by Sarah Blake
 
   mr. west
   MR. WEST
   sarah blake
   WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY PRESS MIDDLETOWN, CONNECTICUT
   WESLEYAN POETRY
   Wesleyan University Press
   Middletown CT 06459
   www.wesleyan.edu/wespress
   2015 © Sarah Blake
   All rights reserved
   Manufactured in the United States of America
   Wesleyan University Press is a member of the Green Press Initiative. The paper used in this book meets their minimum requirement for recycled paper.
   This is a creative and original work of poetry about the poet’s life and her experience of Kanye West’s work and public persona. Kanye West does not authorize, endorse or approve of any of the material contained in this book.
   Excerpt in “Gaze” on pp. 89–91 from Catie Rosemurgy, “Variorum,” in The Stranger Manual. Copyright © 2010 by Catie Rosemurgy. Reprinted with the permission of The Permissions Company, Inc., on behalf of Graywolf Press, Minneapolis, Minnesota, www.graywolfpress.org.
   Excerpts in “The Fallible Face” on pp. 28–30 from Emmanuel Levinas, Ethics and Infinity (Pittsburgh, PA: Duquesne University Press, 1995), 86, 92; and Totality and Infinity (Pittsburgh, PA: Duquesne University Press, 1969), 75, 178, 199. Reprinted by permission of the publisher.
   Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
   Blake, Sarah (Poet)
   [Poems. Selections]
   Mr. West / Sarah Blake.
   pages cm. — (Wesleyan Poetry series)
   Includes bibliographical references.
   ISBN 978-0-8195-7517-3 (cloth: alk. paper) —
   ISBN 978-0-8195-7518-0 (ebook)
   I. Title.
   Ps3602.l3485a6 2015
   811’.6—dc23
   2014035803
   5 4 3 2 1
   This project is supported in part by an award from the National Endowment for the Arts.
   Cover image: Relief of the falcon god Horus at the Temple of Edfu in Egypt. Photograph © Olaf Tausch, from Wikimedia Commons.
   FOR kanne AND FOR noah
   CONTENTS
   “Runaway” Premieres in Los Angeles on October 18, 2010
   1
   JESUS WALKS
   Ha Ha Hum
   5
   Heartbreak
   7
   Like the Poems Do
   9
   Con Moto
   11
   Jesus Walks
   13
   The Week Kanye Joined Twitter
   16
   Kanye’s Digestive System
   17
   Seeing Kanye
   20
   THE FALLIBLE FACE
   Mythic
   23
   God Created Night and It Was Night
   24
   Kanye’s Skeletal System
   26
   The Fallible Face
   28
   This Is Not the First Time I’ve Wondered
   31
   In Song
   32
   So Kanye Transformed Himself, Producer to Superstar
   34
   DEAR DONDA
   Adventures
   39
   Kanye’s Circulatory System
   42
   I Want a House to Raise My Son In
   44
   On November 10th, 2007, Donda West Died
   49
   Dear Donda
   51
   Runaway
   53
   AFTERMATH
   Three Months, to the Day, before Taylor Turned Twenty, but Kanye
   57
   Aftermath
   58
   Hate for Kanye
   59
   A Day at the Mall Reminds Me of America
   62
   Taylor Doesn’t Speak Out Against Racism
   64
   It’s Hard Not to Be Moved
   65
   Hate Is for Hitler
   67
   Because Kanye Isn’t King Kong or Emmett Till or a N ****
   69
   DEAR KANYE
   My Summer with Kanye
   73
   Watching Weeks
   74
   I Try Not to See Myself as a Mother Figure
   76
   Dear Kanye
   77
   After Donda Died, Kanye Dated Amber
   78
   Suge Knight
   80
   Kanye as a Quantum Particle Yet to Be Observed
   82
   HYBRID
   God’s Face over Gold
   85
   Twilight: Starring Kanye
   86
   Hybrid
   88
   Gaze
   89
   Teeth
   92
   Kanye Raps, “ ” Part 1
   94
   Kanye Is Glamorous
   95
   I No Longer Have to Look Up Dates Like Your Birthday, June 8, 1977
   98
   Kanye Raps, “ ” Part 2
   100
   THE UNENDING WORLD THAT CONNECTS US: NOTES AND FURTHER READING
   103
   ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
   107
   mr. west
   “RUNAWAY” PREMIERES IN LOS ANGELES ON OCTOBER 18, 2010
   MTV.com reported: At the end of his speech, West touched briefly on his mother’s death and how he isn’t scared of anything because he feels as though everything has been taken away from him. “I have no mother, no grandmothers, no girlfriend, no daughter, and I lived with a woman my whole life,” he said.
   Kanye is 33. If he were Jesus, he would die this year,
   and be resurrected.
