June 15, 2023

Lauren Schmidt

WHY I AM NOT A TAXIDERMIST

I am not a taxidermist, I am afraid of John Wayne.
A guest at Uncle’s house, I slept in The John Wayne Room.
It was called The John Wayne Room as if a room
such as this could have another name: a life-size
cardboard form of John Wayne in the Western
She Wore a Yellow Ribbon. The plot not to be confused
with that story where the woman’s head falls off
as her husband unties the ribbon’s silky knot secured
around her neck. The secret she kept her whole life
from the man she loved, a private strangeness
such as having, in your home, The John Wayne Room.

Egyptians dehydrated the human body by extracting
soft tissues. The torso, left intact so the soul, an airy thing,
could find its likeness in the afterlife. In this room,
John Wayne’s soul would have a number of likenesses
to confuse for the original John Wayne. The most alarming
of which is the John in a Box which is just as it sounds
except that it was not a box but a buck with a tail
for a crank, then: Pop goes the John Wayne.

Who thought of this is less disturbing than who would
buy this except I know the answer. I would have
John Wayne stuffed and mounted in The John Wayne Room
to look at when I’m an old man, Uncle declared.
I am not a taxidermist because I read “A Rose for Emily”
in high school and I know the need to keep something,
everything, long after it is gone, like youth, like love,
the longing to take it all with me because what is memory if not
the cadence of colliding, forgotten things, cymbals
that tempt a tremor from the body’s core and wake

that thing inside? I am not a taxidermist because I would stuff
my dog the time he got his head stuck in the railing
of our stoop. His leather tongue lapped happily at his dish
as sparks darted around his head from the iron cutters
like the squirrels he was about to chase, mad with desire.
I am not a taxidermist because I would pull the skin
off the kind of sleep I got as a kid, drape it around me
so I could remember what it’s like to be ten again.
I would freeze-dry the first time I let music move inside me
like a sinuous being, fit to romp for days. Yes, the sadness

of these things gone, but I am not a taxidermist
because how do I find the exact eyes Tracey had,
shiny with tears, shaking, when she looked at me,
her father’s fist blued into the knob of her chin?
Or her body the night she huddled beneath my porch light
over a spread of Gin Rummy at midnight, that terrible hand
just across the street. Then the girl with the strange name
in ninth grade, the girl with those cheeks, pocked and red
and pus-capped, that frantic hair, I would mount her
on a shelf so I could look at her, wonder why I wasn’t nicer.

I am not a taxidermist because I would cast all the women
from now that I might never get to be, shake my fist at them
and demand a list of failures. I am not a taxidermist because
one day I would sit surrounded in my John Wayne Room
of All I Wished Forgotten. People in town would wonder
about me, rumor what they don’t know. And I,
an old lady in a rocking chair, would stare stolidly
at the hybrid creature of trauma and whiskey sickness,
the griffin myth of if I woke to her groping me
the way I swore she did while I stirred from sleep
in my dormitory bed. Too afraid then to confront
that beast, now I’d stuff it, I’d give it back its teeth.

from Rattle #34, Winter 2010
Neil Postman Award Winner

__________

Lauren Schmidt: “I often worry that I am a lousy poet since much of what I write about comes from the shit I couldn’t possibly make up on my own. There is, then, nothing clever for me to say here. Boo.” (web)

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June 14, 2023

Tano Rubio

FEED: AUTÉNTICA

The isolation of this existence has led many to take
refuge in such forms of interaction as the Internet
—from The Karma of Brown Folk

When the For You page on TikTok
started showing me videos en español,
I sunk deeper in the sheets:
 
Pensando sobre el trapo que mi familia usa
pa’ las tortillas, dedos leafing
through folds of time:
 
One video says that tortillas are the oldest
tradition still alive on this continent
 
& as masa slides down the throat
to rest in la panza, the acid breaking down
molecules, sorting nutrient from waste,
podemos recordar que el cuerpo
keeps what makes it grow
 
& anyway, yo siempre guardo
at least one piece until the end of my meal,
so that when my plate needs to be cleaned,
I have something to clear the flat wet
glass:
 
& when I show the Spanish teacher
at my school a video that explains
a brief history of the tortilla,
her eyes blink like textbook pages,
scanning for answers to bubble
on a test
 
Ella pregunta si las piezas I rip off
are used as one would use a spoon,
to scoop & shovel: An observation she made
during her cross-cultural experience
in Latin America
 
