Poetry: Selections From John L. Stanizzi
yellow
“…If only you pay attention to it you will
see
that certain stars are lemon-yellow…”
-Vincent Van Gogh
—I sent my grief away. I cannot
care forever.
-Dream Song 36; The high ones, die, die. They
die.
-from 77 Dream Songs by John Berryman
And so I stumble. And the rain continues
on the roof
With such a
sound of gently pitying laughter.
-My
Grandmother’s Love Letters
-from White Buildings by Hart Crane
all
of us who can see
have
been moved at least once
by some
expression
of
their power in the air
and
in our hearts
but
the perpetual bondage
in
which Hart Crane and John Berryman
must
have been locked--
--let’s
call it color blindness--
did
not allow them,
I
believe,
to
see yellow,
especially
on their big days
tumbling through
the acquiescent sky—
Berryman
was exhaled
over
the bridge railing
between
St. Paul and Minneapolis
onto
the icy Mississippi
its
mouth agape
frozen
open
poised
to devour
anything
that could fly in this cold--
his
feet were broken spyglasses
pointing
upwards
at
certain stars
seeming
to be moving farther away-
and
years earlier
Crane
climbing over
the
gunwale of the Orizaba in spring
into
the Gulf of Mexico
at
noon
300
miles from Cuba
his
befuddled feet
pointing
upside down
at
vanishing stars of lemon-yellow
perhaps
like Van Gogh
whatever
visual impairment
they
may or may not have had
is
it possible that Crane was blinded
gazing
into yellow scotch over ice
lit
by the tropic’s midday burn -
or
that Berryman could not see
the
yellow streaks firing from the beard
the
tilting head
the
flailing arms
or
hear Mr. Bones complaining
about
the color of his favorite yellow shirt…
The
high ones die, die. They die. You look up and who's there?
—Easy,
easy, Mr Bones. I is on your side.
I
smell your grief.
Muscongus Bay
On the coast of
Maine, between Penobscot Bay and John's Bay,
Muscongus, the name of an Abenaki village, is
nestled there. The
name means
"fishing place" or "many rock ledges." Despite its
wonderful
lobstering, the abundance of fishing boats and rocky
outcroppings
dissuade many people from recreating there,
but it is these
very dynamic qualities that are a large part
of what make
Muscongus so spectacularly beautiful.
-Maine
Coast Heritage Trust
dories
at rest in the bayT
hin
pastel
fingerprints on morning fog
on
a short outcrop just offshore
raucous
gulls are all commotion
arching
their beaks skyward
a
cormorant dives
as
in my mind
I
challenge him to a contest-
who
can hold their breath longest
it
is of course no contest
a
lobsterman is hauling in his pots
with
a steady hand over hand motion
in
time with the rhythm of the bay’s tidal breath
which
keeps him alive
from
somewhere buried deep within the fog
I
hear the sharp striking of a hammer
tempered
by mist
it
is early
six
a.m.
miry
air smelling of fish and the sea
swathes
the lobstermen along the fish wharf
where
all is silent
but
for the chunk of a breaker knife
driven
into the timber of a dorsal
reaching
out of its universe
the
disarming voice of the bay
touches
the shore
where
it breathes with the heavy haze
the
lobstermen emerge faintly
from
a place behind them I cannot see
suddenly
the water along the shore
blackens
with millions of brits flashing for their lives
as
schools of mackerel rage after them with ravenous instinct
children
run along the shore screaming
breathing
hard trying to keep up with
the
shadowy murmuration of this astonishing thing
mothers
smile and wave at their children
but
the children are too busy to notice
chasing
this galaxy of fish
as
the tide presses in undetectable
*
a
fisherman is sitting on a lobster pot
his
focus is on a massive net
he
is sewing a black patch into a tear
in
the old brittle webbing
which
is spread out before him
like
an enormous sea monster collapsed
he
tells me the net is a mile long
a
hundred feet wide
a
small buoy every ten feet at its hem
he
must mend the net he says
to
keep the good fish from pouring out
like
stars in the swirling ink of a black hole
I
imagine-
even
after the net is patched and spans the bay
air-
fish- and light- will still surge through it
illuminating
all that is beneath the sea
imperceptible
as light that passes through me
invisible driven by the earth’s rhythm
drawing
me closer to dawn’s dew
which
is in its autumn
and
finally the fog begins to lift
for
a time
(Near the end of Eugene
O‘Neill’s play Long Day’s
Journey into Night, Mary Tyrone,
through an impenetrable fog of
morphine, utters into the air, “Yes, I
remember. I fell in love with
James Tyrone and was so happy for a time.”)
Tomato Can
Boxing - A
“tomato can,” is a fighter with
a poor record, whose skills
re substandard
or who lacks toughness
and has a glass jaw.
in
the house of my childhood
a
warped little Cape into which
no
light was allowed
there
were daily protracted conflicts-
chases punches slaps
the
soundtrack? timeless expletives
which
plastered the floors and walls
I
was a child seven or
eight
weak
and afraid
it
was resolvency alone
that
shook me awake each morning
shoved
me into
the
breaking point
every
morning the fear was newborn
and
short-lived
how
could I have known
I
was not yet looking
through
the miasmic eyes of an old man
-
gradually
I began to defend myself-
my
barbs were discharged
with
increased velocity from my irrepressible mouth
this
always set her off
and
she fired back cruelty
which
carved into
the
exhausted knotty pine cabinets
cutting
across the linoleum floor worn to wood
when
she couldn’t grab me
the
first thing she saw would suffice-
this
time it was an airborne milk glass duck-
-a
creamy howitzer
-an
impulsive decoy
she
threw with all the power she could marshal
but
like always
she
missed me
and
it burst to pieces
when
it detonated
off
the filigree of the stair post
how
often I chuckled at her
which
fired her rage
I
snorted at her minced duck
a
struck match on her wrath
she
turned on me
and
launched
with
all the strength
she
could possibly generate
a
whole frozen chicken
oh
the reflexes of a newly minted seven year old
I
moved a smidge to the left
watched
the chicken’s naked gawky wobble-flight
smiled
as this boulder of a bird
crash
through the thick wooden doors
of
the hutch in the dining room
the
air a mist of glass and wood-splinters
a
murmuration of debris
her
heavy breathing her voice coarse and hoarse
she
threatened me…
WAIT
‘TIL YOUR FATHER GETS HOME!!
I couldn’t help myself.
I
tried to force back a laugh,
and
spoke through that thinly veiled suppression…
…my
father gets home??
I
snuffled.
Talk
about an iffy, unlikely, stupid fucking comment.
-
I
was a tomato can, I remember.
But
not for very long.
I
spoke again, smirking…
Ya’think
that chicken’s still good?
John Stanizzi is the
author of fourteen poetry collections, most recently SEE, Feathers
& Bones, and POND, published by Impspired Press (U.K.). His work
has appeared in more than 200 journals, including A Thin Slice of Anxiety,
Prairie Schooner, The Cortland Review, New York Quarterly,
and Tar River Poetry, among many others. A former New England Poet of
the Year, Stanizzi received a Fellowship from the Connecticut Office of the
Arts. His essay “Pants” was named Best CNF of 2021 by Potato Soup Journal,
and he was the winner of The Ekphrastic Review’s “Ekphrastic Marathon.”
He spent many years teaching literature and directing theater in Connecticut.
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