Half Truths
When they ask you if you’d hurt yourself or someone else
You say no. It’s what you say.
So when I went out from the clinic to kill myself
I drove very carefully.
Wet sage from thunderstorms.
Hard light crying off the moon.
Almost makes you want to stay here
Until you get to thinking.
There were horses near the highway
Outside of Toas
And I always liked horses
So I was holding
This dun cheek in my tar covered hand
And then I couldn’t see too well
So I sat down against a fence post.
The road home was still all wet
Along the grass line
And the greenness was
As suffocating lovely
As tallness or speaking just inches
From her ear.
There were dogs and coyotes arguing
And skunk musk a long way off.
My god, the moon crying so hard.
I drank two more so I could sleep
And took off my boots
Thinking of the tall, pretty one
I never kissed,
And I tell you that was the end of it.
Cowpoke
Like everyone else does,
you said, you go around bumping into people
until one of them sticks to you.
I’ve only been bumping into you, she said.
You were leaving the bathroom shirtless.
She was looking for a toothbrush.
Later that night
you made curled prints in the carpet.
A swath of the weave
washed in one direction then the other.
You dreamt of decay, small red worms
twisting on the carpet next to the bed.
You dreamt of manatees flensed,
nude and still moving,
cowboys hieing them through water.
When you woke to watch her chest rise and fall,
you thought of rising or falling as something else.
You remembered the taut skin over her ribs
and the smoke taste her mouth gave you.
Your shoulder thumped back
and darkened from the doorjamb
at the foot of the stairs as you noticed
yourself leaving.
The daphne had just blossomed
under the dogwood and the stars
and the shapes too big to be stars.
You had to unweave your way
loose from her rising chest.
even as the slow curls
of smoke and legs and arms
still stuck to yours.
A Love Life
On her southbound bus line,
the girl witnessed a crocus sprouting
from an old woman’s lap.
The woman’s face was a flat gray plate
tired of being gray.
Tired of life on the head of this woman
who was tired of her life.
But it had no choice.
A boy slept next to the girl some nights
to hoard the sweetness that even cats
climbed morning covers
to gather from her cheeks.
Lines grew from the corners of her eyes
as he wondered how to love her.
He ought to have known better.
Each morning, lying next to her,
he would feel the cold growth
in his chest,
wish for death, roll over—
but then she would wake up
and look at him
as though she would
always have enough in her small cheeks
for everyone.
It was not springtime,
but the crocuses came up early,
And the lines grew more beautiful
on the girl’s face
as the boy stole as much
sweetness as he could.
She should have known better.
Clementine
In my dream I saw a stiff creased mountain
And grass plains spreading out around it—
Small tomatoes popping their skin
In beef and pork broth and red wine.
You, my wild haired girl crawling
Over horse heads to ride bareback—
Your stark wildness sprouting like feathers,
Your running patterned
As oak, sequoia, madrone.
Charley the Catahoula churning circles
Through the shadowed grass lit only by stars—
Horses cropping that grass, one sorrel, one blood bay,
Peering in windows, sniffing brace posts.
My own blood fearful of the ever widening gaze
That must briefly forfeit the earth to the shape of a promise
Too full not to burst.
Damn those eyes.
I love you so much already.
Mourning FKP or Small Business Administration
The aluminum roof sighed
Under a moon seeming to shake
From side to side
Like the great god flinching.
Feathers bloomed around the yard
As though each hen had blown apart
And left its own story about it.
Coyote bellies swayed
Swollen along the sand trails
As clouds roiled over fleshy mountains
Still the warm and seeming to breathe.
Rhinoceros
At sunrise, the morning after the party,
I hear our white rhinoceros
Stumbling through the rosemary bed.
Hoary lawn. Light pissing in
Over the eastern rooftops.
From my bed on the second floor,
I hear the familiar fizz of the poachers’ tires.
Same Toyota, tightening its circles.
There’s a square of green lawn
In my backyard the size of two bodies.
It’s the only patch I still water.
Good for lying back to look up at the overcast sky
Lit white by the city.
Our rhinoceros sniffs in the low grass
For some old smoldering
Gone cold a long time now.
