Authors: Bob Hicok
She ran backward on a ship sailing forward
toward a man running west on a world
spinning east, waving at her
running out of ship waving at him
running out of her, until finally
they were so far apart, it was expedient
to write a novel in which a woman
tears pages from her notebook and drifts them
on the sea, which reads the story aloud
to the moon as it carries the words
to the wrong man, who dresses himself
in the novel and walks the countryside,
until one day, the right man
finds the wrong man dying
by the side of the road, and offers him
water, and reads the wrong man's chest
and arms and thighs, the word
sun
in her handwriting casting a shadow
of the word
tree
Like we are the hole that grows in poor, unmendable
nothing: we blind needles: we unmoored threads:
like feeling I'm the enaction of a waterfall by my tongue
upon your body, as when a boat is brought to the edge
of exile and a hand extends to a hand or a tree
beseeches with its shadeshawl: however born,
there is reaching, we agree the wind smelled of copper
one day, a passport the next: like how to escape
my brain's slum of words, the ghetto of the said,
while adoring there the rocks, the teacups,
if half of me is a Molotov cocktail and half
the inflection of loss and half a genuflection
to breath: like wondering if this extra half
is a country mapped with invisible ink:
like how windows ask to come along with the going
and preside over the staying, and I look at them
with all the love, all the shatter I can muster:
shards cutting me when I try to put the sky,
the distance back together: boredom cutting me
deeper when I don't: like searching for a man
in a burning house and finding a piano as echo flees:
a whetstone still warm from the blade: sheets pressed
with brainfolds of sleep: a whisper from the bathroom
of running water: but no body: and I carry
these things to safety that are not the man: the piano
in my arms, running water in my mouth, the vespers
of sleep, the knife, so like a wing, like flight:
and say of him, that was me, to the ashes, the char:
and sift the memory of flames for their sorrow,
holding smoke to the mirror interested only
in solid dreams: like it will finally see
what isn't there and give it my face, this presence
of absence I have tried and tried not to be
Attempts to say a thing:
Took a day off from breathing
to see if that would be like talking to you.
I've tasted your ashes twice, once today,
once tomorrow.
I study a dead tree that has a living shadow
made of God and crow shit, it resembles winter
all summer, what a stark easel the sky
never asked to be.
If you see a man chopping down wind,
it's me or someone who resembles me, with calluses
and an untied anchor falling through the ocean of his body.
A critique of the attempts to say a thing:
Grief is punch-drunk
stupid, that's why we get along, we have the same
empty IQ, the same silhouette of a scarecrow
challenging lightning to a duel.
A final attempt to say a thing:
It was the worst decision of my life, to hold
your last breath, to say anything out loud, anything
in quiet, I should have left it to the professional stabbers
in white, the professional pokers in squeaky shoes,
I had no business trying to see you leave, see death
arrive, I owe you an apology, an elegy, I owe you
the drift of memory, the praise of everything,
of saying it was the best decision of my life,
to hold you full, hold you empty, & live
as the only bond between the two
They go to the woods, the town, the entire town
looking for a girl but finding
a different girl with her own
missing eyes, her own beetle
in her mouth. They circle, the town,
the entire town, this wrong girl
whose splintered repose
appears to be running
against the side of the Earth,
who makes them imagine
this same becoming
for the right girl. We should lift her,
one is thinking, bury her
under the modesty of leaves, another,
and another
wants to burn the woods, shoot the crows,
poison the coyotes, and beneath
those thoughts, wants to touch
the wrong girl, reach
where she is open, into death,
as some would rest their heads
between the teeth of a lion. They turn,
the town, the entire town,
to where the priest
considers that the closest
he's come to a miracle
is when he backed out of a room,
the woman naked
on a bed, smiling, his pants
undone, his life
pointing where it had never been.
He sees them expecting him
to bring God into the moment
and wants to tell them,
God is here,
God was here the whole time,
but instead, makes the sign of the cross
and asks them to pray silently
for the girl. Then it's dark
but no one leaves, then it's light
and they've grown accustomed
to the habits of ants, no one
wants to let the wrong girl go,
who is more of a scrap
every moment, as if they know
it's not their mourning
they tend but the mourning
of those from another town. Where
the right girl might be alive
in a kitchen, reminding the woman
who asks the right girl
if she knows her phone number,
of her own daughter's
pride of knowledge, her slow pleasure
in repeating seven digits, in holding
what is not real and making it
seem so, as flesh does,
until it does not.
The rain is pregnant with a shape
exactly like you, late to tell your lover
it's over, who is late to tell you
he never loved you, also in the rain,
as wet as a goat in the rain or a statue
of rain in the rain, if there is one,
would have epaulets of rain in the rain
and be made of bronze or toffee, you are running
now in the rain, your version
of the human spirit, your very private instance
of converting sunlight when available
into vitamin D, for the energy
to believe we are more than energy, hoping
that you are wrong in the rain,
that it will never be over, as he
is hoping that he always loved you
in the rain, three blocks, two blocks, one block
to go and there he is, more lickable
than prophecy, like dew has taken human form
and put on a yellow shirt and shaved
in the rain, the rain so hard
you fuck in the rain and no one notices, the rain
fuck-shaped where you are fucking, an animal
with its mouth to your ear, and you
an animal with your mouth to its ear, everyone
on equal footing in the rain, the rain
speaking to your panting with its panting, the rain
washing away the rain
One day I was introduced to a bed
in which a woman was born, gave birth, and died.
