The Cobalt Weekly

#43: Poetry by Allen Jones

DIGGING WITH MY FATHER

When we roll her into the grave, one leg

catches on the dark clay, running on alone.

 

The first being to die in my arms, she sits

three days before we bury her, death always early.

 

We tie dishtowels around our faces, sling her bloated

body into the wheelbarrow, take turns breathing.

 

She dies tied in the truck when we transfer the herd.

She is our best mother, but old, the first goat we named.

 

The strong one, who won’t feed her young, knocks

her down. The kids pitch and rear, struggling clear.

Her neck collapses as the twine slips tight. I yell

for my father. Her eyes bulge white.

 

I dig my fingers beneath the twine.

It will not break. My father goes for a knife.

 

I want to remember him running. The kids buck

wildly, hooves kicking clear of death.

 

I pump her dead legs stupidly.

My father hands me the blade.

 

I have never cursed my father.

Faltering hooves grow quiet.

 

I hold a dead mother goat.

My father brings the wheelbarrow.

 

POETRY CANNOT SEAL A DOOR

It is a promise leaving

invisible shards everywhere.

But memory is fast

as water or a wolf spider,

slipping despicable legs

through impossible cracks,

blithely racing an old red truck

around the wrong side

of a moonless blind curve,

birth lashed to death in the back.

Sleep with me, it says.

Its future bleats a b-flat note

crossing the bridge north,

as if pain could sing time,

home a gash of color,

quick as my brother’s fist.

I sing of a nightmare bird

fixed as a heart,

spiraling tight in a gale,

face dripping with liquor.

I squawk a nonsense

made of black sports cars.

Or at least my brother does.

I only wish to.

Bullet-shaped planets circle.

My mother pulls a gun.

Her skin falls like an onion.

This our tongue-and-groove kitchen

a trap so sprung with love,

it snaps a hole in half.

I sing of an old man

wandering a bleached ward

wielding an oiled set of swords

halving life as silently as my sister

whose pink hair pulverized

box, saw, and magician.

The bath is empty,

the water long cold.

The old oak fell.

A bell echoed

like a prayer.

And this hand

reaching out.

REVELATIONS UNDER THE GREAT OAK

The tree is gone         cut down or fallen      the past a useful fire

    though oaks play at death     winter flies    a plucked set of wings       

 

a nail-scarred skin   the confident hand     of love long dead

      it is wonderful         to hold the world     inside your breast

 

The teacher tells us        the emperor’s advisor       displeased him         

       then on the block       thought this:         as council I advise       

 

against injustice         as good subject           I must die       

       so whose body     is this mind             a severed thought

          

a place exists       where children sit       struck dumb by youth      

       a woman’s words        and a gauze dress        a young tree

 

I’m sure this shade        stands so tall          we can all fall in   

       and I’m sure        more than flesh exists         so many hours

 

here inside it                but a breast?           there is nothing                   

       not already here           she said                   parting her dress 

 

the tree was never there       except in her flesh       this is not my body

       she said              skin bright as hope        our blindness infinite

 

the advisor fled             a mind       is only half yours

       she says         and beware of anyone        who saves

 

the tree is surely gone         but years later          I carry a body

       up the mountain         winter hands           clutching an axe