Read On the Spectrum of Possible Deaths Online
Authors: Lucia Perillo
It's the Bronx, Barretto Point, so the sea
cannot be far away. But all we have to go on
is the lone pine in the distanceâ the rest
bleached by the chemistry of time. Also
there's this young man in the foreground, squatting
with his forearms balanced on the fulcrum of his knees,
speaking to what's disappeared. It is a blur
resembling a woman with her arm extended,
urging him to follow. Soon the Great Depression
will also call him, and for lack of other work
will send him downstairs to the boiler
where he'll nurse the chromosome of sadness
while his words turn into coal. But he was not really
down there with the onions and potatoesâ
in a moment, he will follow her
into the waters off Barretto Point, which will turn his good white shirt
translucent. Like the translucence he was led by,
but in this picture he hasn't risen yet
to cross the muddy shoreline. He's still crouched
in the upland, growing misty with the nebula who touches him,
misty at the prospect of his likewise turning into mist
as the camera makes this record of their betrothal.
Dusk takes dictation from the houses.
Sometimes sobs and sometimes screamsâ
laughter, too, though it doesn't settle like the others
into the hollows of the Virgin Mary's face.
In her concrete gown, she's standing by
the satellite dish absorbing for the trailer on the corner,
wearing shoulder pads of Asian pears I stole some of
before the windfall fell. When the dog
lifts his leg to soil a withered rose I say
Good boy.
Nightshade vines overtake the house of the widow,
their flowers turned into yellow berries
that there are no birds in nature idiot enough
to mistake for food.
after Dick Barnes
Heidemarie Stefanyshyn-Piper: I can barely pronounce your name
but have been thinking of you ever since your grease gun
erupted into space. Causing your tool bag to slip
beyond the reach of your white glove, when you were attempting
to repair the space station's solar wing. Thanks
for that clump of languageâ
solar wing!
One of the clumps
of magic shat out by our errors. And thanks
to your helmet camera's not getting smeared,
in the inch between your glove and bagâ irrevocable inchâ
we see the blue Earth, glowing so lit-up'dly despite the crap
that we've dumped in its oceans, a billion tons of plastic beads,
precursors to the action figures that come with our Happy Meals.
Precursors to the modern Christmas tree and handle of the modern ax.
Precursors to the belts and jackets of the vegans.
The cleanup crews call them
mermaid's tears,
as if a woman
living in the water would need to weep in polymer
so that her effort would not be lost/so that there would be proof
of her lament, say for the great Trash Vortex
swirling in the current, for the bellies of the albatrosses
filling up with tears that can't be broken down.
For the smell of mildew in the creases of ruptured beach balls,
for seabirds strangled by what makes the six-pack possible,
for flip-flops that wash up so consistently alone
they cause disturbing dreams about one-legged tribes
(described by Pliny before he sailed across the Bay of Naples,
into Mount Vesuvius's toxic spume).
Dreams logical, Heidemarie, given the fearful data.
Dreams had by us who live 220 miles below.
Queasy from our spinning but still holding on,
with no idea we are so brightly shining.
Bad luck to enter the houses of old women, a commandment
broken when I entered their stone cottage, two streets over,
covered in vines that twirled around a rusted swing set
though they had no child. That they were witches: a conclusion
come to, given that they wore the clothes of men,
their wool caps covering their secret hair, their house
so laced in greenwork that it seemed continuous with the woods
and its nettles and the nickel in my pocket, which they paid
for bee balm I tore out of their yard and sold
back to them, the dirt-wads dangling.
“Don't let the birds out,” muttered while I slipped
into the room with its stone walls, the backdrop
for a wounded jay who lived in a tin tub rattling with seeds.
Birdfeed, newspapers, feathers, guanoâ I saw
one substance splattering into the next in the life undivided,
windows open, birds flying in and out.
They worked their conjurations by feeding chopped meat
through a dropper, and wiped their hands
onto their jeans so you could see their long black fingers
streaking up the whole length of their thighs.
