Daily Archives: December 19, 2009

The Hyoid Bone

In my hand is a hyoid bone,
staple reference of crime shows
for the way it breaks during strangulation —

It supports the tongue
and gives us
the offer of speech —

The person who once owned this one
is silent now,
choked for some reason —

You can tell by the cracks
along the horns how it was
seized from without —

crushed by some weight
as the person stared into
another’s eyes, perhaps familiar ones —

I can’t speak myself
of any one suspect, don’t know
how to explain —

I’m stuttering now, my breath
stalled inside, preventing me
from lying to you —

My brain’s gone down into a blue hole
swirling into quiet, the lights
failing as I rasp my distress —

How this bone was ripped and crushed
is a story for someone else to carry,
not a burden, really —

a small tale of suffocation
so mundane as to be
unremarkable —

It happens every day, the
free floating bone of language itself
a casualty of others’ desires.

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Ah, Americans

welcome to admitting
you belong under the flag
of scarlet
bone and
vein

unwitting
stamp of pain
for many (leading to comfort
for others on a bed of skins
and feathers)

when you went overseas
that one time
and claimed to be
Canadian to avoid being associated
with the loud couple on the first floor

no one was fooled

and they sneered at you

ah, Americans

best defined
as

impatient
and dedicated to the proposition
that everything
can be found in

either/or

so if you aren’t like them
(demanding the room they desired
and embarrassed by the bidet
they didn’t pay to have that in their room
no sir)

you must not be them

but you are, you are
from your sneakers to your nerves
at the maze of small streets

what if you got lost
and couldn’t speak the language?

(and you couldn’t)

what if you were shown to be
idiots
out of place in the old world?

(and you were, you were)

who wouldn’t be able to tell?

who in the street wouldn’t know at once
that you at last
understood
what it means
not to fit in?

who wouldn’t see
the flag
in your frightened
faces?

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Pastoral

Before I got here,
I wanted the poems
full of feral Siberian iris and
the sword leaves of cattails,
their cotton-bomb tops
coated in tan smoke;

now I have the poems
sticky with asphalt
and cigars, Saabs
broken down on Vermont
snow trails, starfruit
on a glass plate
in a downtown bistro.

If I seem to know the world
these days, it is because
I can still sense it distantly
through its cloak of tar
and screen of clever conversation over
well-constructed food —

but there was a time
when I could stalk the woods
alone, never speaking,
filled with One Word that was enough
until I became hungry
and then I could pull white tubers from the ground
and crawfish from the streams,
build a fire and eat well,
and still never say a thing.

This is why I will not write now
of the peregrine
on the museum eaves,
knowing how little I might have to say
is true to what I have become,

for it seems that everything
that grows or soars without speaking,
is born to be itself without being told,
is now just a symbol of something I’ve lost,
and a weekend trip to the forest spells nothing
worth repeating, and I am
starving, and noisy
with the need to speak of human things
to other humans.

I am discontented
and desire only
to be alone
with the memory of how
I could have been as animal,
as mineral, as green and dumb
with simple existence as these
better beings.

Some nights,
up here on the sixth floor
in the highest loft I can afford,
I can almost believe
it was real.  My blood in my ears.
My pulse slow as constellations
turning.  My eyes fooled
into thinking I am still
seeing things as they are.

On those nights, I sleep
soundly, and the city
fades behind the curtain
of unspeakable
divinity.

It does not last.
And I do not tell a soul
of how it is.

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