The woman who introduced me to the bed
was the granddaughter of the woman
who was born in the bed and never lived
in another house.
Being a child of wind, I whispered
in the company of so much permanence.
The woman found my reverence ridiculous.
I knew this because she took off her clothes
and got on the bed as a way of asking me
to join her in making the bed a living bed.
It was in that bed that the woman told me
she tried to kill herself at seventeen.
Lots of Valium under a tree with horses nearby
ignoring her to eat.
This is my second life,
she said,
the one I got
for not knowing more about drugs, for being shy
when it came to my father's shotgun
in my mouth.
By then, she'd lived a hundred years
in dog years beyond when she'd wanted to die.
When I told her this, she said,
Woof.
The bed squeaked each time we turned
or breathed our bodies into each other.
I keep asking myself if this story is true.
I seem to believe it is, seem to admire time
and making love on top of musical springs
and the world every day for not killing itself,
not exploding or burning down
as it might reasonably want to.
And the woman?
I seem to know her or contain her or think
the valley in which I live
would resemble her if someone had the language
to convince it to rise and be a woman
wearing a flowered dress.
Women are more likely to wear gardens
than men, to be valleys, to hold time
in their bodies and take us
inside what is passing
as it passes, what is arriving
as we leave.
And the man?
I seem to be him or want him
to be the feeling that stars
would look down on us and ask
What are you going through
if only they had mouths.
I love crows, so midnight at noon. Me,
a suit stuck on sticks
that no longer suits your life. As if this aways
who you are, your self-imposed
supposes: suppose this is it â this field,
this light? What does, anyway, fill you
if not sun up or down, if not harvest,
yield? We should switch, I'll hop off
and gimp around, you'll hang
among scavengers for company,
for keeps, your straw-thoughts pecked
by wind. Are you me alive or am I you
dead? I lied: I hold my arms wide
not to shoo but greet, to say
to plunder,
Feel free, dig in.
almost eulogy, is nearly dearly
beloved, I am un-gathered here
where you are not, I confess
I obsess, repeat myself to feel
this speaking's more than the creaking
of a pew in an empty church, where
as a tyke, surrounded by an absence
I was priestly asked to think of
as love, I couldn't wrap my mind
around such a zilch, whereas you
I touch and smell in the rough flesh
of memory, the word sonically
wants to be
remember me,
in my head
at least, you thrive some, you die some
daily in this weird-ass and misty mix
of ghost and gone, to which
I address what pretends to be
litany but is no more
evolved than this stuck
list: come back, come home
Having assumed it's none of my business
that our cats sniff each other's asses
while I prepare their breakfast, I turn now
to the window and resume the relationship
I've had with two horses who may be
two different horses since I fell in love
with shapes moving horse-like
in the distance eight years ago. I watched
one dusk in Michigan a horse mount
and conspire with another to make
yet a third, the mounted horse
completely not stopping eating
while the other quickly did his thing,
which resembled my thing in how it held on to
and cherished blood, as if for a while
it were a heart. I didn't expect that thought
but there it is, the dick-heart, and weirdly,
when I put their food down, the cats usually
go look at birds, as if to remind themselves
what the real life is
and that it isn't this one, though for me,
this has been completely authentic
from day one, such that if you gathered
all of my desires in a bag, I would marvel
at the size and hunger of the bag
and want that too, and we could talk
well into the night about how to slip the bag
holding everything into the bag
holding everything without dropping a thing,
like where else could you fit the sky
but the sky?
Nuclear missiles are rusting in their silo sleep,
gaskets are failing, firing mechanisms are going bad
but the engineers who designed them are retired
and records weren't kept, we couldn't make the missiles
today if we wanted to, and the thousands we have
might work if fired but might not, or leak, or go off
because they feel like it,
Why are we talking
about anything else,
I said to the waiter when he asked
if we had any questions. He cried and sat on one
of the two extra chairs at our table, one of the two spots
for emergency seating that were in our control,
then a second waiter came up and wondered aloud
if we were ready to order, I asked to hear
real silence, not the kind with my breath inside it,
my wife wanted the moon to make up its mind, to be full
or empty but nothing in between, our new friend
the first waiter wanted the second waiter
to make us take it all back, to tell him the missiles
were fine, that we knew how to repair death
on the magnificent scale of the atom.
That's the least
we can do,
I told the second waiter,
look at how
we've wounded his face, it suggests a painting
by Francis Bacon that's been chewed on by a dog.
So we told our new friend the first waiter
that we were circus people, that we lie about everything â
there is no Strongest Man on Earth, The Lion Woman
has more ocelot in her than lion â he smiled, the world
had been healed, and he rose, and served his country
beautifully that night, bringing it sustenance
over and over on plates large enough to hold a human head.