I
LOVE CHICKENS
~This poem first
appeared in Cincinnati Review (2012).
Because
they spend the day paying attention—
One
eye looking for what they can eat,
One
for what can eat them. Because they hang
With
me in the yard, their clucks and coos a comfort
While
I plant and they dig. Because for them
Roaches
are a rare and challenging treat.
Because
an egg tucked amid pine shavings in the dark
Coop
is a brightness and a marvel. Every day.
Because
their eggs are not only white but also brown,
And
blue, and dappled, and fit perfectly into my palm.
Because
they walk like wind-up toys and run
Akilter,
careening like roller-coaster cars.
Because
everything we haven’t eaten tastes like them.
Because
they are delicious. And their eggs are delicious.
Because
they are a world of recipes: Cordon Bleu,
Kiev,
Curry, Florentine, Parmigiana, Pot-pie.
Because
each of the one-hundred folds in a chef’s hat
Represents
a different way to cook an egg.
Because
sometimes they think I am a rooster
And
squat down to be mounted.
Because
they are not mascots for sports teams
Even
though they are fierce with their hypodermic
Beaks
and their scaly feet’s claws.
Because
they like to have their scaly feet rubbed.
Because
after eating they use the grass like a napkin
To
wipe their beaks. Because they are flappable.
Because
every night they return to their coop
And
every morning they walk the plank into their day.
Because
like us they brood, follow a pecking order, desire
A
nest egg. Because even their shit is useful.
*****
A SMALL HOLE
~This poem first
appeared in Lake Effect (2012)
First was the whispering above us in our
sleep.
Not every night. Intermittently. Unpredictably
It woke us and we listened, trying to
understand.
When we touched the ceiling, it
stopped—listened
To us listening—waited. We vowed to know it
But by daylight we thought better to live
And let live, get to work, soon enough it will
end.
Then the ragged hole appeared above our bed.
We bandaged it like an ear with packing tape.
The whispering continued, widened the hole.
I climbed with poison into the attic’s beams
And struts and gently set the tray. In days
The rank rot began seeping down into the
house.
We burned candles and incense but it wouldn’t
be hidden.
We bathed in it. Ate in it. Made love.
Imagined its mouth
Moving over us. Then the flies arrived,
climbing the walls,
Washing their feet in the folds of the
curtains, dimming the lights
Where they gathered, humming their one-note
hymn.
*****
OUR WARS
~This poem first appeared in The McNeese Review (2014)
He was a nerd before there were nerds
But one thing you had to say for Mark—
The guy knew how to die. In our wars
He was the first to scream I’m hit, tumble,
Sprawl, pitch forward face first, call
Mama and go still, not flinching
The gnats from his eyes
Because this was death and he knew
The physics—body in motion, opposite
And equal—wherever it takes you.
We envied him, we who were afraid to risk
A rash, a tear, our mothers’ wrath.
He perfected the staggering collapse,
The high-speed-tree-collide-and-ricochet,
The twirl-into-prickly-vines.
D-Day at the beach, knee-deep in surf, we’d
barely
Begun when Mark screamed, clasped his head
And fell into the dead man’s float. The rest
of us
Zig-zagged through sound effects—burping guns,
Whistling missiles—until we made it up the
beach
To the picnic table, bellowed triumph, took
slugs
From canteens and ran toward the smoking
grill.
When Mark staggered up dripping, he wanted
To know why we hadn’t waited for him, if we
knew
How long he’d held his breath. We didn’t look
at him—
Nobody told him to die. We planned another
assault.
*****
PROFESSOR COOK
~This poem first appeared in The Southern Poetry Review (2014).
1.
He was
football player big, wore a suit
Every
class and carried a black satchel
Thick
with notebooks written in braille.
His
eyes fixed in a permanent squint,
He
stared at the back wall and called roll,
Fingering
each figure of our names
As if
he knew us like no one else,
Not
even us, as if he could feel
The
possibility within us—unheard
Music
rippling outward until we sang it
When we
answered Here and Here and Here.
When he
finished calling us he started
Lecturing,
by rote, monotone, his hands
Still,
inscrutable eyes aimed above our heads.
2.
He liked to shake us up by looking out
The window and making a comment—
Looks
like rain he might say, or I love the wind.
He didn’t expect us to speak, but once,
Striding into the classroom he smashed hard
Into an out-of-place desk, yelped shrilly
And dropped his satchel. For the first time
He looked blind, uncertain, jerky, groping
The desk until he pulled himself upright
And spoke in controlled but unconcealed rage,
Why
didn’t you move that desk? What
the hell
Is
wrong with you? Nobody spoke. Nobody
Looked when he called the roll, but we felt
him
Pressing every letter of our stupid names.
*****
THE
SYSTEM
~This
poem first appeared in The Southern
Poetry Review (2014).
My
son, age four, appears
Beside
the bed, middle of the night
Whispering
in my ear
That
the neighbor’s system is on.
Though
he can’t tell time, he says
They’re
watering the yard
At one
in the morning.
I’m
still surfacing from sleep
But
remember this week, seeing
The
lawn backhoed, leveled, networked
With
pipes, timers, pressure monitors,
Then
completely re-sodded, the entire
System
an extravagant waste
As far
as I was concerned.
I walk
Ben back to his room and we stand
At his
window hypnotized
By a
watery chapel all silver and mist
Created
by dozens of arching, overlapping
Sprays,
the only sound in the star-still night
The
shh-shh-shh of the sprinklers.
*****
THE STORY BEHIND THE POEMS
I always have a hard time talking about how or
why my poems come into being, but here goes. Almost all of my poems are brief
narratives of events from my own experience.
This is especially true of “A Small Hole,” “Our Wars,” “Professor Cook,”
and “The System,” all of which began as prose notes in one of the
notebooks/journals/daybooks that I’ve been keeping for a million years.
Periodically
I browse my notebooks looking for passages that seem to
be good raw material for a poem—something that seems to say more than it says,
i.e., the literal event suggesting a complex idea/metaphor/concept. Then I
start sculpting—paying attention to word choice, rhythm, sonic effects,
imagery, figurative language, and so on.
The
process of writing “I Love Chickens,” was similar but a little different in
that the poem is more lyrical than narrative. The story behind the poem is that
several years ago my wife decided that we should have backyard chickens.
Sustainability and all that. I was dead set against it. Nevertheless, we got
the chickens (three initially, five now). It wasn’t long before I was
completely fascinated by chickens. What amazing things they are! Writing the
poem became a matter of listing (in an engaging, musical way I hope) the
reasons why I love them.
*****
ABOUT ERIC NELSON
Eric
Nelson has published five collections of poetry, including The Twins
(2009), winner of the Split Oak Press chapbook contest; Terrestrials,
winner of the X.J. Kennedy Poetry Award (2004); and The Interpretation of
Waking Life, winner of the Arkansas Poetry Award (1991). He teaches
creative writing at Georgia Southern University.
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