Simon Perchik is an attorney whose poems have appeared in Partisan Review,
The Nation, Poetry, The New Yorker, and elsewhere. His most recent collection is Almost Rain, published by River Otter Press (2013). For more information, including free e-books, his essay titled “Magic, Illusion and Other Realities” please visit his website at Simon Perchik
*
One headstone leaning against another
float though neither moves
taking root the way these flowers
wait for someone under the ground
soothed by gust after gust
from a sky that feels at home
dug itself down as the first tide
planted in business-like rows
still beating, wandering through
and back to rest in your arms
that remember rain as moonlight
overdue, left hanging, tired this time.
*
With each hand the same turn
you learned to take apart
put together, tighten
and though the wrench holds on
the tire's slowly going flat
the only way you know how
–you let go, circle
spring-like, for keeps
around the pin-hole leak
already planes falling into place
as a training song from the 40s
louder and louder, struggling for air
–at last the tire goes down
half under the ground
where you need both wrists
the way flowers wilt and each breath
takes in more smoke, still black
on course, end over end, almost there.
*
Not a chance! the gate
tries to open though rust
was already mixed in, drifting
till the Earth lay alongside
too weak to turn back
the way the lines on your palms
still flow close to riverbanks
and longing, struggle to pull
this mud soaked ironwork
into the darkness and turns
that stayed in the air
after it became the sky
even in the daytime
–you almost see the gate move
and with both hands, yell
you're working on it, yell
anything! how the latch
is just about to loosen, yell
so the fence breaks apart
wading in dirt no longer the rain
that never lets go all the way down.
*
Again your shadow loose in the attic
as if more light could help
coming for old letters, broken frames
not sure what was torn apart
has healed by now, hidden
as sharp corners though you
still expect the some days
to climb alongside and the height
save them –it’s storage work
later work –Esther and you
on a pony that almost remembers the dust
it carried all the way down.
*
Before water was water it grieved
word by word the way each woman
caresses her first child
though what you hear is its mist
washing over those breasts
as moonlight and riverbanks
no longer struggling –by instinct
your lips will claim the Earth
with the kiss that gives each birth
its scent and between your arms
clings with just its bones
–with each kiss you drink
then weep and the dirt already rain
helps you remember nothing else
between your thirst and breathing.
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