Authors: Tom Sleigh
as you stand before the gates of Station Zed—
not to see the dead of invisible worlds
but to hear this melody
stolen from another horror movie,
The Creature from the Black Lagoon
, begin to play.
I wanted first to end up as a drunk in the gutter
and in my twenties I almost ended up there—
and then as an alternative to vodka, to live
alone like a hermit philosopher and court
the extreme poverty that I suspected lay in store for me anyway—
and then there were the years in which
I needed very badly to take refuge in mediocrity,
years like blunt scissors cutting out careful squares,
and that was the worst, the very worst—
you could say that always my life
was like a patchwork quilt always ripped apart—
my life like scraps stitched together in a dream
in which animals and people,
plants, chimeras, stars,
even minerals were in a preordained harmony—
a dream forgotten because it has to be forgotten,
but that I looked for desperately, but only sporadically
found in fragments, a hand lifted to strike
or caress or simply lifted for some unknown reason—
and in memory too, some specific pain, sensation of cold or warmth.
I loved that harmony in all its stages of passion,
the voices still talking inside me … but then, instead of harmony,
there was nothing but rags scattered on the ground.
And maybe that’s all it means to be a poet.
To be hollowed out night by night,
to feel this continuum between envy
and desire, to have the kind of fur that sheds
sparks in the bedroom’s shifting dark,
to sense, when I’m asleep, your whiskers
measuring the void around my face
that expands inexorably year by year,
to know that in your eyes God is just a bird
trapped in the burning bush, and to have
to disappoint you with my dogcat soul,
more dog than cat, really, more nakedly
beseeching, less able than you to be
out there on your own, given all that,
what makes you crave my touch tonight?
When your eyes entrap me, I splinter
into your looking, into what your looking
sees, the seeing itself stripping me down
to flesh and bone, and found wanting—
my face gone vagrant, paralyzed in your pupils
yet heightened and varnished beyond fact:
I fall, am falling, I’ve plummeted beyond
the frame, no internal balance-wheel to land me
on all fours, no mechanism of grace,
no safe harbor under the radiant
engine block, the streets rippling with black ice.
But don’t turn away from me: turn my skinhead
to furhead, teach me slash, slink, creep.
Show me how to survive under a heating vent.
The cursor moving back along the line erases what was was.
What was keeps existing under Edit so that all you need to do is
click Undo. So much of time gets lived out that way—
at the momentary center of the line erasing.
When I push my IV pole down the dark, glass hall, the droplets’
atavistic sheen drips into my veins with an absolute weight as if
the bag of potassium chloride, hanging in sovereign judgment
above my head, assures me that justice, death or life,
will be done. And though it’s not for me to understand,
when I cross the beam that throws open the door so silently
and swiftly, it makes me want to think that like these rivets fastening
glass to iron, some state of me that was will go on,
either as the will of some will that isn’t mine, or out of mercy,
or from the contract between the rivet gun and some unseen hand.
In my fantasy of fatherhood, in which I’m
your real father, not just the almost dad
arriving through random channels of divorce,
you and I don’t lie to one another—
shrugging each other off when words
get the best of us but coming
full circle with wan smiles.
When you hole up inside yourself,
headphones and computer screen
taking you away, I want to feel in ten years
that if I’m still alive you’ll still look
at me with that same wary expectancy,
your surreptitious cool-eyed appraisal
debating if my love for you is real.
Am I destined to be those shark-faced waves
that my death will one day make you enter?
You and your mother make such a self-sufficient pair—
in thrift stores looking for your prom dress,
what father could stand up to your unsparing eyes
gauging with such erotic calculation
your figure in the mirror? Back of it all, when I
indulge my second sight, all I see are dead zones:
no grandchildren, no evenings at the beach, no bonfires
in a future that allows one glass of wine
per shot of insulin. Will we both agree
that I love you, always, no matter
my love’s flawed, aging partiality?
My occupation now is to help you be alone.
On the other side of praise
it’s time to chop down the tall tree in the ear—
enough enough
with the starlit promontories—
a nervous condition traces itself
in lightning in the clouds,
a little requiem rattles among Coke cans
and old vegetable tins
and shifts into a minor key
blowing through the dying ailanthus,
grieving to the beat beginning to pour down
percussive as a run
on a nomad’s flute of bone
while a car engine dangling from a hoist and chain
sways in a translucent gown of rain.
Where does it go when it’s all gone?
Coleridge’s son, Hartley,
wants to know what would be left if all the men and women,
and trees, and grass, and birds and beasts,
and sky and ground were all gone:
everything just darkness and coldness
but nothing to be dark and cold.
Which was what my father
imagined all the time,
calculating with his slide rule the missile’s
drag and lift, as he smeared
across the paper the equation’s
figures propelling his pencil lead
into the void.
And after splashdown, what?
An emptiness like an empty subway car
stumbled into by mistake
on a drunken night
turning into
morning
with the world
stretching out
like wind walking on a lake?—
the body wavering, almost
disappearing
into the inside-outness of being
in that emptiness, its peaks and valleys
and absolute stillness?
