Owed

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by Joshua Bennett


  expect, you ethicist, defending

  hairlines at all cost, your vigilance

  keeping online & otherwise

  slander at bay. Philosopher king.

  Thesaurus in the drawer,

  dominoes & scotch & Barbasol

  adorning your countertop,

  right above the chorus

  line of clippers swaying

  to the clamor of checkmates

  & offhand insults now filling

  the shop, each moving

  as if the unfettered

  locks of some great

  metal monster, some faraway

  watcher, & you, guardian

  of it all. Clean as a pope.

  OWED TO THE DURAG

  Which I spell that way because that’s the way it was spelled

  on all the clear plastic packets I grew up buying for no more

  than two dollars, two fifty max, unless I was at Duane Reade

  or some likewise corporatized venue but who buys

  the majority of their durags at Duane Reade anyway,

  who would actually wage war on the durag’s good name

  by spelling it d-e-w hyphen r-a-g, as I recently read

  some sad lost souls do in an article in The Guardian?

  This isn’t botany. This isn’t a device one might use

  to attend to the suburban garden & its unremarkable

  flora, drying freshly damp wisteria with black silk

  or the much more common nylon-rayon-cotton blend.

  I could see d-o hyphen r-a-g. That works for me.

  One could argue this version makes more sense

  even than the spelling I am accustomed to,

  reflective as it is of nothing other than itself.

  I have never heard the term do used in a sentence

  by anyone other than a long-lost colleague

  at Princeton who once reached wide-eyed

  for my high-top fade before a swift rebuke,

  marked by my striking his wrist as if some large

  though distinctly nonlethal mosquito, surely a top six

  proudest moment of anticolonial choreography

  I have dared call mine in this odd, improbable

  life I hold to my chest like a weapon. I know.

  I know. This wasn’t supposed to be about them.

  You make me inordinately beautiful. Let’s talk

  about that. Or how I’m twelve years old & the cape

  of a white durag billows from beneath my Marlins cap

  like a sham poltergeist, flight & failure contained

  within a single body, worthy core of any early

  2000s-era New York rapper’s coat of arms.

  I was lying before. Once, while we sat, quiet

  as mourners on the front porch, my father spat

  that’s a nice do you have there, eyeing the soft mess

  of corkscrewed darkness atop his second-youngest

  son’s aging face, no sign of the good hair he praised

  for years to family & coworkers alike. Alas, old friend,

  you somehow make me even more opaque, make

  me mystery, criminal, dope boy by the corner

  of Broadway & 127th compelling respectable

  women to reach for smartphones, call for backup.

  My smooth, adjustable shadow. Like policy

  or fire, you blacken everything you touch.

  OWED TO THE HIGH-TOP FADE

  You stand like a black-box theater in a one-pony town where no one likes theater. Except for the one pony. Who loves August Wilson. Especially the way August Wilson describes juba & inheritance & regret. I do not regret your genesis. I was simply unprepared for the side effects. How you announce my entrance for everyone on the subway car, how they fictionalize my vertical leap, my Spades telepathy, my court vision in overtime, you get what I’m getting at here. You’re rocking the boat, my man! You grow out of this body in small black fists, like a poplar you could scale to heaven, like a shadow arguing for a body. You make this body unfamiliar. Mom & Dad loved you at first, but now you are three weeks past acceptable, an inch too long for adolescent phase, or interview, or the gravity of hard bristle & cocoa butter you refuse to obey. You refuse to obey. & I do not know how to care for anything or anyone that dares to break into this vault I built from scholarship money & easy praise, this armory skin. Teach me. Teach me to praise the flesh they flayed. My silhouette’s gorgeous speed. The many contradictions of this name. You redeem.

  OWED TO ANKLE WEIGHTS

  Far as we could tell, Mark dreamt

  of weightlessness & little else,

  an entire career built upon

  leapfrogging elephants

  & lesser men. Though he

  never deployed this exact

  imagery in a public speech

  or more casual tête-à-tête

  over hot fries & Powerade,

  the dream was well known

  throughout the jailhouse

  beige middle school hallways

  we bolted through.

  Mark wears ankle weights

  every day because that

  is what ballers do

  when they are serious,

  & Mark is very serious

  when it comes to

  the business of giving

  out buckets as a kind

  of spiritual practice, ascension

  under control, an outlet

  pass flying language-like

  across the length

  of the court, Mark

  catching the so-worn

  -it’s-almost-gold

  sphere in his dominant

  palm, switching

  to the left without what most

  would call thought, soaring

  like an invocation

  to the cylinder & the crowd

  leaps right along with him.

