Poetry |

“Metal Rat,” “ism” & “Astonished”

Metal Rat

 

 

I want the ineradicable in the palm of my hand.

The tiny pinprick claws. Those fine-tooled wires of the face.

 

I want the engineers to have knocked up a prototype

that works like an uncleaned coffee machine,

 

each cup stronger than the one before. I want to cat

the rat and have the rat cat back, all the cheese-

 

filled traps to snap upon its neck and break.

If that’s what it takes. If that’s what it takes.

 

Feel free to pull up your stakes and move to a new home,

rat-free, rat-alone. But I need the pestering pest

 

behind the baseboard. The unasked-for exterminator

scrabbles at the kitchen table. It’s tough, he says, too close to call.

 

Paws dimple his clean-shaven cheeks. How much can you afford?

He sniffs his poison. Whose freedom are you asking for?

 

 

◆     ◆     ◆     ◆

 

 

-ism

 

 

It is exhausting. You learn to live with it.

This is the country you were born into. This is the way it is.

 

These husks of civic duty. These masks dissolved to the bone beneath.

This hand over a mouth. Over a million mouths. Over

 

infinite mouths open for a scream so long in coming it sparked

the ancient seas to life. It is exhausting. This constant roar.

 

This constant pain. This constant fear. You learn to live with it.

We don’t see the problem. Fear like water

 

off a duck’s back. This cliché. This unsheddable caution.

Alone. No neighborhood is safe after dark. The key

 

in the crumpled fist. Fake numbers like business cards.

Call when you get home safe. Call when your home

 

is unsafe. It is exhausting. You are exhausted.

We said we’d learn to live with it. We are alive.

 

We have learned to sleep, unconcerned. This is how we die.

 

 

◆     ◆     ◆     ◆    ◆

 

 

Astonished

 

“What we commonly call being astonished is an excess of wonder which can never be otherwise than bad.”  ~Rene Descartes

 

 

Every love has an end like an open stomach.

Remember our cat we found after two days lost

 

and how astonished we were she was dead,

gutted, and by a dog? A coyote? What loved her

 

more than us to make her a part of themselves?

Do you love me that much? There is no moon

 

and hasn’t been for a week, the night blind

with hunger. At dinner, we eat the bones

 

of whatever conversation we’d hoped to have.

If I touch your hand, I flinch at your bite.

 

Every love has a beginning, a mutual astonishing

like a magician’s tricks we can’t decipher

 

transforming fondness into love and we hate

that lack of understanding. Every love is a knot,

 

when cut, that turns into a healthy length of rope.

We aren’t every love. We aren’t even astonished.

Contributor
Andrew Kozma

Andrew Kozma‘s poems have appeared in BlackbirdRedactionsThe Baltimore Review, and Best American Poetry 2015. His book of poems, City of Regret, was awarded the Zone 3 First Book Award, and hismy second book, Orphanotrophia, was published in 2021 by Cobalt Press.

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