His shadow anchored to a semi’s tires,
down there with the mussels, oysters, a starfish even
that twice a day shine up through oily film
where river meets sea meets river.
And I can track him in the sonar
of dolphin, seal
as if his pencil
hit the sea floor
echoing everywhere
filling the sea’s room,
unstringing the current’s loom
in which warp
and weft unravel
into oscilloscoping wave.
“He began to think of making
a moving image
of what never stops moving
that would bring order
to eternal being,
and so make movement move
according to number—which, of course, Socrates,
is what we call time …
And so he brought into being the Sun, the Moon,
and five other stars, for Time must begin.
These he called wanderers, and they stand guard
over the numbers of time—and human beings are so forgetful,
they don’t realize that time
is really the wandering of these bodies.”
An all-morning downpour shadowy
as the stained insides of his coffee cup.
He didn’t look up, didn’t talk,
didn’t rush me to the car, but gave his head
the slightest inclination.
We sat while the news talked on and on,
each of us glad to sink down into ourselves,
to not have to speak: it was enough, more than enough
to know the other knew we could settle
in that silence, and no vow or spoken understanding
would be as strong.
And all we did as we sat there driving along
was move from that point where everything originates
until point to point the line we made together got drawn.
The abandoned pit-house sliding down the cliff
sliding into the sea
is lost in fog
wrapped around
the headland’s scree—
and in the mine’s undersea tunnel
where miners walk out (along with my father’s father’s ghosts)
a mile or more under the waves
you can sense the old imperatives like played-out veins of tin
shining up for the men
walking briskly to their unsuspected
deaths, while just above their heads, a moment before the cave-in,
they can hear, as always, boulders rolling on the seafloor,
a job of work to do before the next shift.
“I am a dreaming & therefore
an indolent man—.
I am a starling self-incaged,
and always in the Moult,
and my whole Note is Tomorrow,
& tomorrow, & tomorrow …”
Which because it was how he felt
it’s what he wrote.
But now there’s no tomorrow,
only languor and despondency.
And under that shelter in the storm, among rocks
falling, he finally felt free
to say what his Daemon made him say, and looked up into the rain
and was for that instant washed clean.
English letters are Greek ones dried up.
The aurora on the screen
pulses more real than real.
The post-nuclear, post-holocaust rain he tried to understand
is only another afternoon when the world ends.
And now what passes through him
is a windchime ringing, casting parabolic shadows on the ground
as he hunches at work in his little cubicle,
a cell 8 × 10
which is just another world coming to an end
when twenty years on since the chiming ceased,
I try again to understand the points he plots
where thrust equals gravity and drag
so the rocket can keep soaring on forever.
Glowing on the screen, the initial
capital in the shape of Omega holds inside its void
two flying dragons biting their own tails.
And on another page
Alpha traces out the lines
of the Tower of Babel collapsing.
And just beneath that, a king lies dreaming of a golden statue
crushed by a stone that becomes a great mountain
so that the four kingdoms, gold, silver, brass, iron,
shine in gilt from the vellum—
and across Daniel’s face the shadow of a wing
which is the Lord’s wing whispering to Daniel the dream of the king
turns black as the screen when the screen goes to sleep
and a hand writes an unknown equation across the dark.
The backyard lives of cat and bird
and the way leaves give themselves
away this instant to the all-but-no breeze
creeping across the silver-painted roof where clouds,
reflected, pass dark, then bright
above a book left out by the vacant deck chair
fluttering its pages, signaling to the reader somewhere out of sight
to come back, come back and start the book over,
this all arrives without a valediction forbidding anything,
just the sense of seeing something
or someone for the last time: the poet’s faded fedora
in a tea-store window haunting this October’s primary
blues bringing back mid-May and the missing mate
of the nightingale singing “day long and night late.”
i.m. Seamus Heaney
“The Craze”
Demmies is short for “demolition experts.”
“Hunger”
Ba, Akh
, and
Duat
are terms used in the Egyptian
Book of the Dead. Ba
is a spiritual entity, often depicted as a human-headed bird hovering over the deceased’s body, or exiting the tomb. It’s the part of the soul that can travel between the worlds of the living and the dead.
Akh
is the “blessed or ‘transfigured’ soul” of a dead person whose soul has been judged to be just by Osiris and so is allowed to enter the Afterlife.
Duat
is the dangerous landscape of the underworld, complete with demons and monsters who guard the gates that the
Ba
has to pass through in becoming an
Akh
.
“Eclipse”
A
panga
is a bush knife shaped much like a machete.
A
matatu
is a minibus used as an inexpensive, shared taxi by most ordinary people in Nairobi. They are often decorated with pictures of movie stars, musicians, politicians, and other famous people, as well as religious leaders. They are often equipped with sound systems that blare Motown, R & B, and Afro-Pop.
“KM4”
KM4 refers to a central roundabout in Mogadishu, Somalia, near the Ministry of Education building where a suicide bomber, on October 4, 2011, killed 100 people and injured more than 110 others.
A
macawis
is a sarong-like garment worn by men.
A
chador
is a long robe worn by Muslim women.
UNHCR stands for United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.