Thorin
Oakenshield and I Get Stoned and Listen to Mozart and David Bowie
I roll the weed into the paper dutifully,
minding the tolerance of my guest.
A lighter appears from somewhere in
the strange backyard where we sit,
kicked back in crickety lawnchairs
around a sputtering bonfire.
I do not question.
I only get the joint going,
and pass.
“We need some music.”
My phone appears.
You know what a phone is,
what a radio is—
I have made it so you know
what a phone is, what a radio is.
We have much more important things
to talk about.
“I think you'll like this guy.”
I say this, of course,
not because I know,
but because I feel it,
like weather.
I'll
trust your judgment on that.
Just as the leaf begins to fall,
cozy and sleepy and golden
over my head, Mozart—
Serenade for Winds, Third Movement.
“Close your eyes.”
Why?
“Trust me—it's worth it.”
You give me a look, but do so anyway.
As the oboe wavers its tone
high above our heads,
I hear your intake of breath
(slow, but no less sharp,
like a blade slowly drawn
from its sheath), and I know
I was right.
You murmur something
I can't quite make out,
and I am envious
of the newness
which is, quietly,
ebbing from you.
I peek at you like a child during prayer;
that note has run you through.
I cannot tear my eyes away.
What a beautiful wound.
///
We're deep in the clouds
when Blackstar comes on shuffle.
“And now for something completely
different.”
Why
are you changing it?
“I don't know if you're ready for this
yet.”
Try
me.
As you are my guest, I oblige.
The fire has burnt down to mauve;
what inhuman shadows we cast
with our every exhale.
Everything is purpled,
the world is whirlwind,
the shade of the last
spasms of sunset.
You were
smiling before, that
slight uptick at the corners
of your mouth, but now,
something strange comes
across your face.
A different kind of pain, as
an animal curling into itself,
a heart of glassy petals
blooming bloodpink,
losing itself in its shattering.
What...is
this?
“He knew he was dying. The Singer.
So he took his last breaths and
made them into art.”
Your fate...the fate I've plucked you
from...
You remember it.
Longing—iron band in your chest,
longing, longing, fear, longing—
You didn't know, you didn't know,
but now you know, and knowing
is not so easily reversed.
I have wounded you.
///
“Well, you made it to the end. I'll give
you that.”
…
“There's a better song. Here, hold on—”
I fumble for something with more
narrative, more a ballad than a trip—
“Perfect. Here we go.”
I fumble
again for a roach clip
and settle for using a bobby pin.
Our hands make more contact
with every pass, every diminishing
of the joint. My fingerprint snags
every so slightly on your calluses,
but neither of us mention it
out loud.
The acoustic guitar, anyway, is a balm—
I can see it. You lean back in the
lawnchair,
stretch. When The Singer mentions a
Starman,
you look up into the face of the night,
try to find him in the maze of pinpricks,
this faintest smidge of the universe.
Low, baritone humming. Then. You sing.
And the perfect absurdity of it all—you,
being here, you, king of your people, you
stoic, straight-laced rockface—you,
being here,
puff-passing in a
suburban backyard somewhere
in the multiverse, singing along
to The Singer, of all people,
and this song, of all songs—
the perfect absurdity of it all
hits me at once, and I laugh.
Deep and riotous, the kind
of laugh you only have
when you're high, when
you don't mind if you snort
or hiccup or wheeze.
And then you laugh too—
there's an inherent rarity to its rumble.
And then you're singing again,
and then I'm singing along with you
singing along with The Singer, and then
our voices become a cloud around
us
a cloud
full of stars and starmen
and we are surrounded and held
by this, the warm, cosmic ridiculousness
I have invited you into.
And you, being game, sing along.
The
Boxer (or, What Survived the Fire)
The attic is cold; the box smells like
smoke, even after all this time. You've forgotten its specific contents, but
not the life the detritus denotes. What brought you to the attic doesn't matter
anymore. What matters is the crackle of ancient packing tape as you split it
down the middle and spread the box wide open. // “What got you into boxing?” The primal intrigue of two people
displaying the depth of power—the viscera, the sweat, the feeling of forces
colliding in ways I cannot name. // The aged yellow newsprint,
butterfly-skin thin, you set aside. // Why
the fire came, I do not know. In its path, my kin, all of those who loved me.
What use is playing at godhood when one night you come home to a pile of dust,
empty of voices; even the dying gasps would have been better than that silence.
// The eulogy you never brought yourself to read, you set aside. // A
fox-edged roll of boxing tape. For old times sake, you twine it around your
fingers, weaving the usual pattern, leaving the diamonds of your knuckles bare
and waiting. Your hands remember their powers, though not quite well enough to
follow through with the same force, the same fire, imprecise though it could
be, but in its heat even the blows that stole your breath could not keep you
from rising again, ash-stained, but still, at least, alive.
///
cold
You've forgotten
what brought you to
the viscera, the sweat, the feeling
I cannot
name
the fire came
all of those who loved me
a pile of dust, empty
old times
remember their powers
its heat
your breath
///
cold
forgotten
you
sweat
name
the fire
empty
time
powers
your breath
An
Elegy, upon Parting from Long-Held Griefs
Long have I kept rest from you.
Long in my selfishness have I imprisoned
you.
Long have I ignored your pleas for release.
Long have I smothered grief in my heart.
I open it now.
I release its burden.
I release the dust I've clung to,
hoping it would turn back into
something I love.
I name it dust.
I return it to the dust it came from; pour
it out
among the river reeds and horsetail plants,
along the gravel-tones of the highway,
under the pine tree near the headstone I
know best,
between the leaves in which I found you.
I only ask one more moment.
One last connection.
Give me your hand.
Go now, while my hand still holds
the imprint of yours.
Elizabeth
Reames (she/her) is a poet pursuing her MFA at Butler University. Her
work has been published in Kingdoms of the Wild, Soft Cartel, FIVE : 2 : ONE,
and more. She lives in Indianapolis, but she's originally from the Metro-Detroit
area.
Great job!! So proud of you!
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