Poetry |

“Dispatch,” “Reflexive,” “Monumental Life Building” & “saw, circular”

Dispatch

 

 

The end of day

bays in the blood.

 

It has caught

a great lack

 

and will not rest

until I close

 

the distance.

 

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

 

Reflexive

 

 

The teacher told me

my heart was roughly

the size of my fist

 

and I saw my hand

clench around

the new knowledge

 

as if with an infant

instinct again,

simian vestige,

 

palm and fingers

gripping phantom

fur midair

 

between two trees.

It’s natural the visible

endure as measure

 

of the hidden,

but to this day

it sways in me

 

not only sense

of scale but purpose,

for what is the heart

 

if not called from

the start to close

over, to cling to,

 

to hang on, to hold

itself to this day,

this day, this day,

 

this day, this day,

this day, this day,

this day, this day

 

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

 

Monumental Life Building

 

 

The name, a gauntlet thrown down Chase and Charles

Streets, rendering each pedestrian just that — ordinary,

transient, wondering what veined stone sourced

from what dark quarry, what winch and hoist and

labor, might suffice to build a monumental life?

And what so vast that hasn’t taken its tithe or more,

tip of a worker’s finger or more, capillary-christened?

Up the road, a now-bare plinth shrugs perpetual

disavowal of past purpose where — look! — my daughter

(smallest in her class) pointed one afternoon as

a young man hopped atop it to juggle in its statue’s

absence. I can still feel her other hand in mine and

somehow, too, the quick palm-thud and twitch aloft

of his brief constellation.

 

 

*     *     *     *     *

 

 

saw, circular

 

 

we serve

 

the swerve that one

good turn

 

deserves. another

 

riven swivel,

pivot fodder.

 

the whole flock

 

reverses charges,

calls collective.

 

turn me

 

on to turn me

one again.

 

how in

 

our moment’s um,

now buckles,

 

bones up on

 

the autopsy-turvy

table, espies

 

and pries the gum

 

stuck under

to make a meal

 

of then recoil,

 

anguine, sanguine,

disavow each

 

season’s treason

 

as it reveals

the wheel.

Contributor
Dora Malech

Dora Malech’s most recent books of poetry are Flourish (Carnegie Mellon University Press, 2020) and Stet (Princeton University Press, 2018). Her honors include a Ruth Lilly Poetry Fellowship, an Amy Clampitt Residency Award, and a Civitella Ranieri Foundation Writer’s Fellowship, and her poems have appeared in publications that include The New YorkerPoetry, and The Best American Poetry. She is an associate professor in the Writing Seminars at Johns Hopkins University and the editor in chief of The Hopkins Review.

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