  Hands aloft in awe

  of the boy who must have

  some falcon in his blood

  -line somewhere, the sheer

  eloquence of his movement

  enough to make them forget

  whatever heaviness like a second

  skeleton held them flush to the ground

  that day, whatever slight or malice

  born in silence by necessity

  simply melts, falls like a man

  made of flowers to the floor.

  When we closed our eyes

  that year we all saw the same

  fecund emptiness staring

  back, imagined all we could

  hammer our bodies into by way

  of pure repetition: sprinting

  to the bodega for Peanut Chews

  before the cheese bus could leave

  us behind, toting little

  brothers all the way up

  past the third flight

  with no break for breath,

  jumping rope with the girls by

  the hydrant by the hardware

  store at least once a week,

  two-pound silver bricks

  strapped to each leg,

  tucked as if contraband

  or some secret knowledge

  into the lips of our lucky

  socks, all that kept us

  from drowning.

  OWED TO THE CHEESE BUS

  O, how we gave chase

  on legs that bent like Air

  -heads under front teeth

  or early summer’s graceless

  gaze. The back seats that
loved us

  back. Our bodies flush

  against their sticky green

  leather glory once heat

  was high enough for hydrants

  to bloom: block boys molted

  swagger, gathered laughing

  to see red & yellow metal

  croon cool. It was you

  who taught uncute kids

  the breaks, their hearts to flex

  with pluck & pomp, re-spawn

  when Valentine’s Day cards

  went unopened, when jewelry

  stolen from Mom

  & given to Melissa was worn

  to homecoming with Jordan

  who was an inch taller

  than he should have been

  & a mediocre chess player.

  Who else could defang the shame

  but you, great muse of Morlock

  youth, patron saint

  of the thirteen-yet-still-juice-box

  -bearing multitudes?

  Mom’s Volvo? Quotidian

  by comparison. They call you

  yellow. I call you off-gold

  chariot. Haven for homework

  forgotten at home or forgone

  altogether. Truth is, we all together

  like this nowhere but here.

  You wrought us. You drop us

  off but never drop us. Even

  when drivers threaten

  to call the law,

  or actually carry through

  with such a pitiful joke

  & we drop down for fear

  of turning to smoke, you stay.

  Your floors may be filthy, but they

  are solid as a full life & we are young.

  & quicksilver tongued. & learning

  words like inertia for the first time.

  PLURAL

  You know I ain’t scared to lose you.

  —Nayvadius DeMun Wilburn aka Future

  In the name of solidarity, I have given

  myself over to the particular

  fixations of my age: ducking

  sleep, day-drinking

  with my internet

  friends, three or four

  Instagram self-portraits

  on the downtown A,

  left arm angled high

  enough to catch collarbone.

  I’m learning how to participate

  in the world. Why

  just last week, I said hello

  to a woman wearing a dress made of smoke

  spilling Stella over both her hands

  in a charming sort of way

  as Trina offered a theory

  of radical black self

  -determination in the background

  each line giving fresh velocity

  to the room & yes I do

  of course mean that Trina

  whose unfettered praise

  of the shaking of the booty

  has always been

  to my mind

  a kind of talisman,

  laic prayer lending valor

  to the bashful & now

  the woman in white

  is talking to me

  about the history of Liberia

  & her favorite podcasts,

  how good it feels

  to see this many people dancing

  in a city best known

  for its casual indifference,

  the impossible farness

  between a mass of bodies

  flush as paper sheaves

  on the bus ride home,

  six to an apartment built

  for one, poverty & proximity

  like two bladed halves

  of the same long equation.

  She types her number

  into my right palm

  & the boys go wild,

  stain the floor

  with handfuls of hyacinth

  petals they cast

  as if aspiration

  into the soft

  black air.

  I’m pretty good

  at not loving

  anything enough

  to fear its ruin.

  The cruel speed

  of our guaranteed

  obsolescence suits

  me. This way

  I get to be at least one

  of my favorite

  versions of myself

  every other week:

