

Stephen Dunn
hell in a
gasoline sportcoat, and
live to tell
about it.
-
Cassius Clay on Sonny Liston
At parties, women with skirts
slit up to their thighs
have been known to touch it,
and men of all kinds turn suddenly alert
in its presence,
seemingly envious or wary.
I call it my gasoline sportcoat,
my live-to-tell-about-it
antidote to what’s shy in me.
With it on, I’m able to challenge
those who Jesus us
beyond all sympathy, laugh at others
who, in the glare of daily atrocities,
say it’s hell
having this ache, this head cold.
Without it, when I walk into a room
it’s as if Anonymous
has preceded me and stolen the spotlight,
his amazing fame on everyone’s mind.
A man like me needs help
to get through a day and the long slide
into evening. Which is why at home
I push its hanger
deep into the closet as if it might gather
strength there, in darkness, be ready
for a next time.
It’s mingling now with my ties and shirts,
it’s influencing the sweaters on the topmost
shelf, it’s becoming
its story, the story I’m now telling.
Timothy Liu
we cannot read.
Impossible
to counterpoint
the apolitical
dream reduced to an apple
without design
while icy cosmic chatterings
orbit the
earth, filtered through the radio’s
intermittent
fuzz —
history taking on shape —
a diary
scrawled into by a child’s hand. Few
are given a
shiny penny
let
alone carte blanche
to do as they
please — this isn’t a primetime
pilot freed
from costs —
one can’t just watch
ratings
plummet. Welcome then to the new
upheaval
ushering in a day
so dishwater dull
one can’t help
acknowledge some grand design
buried in the
backyard dirt
as the landscape
slides on its
native blood like messages left
unopened
Katharyn Howd Machan
THE WOMAN WHO WON’T DANCE WITH GOD
says No thanks, my card’s full.
She slips out of her crystal slippers
and sets them on a window sill
next to a glass of flat champagne,
a strawberry someone tasted, spat.
Barefoot now she crosses bright tiles
of a balcony facing the sea. Her dress
is red, the simplest crimson. Alone
where night birds sing names and poems
she moves this way, she moves that,
her arms above her naked head
finding music in her own breath.
Carmen Firan
delirium
I woke up with a dry mouth
in my dream I’d told you everything that could be said
rain kept falling upward and the water dissolved
my enemies’ names with shoe polish labels
all were floating, sodden and swollen, on a street where I once strolled
for the sole pleasure of the conspirators of dream
with such loneliness my men stretched out their necks
and flew in fluttering capes
like bats scattered over the city
I was the only inhabitant
of a blue cup
terribly thirsty
This place is
not home. Here people sleep through the day, and wake with the night, as if
they were ghosts, all out of this world, and all waiting. Here, the moon shines
in small slivers; it tells shadows to slide from their rooms, and then slide
out the door. I watch as they go, and after they have gone. I can see across
this city: places I have been to, places I will be again. There are red lights
in the dark, pants thrown across chairs, and room after room after room, all
waiting.
Eyes closed, I
still see: watch ghost-girls go out. They leave this place that’s not home, to
duck into darkness. They float to the foreign quarter, turn red with the
lights, let white hands guide them down dangerous paths. Green uniforms and
green dollars lead the way. They find the thin-walled buildings; they open the
doors that never quite close. They bring the ghost-girls inside, where they
land on their feet, but just barely. High heels tap unsteady rhythms down empty
hallways, and up dimly lit stairs. I can hear their echo, even now. It is the
music of my own feet, from those nights that have passed, when I followed the
moon. From the nights that will come, when I will float to the foreign quarter,
a ghost-girl again, in search of green men and green money.
It is only
tonight I am human. Only tonight I will stay where I am. Sit with the cold, and
think about ghosts. Stare at the floor, and let it reflect me in fragments,
faceless and strange. I am waiting for the screams that come from the street.
It is only the cats, scratching across roofs, but the sound is like the baby
that should have been mine, calling me to another world. I go there to meet
her, in that place without ghosts. I go there to join her, in that place that reminds
me of home. Together, we play in rice paddies, steady on bare feet, and safe
where the men in green can’t find us.