little bitch finch. Why must you prune

      the tails of others? Bitto and Marcel

      live well together. They work out

      the kinks, where to poo and how much

      privacy to give. Bitto has even grown

      a little fond of Marcel, the older,

      the literate, the one who says less.

      In this Bitto sees the finch he would

      like to be. For now Bitto delights the people

      who visit the Falls, flies in singing

      weeeee flies out singing wooooo.

      Bitto tried to explain to Lydia

      the water, wide blue, the pressure,

      the pinch, the wee-woo of it,

      the climax, he called it,

      which ticked her off and meant

      many nights of scavenging

      extra tacky shit to nest her with,

      a gold thread, a baby’s bib.

      In return, she lays a good egg.

      She lets him do what he wants.

      She listens to his day. “Today,

      a family of four, Denmark.

      The lady took pictures, the man

      thought of sneaking away,

      the daughter of ice cream, the son

      of pillaging, something or other.”

      Marcel, in a rare breach of silence,

      said, “You know why all those photos?”

      “The Falls are pretty this time of year?”

      “She thinks if she takes enough

      and if everyone is smiling and if

      she places them on her mantel—”

      “What is a mantel?”

      “She will not be alone in the world.”

      Bitto said he liked the idea of a mantel.

      Bitto told Lydia he liked the idea

      of a mantel, would build her a mantel,

      when they grow old in the Arbolis.

      Marcel flies the Falls, his left wing

      aching, will there be no stop?

      He cheeps for the children,

      holds his poo and acts happy.

      He sees that Bitto is happy

      and it irks him because

      to be happy requires it seems

      some lying and good timing.

      So Marcel cracks a seed and works

      on his index of every time

      a finch appears in print.

      He dreams of someday turning

      the index into an anthology, which all

      finches will read with interest,

      thereby validating his work and they

      will present him on the mountain,

      during the yearly festivities, where

      all finches gather. This gathering

      arouses in Marcel a sense of place

      in the world, an ambition to congregate

      with other finches, as long as they

      know him by nametag only.

      Once Marcel allowed himself

      to be known, with Kate, on the mountain.

      She asked the basic questions—

      How many finches do you flock with?

      Do you want to sit on my eggs?

      Where do you see yourself in three days?

      In the cave, Marcel thinks of Kate,

      how she looked perched on the crag

      that first afternoon. She liked to read

      the surrealists. Her chirping

      did not aggrieve him as other chirps did.

      While Marcel saw himself as a loner,

      a misanthrope, Kate was a weirdo too.

      Giving things up, Marcel thought.

      He might give things up for Kate.

      Bitto did not make such sacrifices.

      He kept Lydia in thick leaves.

      Bitto believed in what he called

      “the spirit of the moment”

      which is why Bitto enjoyed

      his job genuinely. Except when

      the ladies of Brazil entered the cave

      like this one, carrying a baby,

      dropping it into the Falls.

      Next an older man, with cane,

      who came almost everyday, his wife

      had disappeared. Next a couple

      from Australia, where ten years

      into a marriage, a stall, an impasse.

      The cave was quiet for a while.

      Bitto thought about Lydia

      and building a mantel.

      Bitto continued flying in

      and out of the Falls, for no one,

      for himself, for the spirit.

      Sometimes they talked about God

      and did he exist. Bitto said yes,

      obviously, faith and feelings.

      Marcel said no, obviously, science

      and reason. Marcel said,

      “I am a spiritual person.”

      “What is that?” Bitto asked.

      “Decency.” / “But wait!

      Spiritual means a spirit. Do you

      have one?” / “Do I think

      there’s a spirit of Marcel? No.”

      “Then you’re not spiritual.”

      Marcel let the conversation drop.

      His wings hurt from flapping.

      He could not be bothered with Bitto’s

      spirituality, skinny little Bitto.

      The closest Marcel came to religion

      was when he had to humor Hesiod

      who believed in theogony.

      Around this time, Kate visited.

      “I’m here to deliver a message

      from the Minister of Finches,”

      Kate said, looking awfully

      subdued in her new plumes.

      Marcel believed she was not

      only there for that reason.

      He spent each d
    ay sorting

      through reasons people came

      to the Falls and there was never

      only one reason for coming,

      there were five or six reasons,

      stacked on top of each other,

      overlapping each other, contradicting

      each other, such that humanity

      was a big den of squawk.

      Marcel knew Kate must have

      asked for the assignment and that

      to ask for something was to want it.

      “Is there anything you want from me?”

      Marcel began, “Is there anything

      at all I can give you? I spend

      my days flying in and out of the Falls,

      which is a testament to my strength,

      and though I am not spiritual, I like

      the surrealists, and I’ve tried

      to write you to describe my nostalgia

      for our time on the mountain but I can’t

      get it right since I don’t think

      it is nostalgia. That implies something

      of the past, lost forever, and a sadness,

      a gravity I don’t think worthy of us.

      Bitto wants a mantel to fill up

      with lies and Bitto doesn’t mind

      because he lives in the spirit

      of the moment, but I want more,

      like some guidelines, and to write

      the Great Index of Finches, so we

      can be happy, and I just said we,

      which is what I mean, you and me,

      so if you’ve come here as courier

      from the Minister of Finches,

      and nothing more, then you can go now,

      but if you’ve come for other reasons,

      stacked reason upon reason, and if

      even one of those reasons

      tangentially relates to me, Marcel,

      then please, speak.”

      GO ON HIGH SHIP

      The Falls were quiet with Bitto gone

      to raise feathers and Kate invisible

      on Skype and lone Marcel in the cave.