  brooding philosopher,

  race man, public apology

  connoisseur, without

  the pressure

  of your seeing

  where I keep

  the parts I know

  you would one day

  wish I tucked away

  or else killed

  somewhere private

  so you didn’t

  have to smell

  the fire & all

  I can think of

  these days as I stare

  across the table

  past the drinks

  with beautiful names

  is how my friend Ibrahim

  used to say I’m not single,

  I’m plural & we all laughed

  like we understood

  PALIMPSESTINA

  I spend my days studying the eloquent beast

  juxtaposed against a given black

  body living into its singular joy, i.e., forsythia

  & lemonade in the middle of July, steel

  pan playing loud enough to feel it. Hands

  aloft in praise taken for surrender, left

  then right, slowly. Nothing left

  to an officer’s imagination lest he manumit the beasts

  which call his corners quarters, think his hands

  tempest sent to scar the endless black

  expanse. George Jackson bends steel

  with every letter, & I can think only of the forsythia

  growing in his lover’s eyes, how forsythia

  sounds like the name of a girl I knew before I left

  town for hallways bereft of steel

  -faced boys who named sorrow the beast

  they slew daily, how they sustained a kind of black

  humor about this business of being bound to one’s hands

  as conflict’s only punctuation. Survival: how I lend my hands

  to lyric’s labor, as if forsythia

  or chrysanthemum could bloom from black

  ideas dancing across a screen. What is there left

  to say about the dead space betwixt soul & beast,

  the law as an eternal mouth, anxious for blood & steel?

  Before I learned to steel

  nerves in the face of a stranger’s hands

  swinging swift as a beast’s

  heart in chase or heat, my arms were forsythia

  freshly grown, thinnest green, bad for business. Which left

  only a world of fugitive black

  letters to serve as my loophole of retreat, a black

  wholeness to ease the wounds, flesh of gem & steel

  to reflect the light of those who left

  only faintest trace behind. May these hands

  forever tend the soil of those songs, the forsythia

  lives straining for air against the beast

  -ly fear which seeks to calm the black steel beast

  that sleeps within, the voice left praying forsythia,

  forsythia, make a world of these h
ands.

  THE OPEN

  To be sure, there is a certain promiscuous relation

  between what Rilke calls, in his eighth & greatest

  elegy, the open, & what I meant in twelfth grade

  when I dialed Tiana’s digits into my aquamarine

  Sprint flip phone, said you free this Wednesday,

  I got the open, which was shorthand, of course,

  for open crib, or open house, without the academic

  associations that attend the latter phrase.

  In Rilke’s mouth, the term connotes a way

  of seeing, the world as a blurring of body

  & shape, no discernible split between

  the water & its trout like broadswords

  soft to the touch, lending their silver speed

  to the landscape. I have spent years yearning

  to be so close to the body of another

  my mind might pass like mist from me,

  an albatross I could shed without penance

  or pain. Tiana leaves for the 64 bus

  eventually, & I am only a boy

  alone in his childhood bed, watching

  the hours improve. At school the next

  day, my friends adorn me

  in their singular brutality, claim

  Tiana has me open, outlined

  in marigolds, my body luminous, my body

  barely discernible, as if I had gazed

  upon the edge of the known world

  with all my eyes & yet lived

  AMERICAN ABECEDARIAN

  A is for atom bomb. B is for blacks belting blues before burial, the blood they let to give the flag its glimmer. C is for cocoon & its cognates. Cocaine, Coca-Cola, the cacophonous wail of drones filling air with wartime. D is for demagogue. E is for elephants & their semblances, every political animal laboring under some less-than-human name. F is for foxhole. Firefight. Fears we cathect onto men holding best intentions close to the chest as one might guilt or guns & of course G is for guns, G-men, guillotines draped in flame we dream any hellscape holds if it’s up to snuff. H is for Horsepower. I is for I. I is for individual drive trumps all concern when it comes to this business of living joyously at the edge of wit, watching half a world drown with your hands tied. J is for jeans. K is for Krispy Kreme. L is for loss. L is for loveliness. L is for lean in the cups of boys in white shirts billowing free in Mississippi towns so small, they are visible only when passing through them, like death. M is for metafiction. N is for next: next wife, next car, next life I would spend the bones in this flesh one by one to touch. O is for opulence. Opportunity. Occasional anguish but nothing compared to what I will reach when I peak & P is for Preakness. Poverty & bodies that flee it. Oh body, like a storm of horses. Oh questions we dare not ask for fear of breaking rank or losing funding. Q is for quarantine. R is for repair, Revolution, other conflicts that lack limit in any definitional sense. S is for stars we adore & reflect. T is for tragedy. U is for upper-middle working class when the survey asks. V is for the viola my mother plays in the 1970s as her hometown collapses without fanfare. W is for Windows 98 in the public school computer lab & every fourth grader playing Oregon Trail there. X is for xanthan gum, every everyday ingredient you couldn’t identify by sight if you tried. Y is for Yellowstone. Y is for the yachts in the docks in our eyes. Z is for zealotry: national pride like an infinite zip line, hyperdrive, the fastest way down.

 

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