His dreams rush over the arctic surfaces
Behind the bones of his skull, behind his eyes.
He hardly fits in my front yard.
You can’t call it cruelty
Because he chooses to stay.
Still, I know he’s just too lonely to go.
When he was smaller,
He’d stomp at the feet of smokers
Over for a beer or barbeque.
Now he can’t be allowed near the guests.
He’s drawn masochistically to fires.
He must weigh five thousand pounds.
The moment I saw him
I knew he wouldn’t last in the city.
But he stayed—below my kitchen window,
Thumping heavily through the garden,
Observing all the bits of eyes and skin.
He was watching us that night
Through the tangle of chain link
And butternut squash vines
When you kissed the white underbelly of my right forearm.
He knows about grazing,
About taking what comes, and how to go on living
Despite the value of his death.
I know about the tangled shape your hair takes
After all the pins and clips come out.
I know that you cry for your husband sometimes.
In the evenings, when I know it’s worst for him,
I take his face in my hands—
Buttock-sized jowls, bottle-sized olfactory passages full of my scent,
Hair sprouting from his ears as they flick
And listen in different directions.
It’s a wonder he keeps all the sounds
Straight in his head,
Their sources and meanings.
My cheek touches his horns
And he knows that I love him,
But it only makes him sadder—
That he can’t make me any happier,
Or any less lonely,
That I can do neither for him.
I know that you plan to leave this city,
And it may not matter whether or not I water
That square of lawn. But I remember
The white gasp of your neck
The first time I heard my fingers touching it,
Our rhinoceros watching us through the fence
As buds turned sharp and burst.
Forgive me.
I wasn’t really listening.
Woods
It’s just her chin
And mouth poking stoic
From under the pillow
At first light.
What she dreams is
Still hidden.
Primate infants suckling,
Wide spiders cover the ceiling,
Ants swarming in orgies over water,
The light we all secretly know
Is not there.
Morning bucked and seared
And the clouds gloved over
So we took the dogs across the river
To the dry creek bed:
One hound, one ferret-like, one shaped
And sorrow-eyed as a seal.
Stream crossed
Scrabbling up the wash
Wet boots and all
Twisting the ticks out of the soft
Of the dogs’ legs
We found it.
The heavy malamute at the cottage
Didn’t know any better.
The Catahoula does and does.
He can smell all the savage
Hope of the world.
Soft stone or hard.
Squalid disfigured tangle.
He knows better.
There is more underneath.
Thick tackle of sagebrush;
Singing prattle of water through rocks.
Soda dam.
Everything streaming from the girl’s little heart
Lives out here.
At first I couldn’t see it
Though it swaddled me like fog.
The girl and the dogs found it.
I just followed them in.
Election Year
It didn’t matter that he was still speaking.
His cheeks puffed and sank.
He could have spat or thrown a bottle,
rent a novella into a flurry of leaves.
He could have left,
having already said everything.
But he didn’t. He stayed incumbent
on the stoop, looking down the path
at the leftmost of the two pits near the garden gate
where the rosebushes had been. He remembered
the loppers you used to reduce
the foliage to two thorny crowns,
the way the handle of the shovel
had split then splintered
as you pried loose the tangle
of roots from the soil.
He took off your ring.
You’re choosing him over me, he said.
Blood-colored leaves swarmed with the wind.
Your sinking chin bloomed white. You looked at him.
You noticed your cigarette
burning the soft of your finger.
You thought of crying,
showing him the wound,
then decided against it,
although your lips had already begun to swell—
your own persistent allergy to salt or sadness.
The mist pinched minutely at your face.
You moved your good left hand out to touch him.
He was holding his left hand in his right.
Blood moved out, away from his heart.
He didn’t say anything.
Branches and Sharpness
It’s early spring.
There’s cold sunlight
knifing through the trees.
I’ve been sawing off
the lower limbs of rhododendrons
all morning and my chest aches.
The firs seem weepy.
You know, little brother,
next morning you could do anything.
You could practice diving
like Johnny does.
You could move to India.
Feed house sparrows every morning
until they wait for you.
You could do anything, Joseph,
and I’d be so proud of you.