& I begin to sink, only this time
there are no sheets in which to recede:
 
tengo solo mi celular
 
& I want to lock & return it to my pocket
pero the video keeps looping over & over & over
 
hasta la historia is but an echo,
& my palm becomes a chamber
 

from Rattle #79, Spring 2023

__________

Tano Rubio: “Thank god for TikTok and its endless stream of content. Without it, I would have nothing but time.” (web)

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June 13, 2023

Francesca Moroney

I KEPT BUYING BOTTLES OF HONEY

after Catherine Pierce

as if the amber-hued stuff could actually deliver
the promises of health and wholeness I read
on each label, slowly, repeatedly, kneeling
before them in the grocery aisle. As if tasting
the difference between tupelo and manuka might
finally unlock the bolted door I was forever throwing
my heart against. Because the cashier always smiled
and the clinking jars kept me company on the walk home.
I kept buying bottles of honey as if each satisfying pop!
of a new lid unsealed could be a fresh start, as if my hands,
holding the virgin jar, could serve as makeshift womb, as if
I actually believed salvation could be found in sweetness.
I kept buying bottles of honey because I had no other
addiction—I was allergic to gin, repelled by chocolate,
made hysterical by marijuana. In those days, I lived
on oranges and slices of sky—coffee tasted like dirt,
eggs wouldn’t scramble, toast turned to ash,
and, before I could make porridge, the water
boiled back into the atmosphere. Because I bled
all the pens dry and still could not find the right
metaphor, because the dirges in my journal
terrified me with their crowded, unrecognizable script,
each line a miniature pirate’s plank, my words falling
right off the page. As if the honey could replenish
all that had been plundered. Because the sun
set too early and rose too late and the candles
didn’t catch and the dogs broke the lamp
and even in a good year the magnolia only blooms
for a single week. Because I wanted to be naked,
raw, and wild, but was actually too tired
to live; too lazy to die. Instead, I did nothing
but take my mug outside each morning. I sat on the fallen
pink-and-purple petals and stirred my tea. I waited
for the honey to melt into its newfound heat,
swirling the golden globule round and round—
the shimmering, eddying vortex my tiny, daily
victory: a lone act of creation.
 

from Poets Respond
June 13, 2023

__________

Francesca Moroney: “After reading the way women celebrate their divorce in Mauritania, I was reminded once again of the utter lack of rejuvenating or supportive ritual that associates divorce in the U.S. In the New York Times article, I saw women feasting with friends, mothers, sisters, townspeople, all dressed in their most festive garb. It occurred to me that I have spent much time since my separation trying to find rituals for myself, even if my society doesn’t make it very easy for me.” (web)

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June 12, 2023

Mark Rubin

OHIO DOVE

She lay at our feet with a metal arrow
through her chest, the arrow angled in
the ground not far from the lilac  
nest where she’d been sitting.  
 
Because he owned the bow, or that
he went by his last name, 
or that his peach fuzz had darkened, 
Cunningham said he was taking my turn.
 
He could not wait to show me
how it’s done, the killing.  
 
If only quick, like turning off a lamp.  
The dove lay gasping in the too sudden
present tense. Cunningham pressed 
his shoe down hard, 
 
then took the arrow out from her. Because 
I’d not had my heart broken this close up
before, I held the bird extra, said good aim
then placed her back in the lilac bush
 
so no one could see. I heard my mother’s
dinner bell in the distance wringing 
the dry air in my throat. I walked home and ate all
her steamed kale, because it was good for me.
 

from Rattle #79, Spring 2023

__________

Mark Rubin: “I write because it’s a way of rendering the heartaches that come from being alive. As a certified curmudgeon, I have an edgy, ongoing sense of wonder, if not reverence, for small things in the natural world, and big things that move through me as a result. I am most happy when I can get out of my own way.”

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June 11, 2023

Jeremy Marks

SMOKE GETS IN MY EYES

“The other theme is fire.”
—Stephen J. Pyne

I
 
I got a call this morning from my father
who said the smoke was so thick over home
that it had come in the form of a brown fog
to make your throat burn or what my sister said
smelled like the apocalypse.
 
(We’re Jews, so we don’t use
that word on a regular basis.)
 
I don’t know how we got here,
my father claimed and it was a terrible
shame. Worse, I know he was at least
one thousand klicks from the closest blaze
 
(in Manhattan they couldn’t see
the top of the Chrysler building).
 
 
II
 
Currently, I live in Canada where right-
wing papers say the blazes come from bad
forestry not Alberta bitumen, Canadian bacon
and uranium mining.
 
