Read The Best American Poetry 2015 Online
Authors: David Lehman
Defending Walt Whitman
Basketball is like this for young Indian boys, all arms and legs
and serious stomach muscles. Every body is brown!
These are the twentieth-century warriors who will never kill,
although a few sat quietly in the deserts of Kuwait,
waiting for orders to do something, to do something.
God, there is nothing as beautiful as a jumpshot
on a reservation summer basketball court
where the ball is moist with sweat,
and makes a sound when it swishes through the net
that causes Walt Whitman to weep because it is so perfect.
There are veterans of foreign wars here
although their bodies are still dominated
by collarbones and knees, although their bodies still respond
in the ways that bodies are supposed to respond when we are young.
Every body is brown! Look there, that boy can run
up and down this court forever. He can leap for a rebound
with his back arched like a salmon, all meat and bone
synchronized, magnetic, as if the court were a river,
as if the rim were a dam, as if the air were a ladder
leading the Indian boy toward home.
Some of the Indian boys still wear their military haircuts
while a few have let their hair grow back.
It will never be the same as it was before!
One Indian boy has never cut his hair, not once, and he braids it
into wild patterns that do not measure anything.
He is just a boy with too much time on his hands.
Look at him. He wants to play this game in bare feet.
God, the sun is so bright! There is no place like this.
Walt Whitman stretches his calf muscles
on the sidelines. He has the next game.
His huge beard is ridiculous on the reservation.
Some body throws a crazy pass and Walt Whitman catches it
with quick hands. He brings the ball close to his nose
and breathes in all of its smells: leather, brown skin, sweat,
black hair, burning oil, twisted ankle, long drink of warm water,
gunpowder, pine tree. Walt Whitman squeezes the ball tightly.
He wants to run. He hardly has the patience to wait for his turn.
“What's the score?” he asks. He asks, “What's the score?”
Basketball is like this for Walt Whitman. He watches these Indian boys
as if they were the last bodies on earth. Every body is brown!
Walt Whitman shakes because he believes in God.
Walt Whitman dreams of the Indian boy who will defend him,
trapping him in the corner, all flailing arms and legs
and legendary stomach muscles. Walt Whitman shakes
because he believes in God. Walt Whitman dreams
of the first jumpshot he will take, the ball arcing clumsily
from his fingers, striking the rim so hard that it sparks.
Walt Whitman shakes because he believes in God.
Walt Whitman closes his eyes. He is a small man and his beard
is ludicrous on the reservation, absolutely insane.
His beard makes the Indian boys righteously laugh. His beard
frightens the smallest Indian boys. His beard tickles the skin
of the Indian boys who dribble past him. His beard, his beard!
God, there is beauty in every body. Walt Whitman stands
at center court while the Indian boys run from basket to basket.
Walt Whitman cannot tell the difference between
offense and defense. He does not care if he touches the ball.
Half of the Indian boys wear t-shirts damp with sweat
and the other half are bareback, skin slick and shiny.
There is no place like this. Walt Whitman smiles.
Walt Whitman shakes. This game belongs to him.
The new news is I love you my nudist
the new news is I love you my buddhist
my naked body and budding pleasure
in the weather of your presence
Not whether your presence but how
Oh love a new nodule of neurosis
a posy of new roses proposing
a new era for us
nobis pacem
Oh my bodhisattva of new roses
you've saved me from my no-love neurosis
You've saved my old body from the fatwa
Let's lie down in a bed of roses
a pocketful that rings round the rosy
If this is the end of the world my love
let's fall down in bed and die
Let's give a new nod to nothing
Let's give a rosebud to nothing at all
How I love the new roses of nothing
Oh my bodhisattva of nothing
boding I hope no news but this
For our bodies and souls I hope nothing
but the weather of us in our peace
from Poem-a-Day
His legs are as pillars of marble, set upon sockets of fine gold: his countenance is as Lebanon, excellent as the cedars.
âSong of Songs 5:15
If you can see them, the snow-covered
cedars, crowning the hills, come
to the cabin between the two tallest,
their branches hooked
with the tantrums of crows.
~~
Will you find me without the pink and blue hydrangeas?
Will you find me without the spikes of St. Augustine grass?
Will you find me with the bloodied snowâwhere some frail thing was
raptured?
~~
If you find a stag and kill it,
throw its hind legs over your shoulder
and drag it to my cabin
between the tallest cedars.
Its blood on the snow is my voice pursuing you.
~~
I sleep on a cedar bed
with red fur blankets,
the wood of the gates of paradise,
wood which hid the naked couple.
Wood of shame. Wood of passage.
If you come, I'll press my hand
to your chest. A key
to the fittings of a lock.
~~
You knock at the door.
Break several cedar branches
and dust off the snow.
Bring in seven for the bedroom,
seven for the fireplace,
then rest your head on my chestâ
even bare
branches can make a kind of summer.
from
Burrow Press Review
She crept into my room, took me outside into the mosquito night thick with the gutted hums of fishermen's wives, piercing the flesh of a sleepwalking sky.
She taught me that cobwebs are hammocks for spirits, a stop along the way to rest their weary skins, a knot on the thread of their pilgrimage to a place they had almost touched once.
In those days, a village could grow legs. Wedge itself deep into the throat of mountains where horses couldn't smell it, where footsteps couldn't sear its memory onto peeling roads.
Dear mama: | The orchids have teeth |
 | the machetes are ornaments |
 | rusting upon the walls. |
 |  |
 | I want to build you a temple |
 | of teeth |
 | but my hands are too tender |
 | my hands are for stringing |
 | the rice grains of rosaries. |
 |  |
Dear mama: | On the ocean roams a shadow of splinters |
 | the fish are hurling themselves onto the shore |
 | the shore will break into birds of dust |
 | the scales are mirrors |
 | blinding the sun. |
 |  |
 | On the ocean roams a shadow of splinters |
 | how will I swim to you |
 | when the day is done? |
from
Muzzle
â
lines from Craigslist personal ads
Hi. I react really badly to Pine-Sol. My eyelids swell up and my eyes
turn bright red. I am a REAL woman. It is January 1, 2014.
Educated men move to the top of the list.
We were both getting gas Wednesday evening. Fish counter, Giant Eagle:
My husband knows how attractive I find you.
You caught me singing loudly. Your name means “wind.”
This Christmas season marks my eighth year of being single.
Please have a car (truck preferably) and a job.
I collect candles and have two grown children who are on their own now
thank God. I already bought your birthday presentâ
It's a tie. With swordfish on it. There are certain things
my nose can't handle and smoking is one of them.
I signed up to volunteer at a local park for a Merry not Scary
trick or treat trailâit would be nice to have a companion.
Must be willing to be seen in public with a size 16 woman.
I'm a little bigger, but not sloppy-fat. Six one four five nine eight
two three one nine. I can swing a hammer and am a pro
at putting on makeup. Sexiness to me is you
plus a photographic memory. Do you have questions
you've always wanted to ask a woman? You left your receipt
and that's how I figured out your name. I was behind you
at the Lane Avenue Starbucks drive thru and you paid
for my grande nonfat no whip Mocha Frapp.
Your silver hair was gorgeous. Wow. The first time
we made love our souls connected and intertwined
and seemed to remember they were destined for one another.