But one day you might wake up
feeling so tired
that you do nothing.
If you decide to do nothing,
how could I keep you
from the frowzy hell I’ve lived in too?
To think, it might be fall already.
The house sparrows might be watching,
the lower limbs might be growing back,
and you might feel
the ache of cold sunlight
knifing through the trees
at just the wrong moment.
It’s still spring now, brother.
Be careful when our mother feels weepy,
and the sunlight isn’t knifing,
and when you are moving through the branches
the sly way you do, sweet Joseph,
because you’re so much more graceful
than I am, and you’ll never have
to saw the branches off.
First Thing When I Wake Up, I’ll Try to Leave You
1.
It was afternoon near a lake.
You were there, of course.
I think I need a little space, I said,
and that we had nothing else to say to one another but goodbye,
good luck, and, would you please consume me
now, please, before the water takes me?
The failing light was the color of a young pine fire.
The air coming up from the water smelled of new cantaloupe.
I thought I saw a very small walrus
on an ice block in the distance.
The grass we were lying on sloped toward the lake.
The air coming down the slope smelled of rotting maple leaves.
I had read in the newspaper that
the congressman wears stick pin collars.
He wears French cuffs. The congressman said,
“We’re going to give them the devil.”
2.
—You have made me impossibly happy,
you said to me.
You failed to look me in the eye.
—You know the eighteen parts of my clitoral network
and their functions, you said.
You were not looking at me,
but at the temporary voting booth
that you, too, perceived as a very small walrus
atop an ice block—or a snow cone stand.
—You gave me books of poetry and I read them, you said.
You had given me books, too, which I placed in my pile.
—You make my face feel hot and a little sweaty, you said.
You were surprised that ice was still purveyed in block form,
and even as you re-described the form and function
of your clitoris’s eighteen (sometimes nineteen) parts,
I could see disappointment streak your irises
upon recognizing that the temporary voting booth
was not a walrus.
—You should go for some red popsicles, you said.
3.
The congressman is quite good, off-the-cuff.
He looks a body in the eye.
I had been following closely the media coverage.
I said to the congressman:
The oftener I think of dying,
the fewer mean things I say to people.
4.
The rain began and fell like shaved ice.
Still, there were boys running shirtless.
We tried together to think of the word
for fresh rain smell on mixed surfaces.
We made a list of the current surfaces:
Dead, straw colored grass;
Live blue fescue grass, (bluish);
Your stomach, (soft, white,
hard to keep from blowing on);
The water of the flashing and bursting lake;
The burbling water of the fountain near the lake;
(You dropped three olives—
one nicoise, one oil-cured, one royal—
into the short glass of potato vodka I was holding.
I thanked you with one of my feet for
leading me to an understanding
of the three party system.
I began for the first time to really drink
the short glass of potato vodka I was holding.)
Potato vodka and olives;
Agapanthus leaves (someone had cut the flowers);
The backs and shoulders of the boys running shirtless;
Cotinus leaves and their wispy plumes (I could smell smoke.)
(My chest and face felt warm
from the potato vodka and I tried to kiss you.
You turned your left temple into mine
and held it there, preventing full facial contact,
until I gave up.)
5.
A pack of cigarettes made from a kind of tobacco
used to make cigars;
Vitis labrusca leaves;
Grapes, not quite ready, too tart,
may have actually been currants;
The umbrella mounted over the temporary voting booth;
Shore pine needles and limbs;
(We tried holding hands.
The positions of our bodies made it feel overly formal,
like shaking hands.)
The top of my right hand;
The cuticles and nails of your right hand;
Potato leaves and dangling purple flowers.
Picnic tables the color of driftwood,
fried chicken grease worked into the grain;
ducks.
(I wanted to start over.)
6.
The congressman winked at me.
7.
The ducks began to make love violently.
I began to hope that one of the boys jogging shirtless
would make an attempt on my life so that you could save me
and I would belong to you always.
Sex is such a tired ending for me, I thought.
Death is worse, I thought.
There were ducks in the fountain near the lake.
I remember that. I said to the congressman:
When I’m dead I’ll have plenty of space.