      “I’d rather be a zero than a one,”

      Marcel thought, looking up from Euclid’s

      Optics. The sun set on the lagoon

      as the tourists ambled through the park.

      Marcel was thinking of the rescue

      of a girl from a nearby jungle and how,

      to be fetched out of something,

      you had to be in something and Marcel

      wasn’t in anything other than a book.

      His screen didn’t ring, his job paid in seeds,

      he had no credit, no authority. He missed

      Kate though he did not admit it, instead

      he thought, “Why are ones so strange?

      If I chirp once, why do I want, always,

      another and am not content until I get it?”

      Then he performed an experiment.

      CHIRP, sang Marcel and tried to let be,

      go on with reading. He couldn’t

      and before he knew it, CHIRP, CHIRP.

      He felt better and looked to Bitto’s empty

      bed of leaves stolen from trees and wondered

      what sort of feathers Bitto was raising.

      “He is a liar and a thief,” Marcel thought

      and knew he was right to think so,

      but even lies add up to something.

      The Goldfinch sauntered in, half past

      six, with briefcase and insurance.

      He always talked what-if-something-

      happened instead of what-did-happen.

      Goldie had these ideas, these grand ideas,

      such as “You are only pleased when eating

      ice cream,” and “In Key West,” and etc.

      Marcel wished Bitto was there.

      Bitto liked to take Goldie’s words

      and muck them so that Goldie’s words

      on nothingness became in Bitto’s beak—

      “Nothing that jizz and nothing that jizzm.”

      Today, all business. “We should insure

      your left wing,” Goldie said. “What if

      it gives out permanently?” Marcel flapped

      the wing to show it worked.

      Goldie opened his briefcase, pulled papers

      from it and set them on the dirt. “What if

      a giant sloth lumbered in and wanted

      the cave for himself and used the pages

      from your books for toilet paper

      and ate you?” “If I’m eaten, what do I

      need insurance for?” Marcel said.

      After all he was not in anything,

      not in trouble, not in a bind, not in

      a socioeconomic climate of anxiety,

      he was just a finch. “Besides,” he said.

      “I have never seen a sloth. I’m not sure

      sloth exist and suppose they do, what

      would an animal of gargantuan size

      want with a cave of this size?”

      “You never know,” Goldie said,

      wetting a talon with his tongue.

      It was getting late. Marcel wanted

      to return to reading Euclid. He knew

      what was next: the Grand Ideas

      Monologue that Goldie gave and when

      he delivered it, he liked his listener

      to interrupt him and say, “Go on, high ship.”

      Goldie began: “I got married, I lived

      a long life with a wife who stopped

      reading my poems when I was forty as if

      I died and my poems with me.”

      Go on, high ship. “So I traveled

      south the country, all became hysterical

      to me, ki-ki-ri-ki, no rou-cou, no rou-cou-cou.

      I was losing my mind, and in losing it,

      I realized I had nothing and nothing had me.”

      Go on, high ship. “I told my biddy,

      I don’t love you. If I said I loved you

      I meant the nothing that is.”

      Go on, high ship. “I’m in love with

      plough-boys and old women in wigs

      and bowls and broomsticks and paltry

      nudes and dwarfs.” Go on, high ship.

      “I’m in love with Florida and Havana

      and the Carolinas and Hartford,

      but mainly Florida.” Goldie wet his talons

      and bowed his head. Marcel thought

      his was an old story and he an old finch.

      Since he was so unhappy, Marcel figured

      he should do something, become

      the what-did finch. But you can’t tell

      finches what to become.

      Later Marcel had difficulty falling asleep.

      I will not think dirty things. I will keep

      the brain sharp for Euclid, honest for Hesiod.

      The cave was cold. Marcel saw the folds

      of Kate’s plumes near her breast and while

      it wasn’t dirty, it wasn’t clean either,

      what he was thinking, and Marcel said, No.

      That is all that was, that is what-did.

      That is done. He turned his thoughts to

      Goldie, poor Goldie, wetting his talons.

      The moon shone on the lagoon like

      a giant sloth. Marcel fluttered close

      to the wall of the cave and fell asleep afraid

      and began to have his what-if dreams,

      of Kate, of high ships, of twos and threes,

      like all what-did finches do.

      MARCEL ADDRESSES KATE (AS HE WOULD IF HE COULD)

      When the call came for me to join Bitto

      behind the damn Falls, did I not challenge

      the appointment, did I not appeal to

      the High Courts and wait in the dark offices

      of tree holes and check the box to describe

      myself as too birdbrained? Did I not

      beg to stay in the Arbolis with you?

      Yet you have not returned to me.
    r />   I know, I know I got beaked and fifed

      Hesiod into your ear when all you

      wanted to do was sleep and sometimes

      all you wanted to do was pluck me

      and that was, will always be, fine by me.

      If I quote the Greats too much, know it’s

      because I’m afraid of you, yep, yep,

      how you puff up your feathers, you know

      how you do. I’m talking out loud again

      to the can of Brahma, Sage of Seven

      Ages, Father of Creation: No, I won’t

      shut up. I’m talking to Kate.

      Also when you entreated me

      to buy a machine, a machine to show us

      what we look like when we’re looking at

      a machine, I suffered the wages,

      the setup and download to find you,

      wearing all your feathers, cheeping

      with 36 other finches, none of whom

      concern what I have to say here:

      I am the original plagiarist.

      Yet you have not returned to me.

      Daily I withhold from one million

      strangers, though they be willing.

      I withhold the ability of my

      cyber gender and this is a stupid

      point I agree. No one wins for withholding.

      What else can I say? I’m winging this.

      At least when we were speaking in our

      deplorable way that was something,

      that was some smutcaw we had,

      and seduced me you did in manners

     

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