Mine have occurred in empty houses
down whose dark paneling I dragged my fingernailsâ
though big-box stores have also played their parts,
as well as entrances to indistinct commercial buildings,
cubes of space between glass yellowing like onion skin,
making my freak-out obscure.
Suddenly the head is being held between the hands
arranged in one of the conventional configurations:
hands on ears or hands on eyes
or both stacked on the forehead
as if to squeeze the wailing out,
as if the head were being juiced.
The freak-out wants wide open space,
though the rules call for containmentâ
there are the genuine police to be considered,
which is why I recommend the empty vestibule
though there is something to be said for freaking-out
if the meadow is willing to have you
facedown in it,
mouth open to the dry summer dirt.
When my friend was freaking-out inside my car, I said
she was sitting in the freak-out's throne,
which is love's throne, too, so many fluids
from within the body on display
outside the body until the chin gleams
like the extended shy head of a snail! Even
without streetlamps, even in the purplish
penumbra of the candelabra of the firs.
My friend was freaking-out about her freak-outs,
which happened in the produce aisle;
I said: oh yeah at night, it's very
freak-inducing when the fluorescent lights
arrest you to make their interrogation! Asking
why you can't be more like the cabbages,
stacked precariously
yet so cool and self-contained,
or like the peppers who go through life
untroubled by their freaky whorls.
What passes through the distillery of anguish
is the tear without the sting of saltâ dripping
to fill the test tube of the body
not with monster potion but the H Two⦠oh, forget itâ¦
that comes when the self is spent.
How many battles would remain
in the fetal pose if the men who rule would rip
their wool suits from their chests like girls
in olden Greece? If the bomberesses
stopped to lay their brows down on a melon.
If the torturer would only
beat the dashboard with his fists.
Now the tanagers have returned to my dead plum treeâ
they sip the pond through narrow beaks.
Orange and yellow, this recurrence
that comes with each year's baby leaves.
And if the tree is a church and spring is Sunday,
then the birds are fancy hats of women breaking into song.
Or say the tree is an old car whose tank is full,
then the birds are the girls on a joyride
crammed in its seats. Or if the tree is the carnival
lighting the tarmac of the abandoned mall by the freeway,
then the birds are the men with pocketknives
who erect its Ferris wheel.
Or say the tree is the boat that chugs into port
to fill its hold and deck with logs,
then the birds are the Russian sailors who
rise in the morning in the streets where they've slept,
rubbing their heads and muttering
these words that no one understands.
Every morning I put on my father's shirt
whose sleeves have come unraveledâ
the tag inside the collar though
is strangely unabraded, it says
Traditionalist
one hundred per cent cotton
made in Mauritius
Which suddenly I see is a haiku
containing the requisite syllables and even
a seasonal image
if you consider balmy Mauritius
with its pineapples and sugarcane.
And this precision sends me off
down the dirt road of my fantasy
wherein my father searched
throughout the store to find this shirt
to send an arrow from before the grave
to exit on the other side of it,
the way Bash
Å
wrote his death poem:
On a journey, ill
my dream goes wandering
over withered fields
It suits my father to have hunted down
a ready-made for his own poem,
not having much of an Eastern sensibility,
having been stationed in China during the war and hating it
despite the natural beauty of Kunming.
They say a man dies when the last person
with a memory of him dies off, or maybe
he dies when his last shirt falls to ruin. Now
its cuffs show the dirty facing all the way around
and a three-inch strip of checkered flannel dangles down
into my breakfast cereal:
I have debated many days but
here it goesâ
snip
and am overcome by an Asian wash of sadness.
Because the washer spins so violently, like timeâ
perhaps its agitations can be better withstood
with the last-memory theory, which means that a dead man
reposes longest in the toddlers that he knew,
which often are not many,
children being afraid of old men,
what with their sputum-clearing rasps
and their propensity for latching on to cheeks,
though my father was not much of a child-cheek-pincher,
not that he had anything against them;
he had a grandson he tolerated
crawling under the table at La Manda's
where between forkfuls of scungilli
as his kidneys chugged with insufficient vim,
he composed his other death poem,
the one that came in his own words, it went
Soon I must cross
the icy sidewalkâ
help. There goes my shoe