My wife told me that last night my snores
were so loud they molested her dreams.
All night I sawed away at some log
and she wondered whether my nasal passages
had swelled with ash.
 
No matter how much light, water, and fertilizer
I use I can never predict how my plants
will do. The drought takes some and bunnies
eat the rest. I have a desert rose that dazzled me
last year with lush green leaves but remains bare
this June.
 
In all our years together, this has never happened.
 
 
III
 
My great grandfather knew DDT was a problem.
He was a lifelong Republican even though he took
a position with FDR’s Works Progress Administration
during the Depression.
 
He grew watermelons in his yard, built a windmill
for clean power and tried to never live in a town larger
than 10,000.
 
He also killed sparrows by the scores
because he said they were bad birds.
Some folks believe there are fauna
and flora who are sinners and God
(or opposable thumbs) gives them a right
to smite.
 
His wife loved birds and awaited their return
while wintering among the dim dust of northwestern
Missouri prairie.
 
I have been out to the town where she expired
Cameron, MO in January when nothing seems
to move save people from their front doors to Chevies
and Fords and through the double doors at chain
stores.
 
 
IV
 
I live in a place that still has vast forests.
Hunters go on call in shows and say they should
be allowed to hunt bears in the spring because store
bought meat is far worse
cruelty.
 
Hunting is sporting while factory farms
commit unspeakable harm.
 
A bear showed up in a neighborhood nearby
and the city had it shot. People took to social media
to declaim the criminality of summary executions when
government could just do a resettlement.
 
My neighbors grow tomatoes
and do not like grackles for their noise
and mess. Squirrels keeps chewing the heads off
their tulips.
 
If you live where there are bears you are advised
not to keep vegetable patches.
 
 
V
 
My wife comes from a small town where good
dark soil turns to clay about six inches down.
 
My parent’s yard has the same ‘problem.’
 
The two places are not quite one thousand
klicks from each other.
 
 
VI
 
My father apologized for his anguished call.
He wanted to know that his son, daughter-in-law
and grandchildren were alright.
 
We didn’t see each other for nearly two years.
There was a global virus and now catastrophic fires.
 
I told him he need never be sorry for love.
And then I hung up and lost my voice because
smoke got in my eyes.
 

from Poets Respond
June 11, 2023

__________

Jeremy Marks: “I wrote this poem after my father called me from the Washington D.C. suburbs and told me the smoke was so thick from the forest fires in Canada, he could not see more than a few hundred feet ahead. I live in Canada where our forests our burning. I grew up in the D.C. suburbs where my peoples’ ears, noses, and throats are aching.”

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June 10, 2023

Steven Brown

WHALE BONE

In this field of fireweed and wild oat
that leans for ten thousand mornings to the east,
I see the wind coming
from miles and miles away
like wakes at the back of an unseen boat.

At first, it seems an incredible distance
between the wind and where I stand, but then
as if it knew my time on earth
unpredictable as lightning path,
as if it knew that for love to work,
it must catch up, it must travel fast,
it blows over me, its body an enormous swimmer.

It is in this place I know the truth of things:
that whales, when they die, swim out of the deep water
into the bright blue, their heavy bones forgotten
with effortless glide, that is to say, with grace.

They know and are a part of what is always,
what is true in the wind and the long grass.
I watch as the whales go by, all breath,
touching the things that cannot last.

from Rattle #26, Winter 2006
Rattle Poetry Prize Honorable Mention

__________

Steven Brown: “VW vans, pickup trucks, El Caminos. I often wonder about them, parked on the side of an interstate, abandoned or broke-down. Nothing but fields of dry grass or dark pine. Where did the owners of the vehicles go? There are cows everywhere and crickets. I like to think they’re out there somewhere—the permanently fed-up—thousands of them in the woods who’ve got it all figured out.”

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June 9, 2023

Amy Rose

YOUR LIE IN APRIL

When it snows
in the spring
after the flowers
have bloomed
it feels
just like
that time
my ex called
and said,
“Sorry.
Wrong number.”
 

from Rattle #79, Spring 2023

__________

Amy Rose: “The title of this poem comes from a Japanese story retold in various formats, and when I wrote the poem, this was the only title it could have. Not because of a direct relation to the story itself, but because of what lies underneath the words. There is sometimes a magic that happens, when saying a truth, even a painful truth, in a completely honest way, which makes it beautiful. No less painful, but somehow beautiful, and that has real value, and that is poetry, and that is why I write poetry.”

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