Poetry: Selections From Mather Schneider
FUNERAL MUSIC
José José
was a great singer
and now
he’s dead.
Mexico is
in mourning.
Two weeks
of drama on the tv,
his songs
nonstop on all radio channels.
The
problem is he’s got family in Mexico
and family
in Miami and they’re fighting
over where
to bury the body.
They could
cremate him and then split the ashes
but they
won’t do that because he’s Catholic.
His song Que
Triste is pretty good,
powerful
stuff back when they knew
how to
make music.
Que
Triste means How
Sad.
It made me
cry the first few times I heard it.
Natalia
and I used to watch videos
together
and drink beer, during the good times
long gone
now.
Natalia
can’t drink anymore.
I drink
enough for both of us and a couple more people too
but I
don’t cry no matter how much I drink
or what
song I am listening to.
I usually
just get angry.
Sometimes
I get angry at death and sometimes
I get
angry at myself and sometimes I get angry
at Natalia
and sometimes I get angry and I
don’t know
why.
Death is
the main thing I think.
I probably
need therapy.
I wonder
if José José went to therapy.
His family
needs to go to therapy
from the
looks of it
as they
argue over a corpse.
It’s funny
that his name
is just
the same name twice.
When I die
bury me wherever you want to.
You can
burn me up, that’s fine too.
Hang me in
the town square for
all I
care, and play
whatever
music pleases you.
SEVERED
I found
some severed hands
in a
plastic bag
tossed
down behind the gas station
removed
from their owners, for thievery, por rateros,
the kind
of bag
you put
beer in with ice
but no ice
for these hands, rancid
in the
Puerto Lobo heat, flies, dried blood.
Now I’m
sitting in the car outside our house.
For three
hours I’ve been here
afraid to
go in and face Natalia
sick in
bed.
I think of
that beautiful sad story
I read
long ago
about the
man whose hands got him into trouble
when he
only wanted love.
It was
real, that’s the problem,
it wasn’t
a metaphor,
that
plastic bag full of severed hands.
I’ve
stolen things. Hasn’t everybody?
One time
when I was young I was too sick for school
and I was
home alone, in bed,
and a man
snuck into our house like Death
and came
into my bedroom.
I woke up
and said, Who are you? He ran
stomping
up the stairs and I heard the door
slam and
his truck tires throw gravel out
of our
Illinois driveway.
I drew a
picture of him
and they
used the picture to put him in jail. He only lived
a few
miles away. I drew that picture
with my
own hands and everybody
said I was
a real good artist.
I just
hope
it was the
right man.
Some
peoples’ hands have scars,
some are
grotesque. Some
don’t work
well, they tremble.
Some are
beautiful and smooth
as
buckeyes. Some are so calloused they cut
you when
you shake them.
Some of
them cup
the
sunlight.
Imagine
the hands
that held
the thieves down, the hand that raised
the
machete, the hands
that fell.
Hand shadows, hand puppets,
hands of
time, hands of God. A clock
without
hands. Why
couldn’t
that plastic bag
have had a
six pack of beer in it instead?
Natalia
has beautiful hands. What would I not take
from this
world to give to her?
She’s
dying and I’m afraid
to go
inside to touch her, to try to steal
a kiss, or
coax a rare smile.
I keep
thinking about that
plastic
bag of severed hands and how
I will
manage to go on
without
her.
THE
CHILDREN INSIDE US
Natalia
and are watching Snow White on tv
this
autumn afternoon.
Snow White
of the pure life
who heals
with a smile.
Commercials
every eight minutes
for
cleaning products
and shiny
new cars
and
medicine like poisoned apples.
The snow
in the fairytale is not cold,
not real,
unlike the sores
on
Natalia’s tongue
or the
puss that comes like beer foam
or the
pills
or the
butterless popcorn
or the
bleached underwear
on the
clothesline.
I hold her
wishing she could draw my health in
like sweet
blue smoke.
She falls
asleep. I wonder what
she’s
dreaming and if
she’ll
open her eyes again.
I want to
kiss her to lift the curse
but the
doctor won’t let me, the doctor who is now
her only
prince.
She wakes
up five minutes later
and asks
me if it’s over yet.
Not
yet, my sweet, I
say, but soon,
as the
evil sorceress cackles
at the
foolish fresh-cheeked lovers
and the
swords of the fearless
horsemen
flash
on the
mountain.
Mather
Schneider divides
his time between Tucson, Arizona and northern Mexico. He has several books
available including his first novel, The Bacanora Notebooks (Anxiety
Press) and the recently released book of stories, Port Awful (Anxiety
Press). He works as an exterminator.
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