The Cobalt Weekly

#18: Poetry by D.E. St. John

INCISION

The policemen found my friend face up

at the river’s edge, in the patterned dark

and light of passing clouds. Beyond that,

they found ashes from a fire and the outlines

of bodies, where men had lain down and slept.

 

Those men were his friends, not mine. They ate

and slept and shat together down river where

they knew no one went. When I picture them,

their wrinkles and their scars and open mouths

are all I can imagine. He was only sixteen.

 

At school, I was the one who cut apart

the fetal pig, cuts shallow and sketching

the organs with a pencil nub, while he wrote

his name as if he deserved the credit. That odor

of formaldehyde: it made him nauseous.

But maybe if I had him hold the knife and draw

the heart, maybe his body would have shaken

the way my fingers do now, when I picture his

body in the morning air, pierced by the light.

Maybe he could have moved with his family up north –

 

where his father is now a landscaper for a banker

on Long Island.  On summer Sundays, his boss

tans his pale body by the pool, while he lays sod

and plants saplings, watering them with a hose,

stretching the roots downwards toward the dead.

 

PARISH

These days, I crank up the a/c in the Ranger

and I don’t patch the leak in the driver side tire.

 

Westerberg, Chilton, Springsteen: none of them

know the way this truck handles on unpaved roads.

 

None of them ever had to help their dying father

clean out his office in the middle of the summer.

 

You left the door open – not on purpose.

I flip through your collection of classical LP’s:

 

A lot of Beethoven, but other pre-romantics also –

Mozart, Schubert, Soler and Salieri – and I stare

 

at a poster of Yo-Yo Ma, smiling with his cello

angled upward between his tuxedoed legs.

 

I could never be a pastor because I don’t believe

in the importance of pooling water in your palms.

 

I could never baptize some poor wincing child;

I would not know what to say to them, because

 

I don’t know if I could ever convince myself

of the truth printed in the finger thin pages.

 

When you finally tune your cello, it answers

the quiet with open tones and vibrating strings.

 

I listen to the sounds resonate from within

the hollow body.  And what the music hides,

 

in the absence of language, is your starvation:

a hunger sated only by the empty calories of art.

 

POWER PLAY

For Emma, heading North.

 

Before the punch-up in the scoring end,

when both players lost their sticks, silently

helicoptering across the ice as we watched;

 

Before the Caps knotted it up at 2 in the second,

and the trio of Letang, Maata, and Dumoulin,

penalty killers, lumbered over the ice, chasing

the puck as it turns end over end, the ice kicked up

from their skates hanging in the air like stardust;

 

Before the Pens had a 2-1 lead, but failed to score

on a 5 on 3, when the falling rain outside

Twain’s turned the streets into puddles of rust;

 

We witnessed a father throw a wiffle ball

at his son’s bat in the center of Decatur Square,

under darkening clouds. The ball went nowhere,

seeming to disappear into the child’s eyes, and so

we headed to Twain’s for the puck to drop.

 

My father used to say that I would know love when I saw it.

That morning I breathed in the air through wet cloth,

and while walking in the tumult of downtown Atlanta

the doors of the public toilet in Woodruff Park opened; 

 

and what I saw from across the street was the glow

of a woman’s bare ass, sweatpants at her ankles. 

She was standing, screaming something in response

to the men outside, who were telling her to get out,

to cover up. But she was in no rush to leave.

 

What I wished I saw then was a confirmation.

Some sign that reaffirmed the beauty of all things,

like the golden sheen of rust after rain.

 

Instead, I kept walking, thinking about the weather.

Letting the scene fade from my memory, I replaced

it with thoughts of the game tonight: the dim lighting

of the bar, the faces in the crowd, the blanched ice.

All these better spaces where we could belong.