Poetry |

“What’s The Past Like?”

What’s the Past Like?

 

 

Fragments of a water jar restored

with library paste, like cracks

 

filled and painted over to conceal

a disassembled vessel.

 

I said I couldn’t remember myself,

long ago, fastened long ago,

 

as a sensitive boy imagining life. But

now I recall the sound a gray bird

 

made to wake me from a crazed dream.

Like a scratch awl with its fluted wooden

 

handle chipping bark off an oak tree.

I wrote my name so passersby know

 

I existed, not who I am. I am a man

now, whatever. I go to town

 

alone. Time arrested me differently,

its strange sound took custody

 

of my desire to know myself. It sprained

my ligaments, swelled my back,

 

and still I ran through the sand dunes

like a wild mare, round-bellied,

 

and munched on the American beach

grass of forgetfulness. It’s hard

 

to remember that all horses were

once wild. I don’t do those things

 

that I did then. Secrets waver there like

a tail I cannot see. I grew up in a desert

 

until I was expelled to snowdrifts.

My lexicon, my only friend, was

 

words the dunes knew, but didn’t

say. Memories, primed by westerly

 

wind, are cold and strong. The wind

shapes the trees, its velocity greets

 

obliterated landscapes, dead reckoning.

The music of this loamy soil undulates,

 

a murmur snowballing, and if you can

balance as it trembles, you’ll remember

 

that first sip of gin, of cream, life

when it was dessert. Not an ice floe

 

begging you to collect its water

and convincing you of its warmth.

Contributor
Alan Felsenthal

Alan Felsenthal is the author of Lowly (Ugly Duckling Presse, 2017) and Hereafter (The Song Cave, 2024). His writing has appeared in FENCEHarper’sThe New York Review of BooksThe New York Times Magazine, and Oversound. He is the co-editor of A Dark Dreambox of Another Kind: The Poems of Alfred Starr Hamilton (The Song Cave, 2013) and the editor of Bookworm: Conversations with Michael Silverblatt (The Song Cave, 2023). He teaches poetry at NYU Tandon School of Engineering.

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