   I can’t unthink this thought.
   He said he had considered suicide, but found his life to be that of a soldier’s,
   “a soldier for culture.”
   Some men are kept alive by fighting.
   I don’t want this for you, Kanye.
   To the right of the article is a video clip of an interview.
   “… both me and George express ourselves with our truest, our truest vision …”
   Kanye’s bottom teeth distract me.
   If I ever questioned whether the diamonds were there,
   they’re there.
   You’re all kinds of beautiful.
   And if that’s not a word I can use, you’re
   resplendent, numinous, healthy.
   I am two months pregnant.
   Monday this premiere, Tuesday this article, Wednesday
   my first ultrasound, with my child’s boneless arms in motion.
   A memory I didn’t know I could have.
   Thursday I write—If I have a daughter, you can hold her. A son, too.
   The two of you, tied to this week in my life.
   jesus walks
   KANYE WEST, “Jesus Walks,” line 6 of verse 1
   HA HA HUM
   In the chorus of one of my favorite songs are three throat-clearing sounds—
   sometimes depicted as Ha Ha Hum
   on lyrics websites such as azlyrics.com, lyricstime.com, and anysonglyrics.com.
   A sound we make when we talk with the mouths of Jews.
   Channukah, l’chaim, chutzpah.
   Voiceless fricative.
   Russians have a letter for it. In block, an x, in Cyrillic, two c’s back to back.
   In the words, good, chorrosho, and bad, plocho.
   They have other letters I love, for sh, tss, sht, szh, yoo.
   The sound Kanye makes—it’s not unlike the French r.
   How my name falls back into the mouth like it’s collapsing.
   Sa-cha.
   In Russian, the r would roll, as when my great-grandmother said her name,
   as when my great-grandfather called to her.
   My name means princess in Hebrew.
   Kanye’s means the only one in Swahili.
   A language once written in Arabic script, now written with letters like ours.
   Switched in the 1800’s. Trying for sounds like nz and nd, to begin words.
   The mouths we speak with are hidden by our other mouths.
   HEARTBREAK
   The couple, who have dated on and off since 2002, got engaged over a lobster and pasta dinner during a vacation on the island of Capri in August 2006.
   How does People magazine know this?
   I hate to say things look like butterflies, but what should I say—the island
   looks like motion? Like a liver?
   It’s an island.
   You proposed to her and it looks like a butterfly.
   The Italian map, covered in via, via, via. The Italian mountain. Citrus and gulls. I have never been to Italy, let alone to Capri. And I have never been to an island so small.
   When the New York Times reporters write about 808s & Heartbreak, they write how it came after “ ” with the death of his mother in late 2007 and, in early 2008, breaking up with his fiancée.
   They don’t name her. Alexis Phifer.
   If Alexis is the woman in “Heartless,” in the video, thank you
   for covering her dress in stars.
   I have planned my wedding—sent the invitations, tasted all the cakes, bought my dress, named for its sweetheart top, and sparkling. My mother has rsvP’d.
   I got engaged in the courtyard of a museum in Philadelphia—Museum of
   Archaeology and Anthropology.
   Mummies resting
   behind us, and sculptures from China.
   The past pushes us.
   I lament what you have lost even if you do not still love her.
   I think of all the coves of Capri—Cala del Lupinaro, Cala del Rio, Cala di Mezzo, Cala Spravata, Cala Marmolata, Cala di Matermania. And Kapros, meaning wild boar.
   LIKE THE POEMS DO
   I ask,
   “Who’s that?”
   and Noah answers,
   “Mos Def.”
   “Is Kanye rapping like Snoop Dogg there?”
   “No. His jaw is wired shut.”
   Another song,
   “Is that Common?”
   “Yes. They’re friends. They’re both from Chicago.”
   Noah’s been listening
   to rap since middle school. He used to make tapes
   off the radio and listen to them until they broke.
   I grew up saying, I listen to everything but country
   and rap.
   Recently, I spent another evening researching Kanye.
   This time
   about his 2004 debut album, College Dropout.
   “Through the Wire” came out fast, without permission for the sample of Chaka Khan’s “Through the Fire.”
   I tell Noah. We’re on our computers,
   across the room.
   He pulls up Khan’s song; I pull up Kanye’s music video.
   The room is a mess of sound.
   I tell Noah how Kanye kisses his hand, places it
   on a larger-than-life poster of Khan.
   Is there a poem of Kanye as a teenager, loving
   the woman who sings, too,
   “I’m Every Woman”?
   A smaller poster in his smaller room.
   Noah with posters of Erykah Badu and Lauryn Hill,
   if he were the sort of boy to have posters.
   Noah and I move to the bedroom soon,
   and every night. Noah lets me
   bring Kanye in,
   knows our life has room for all of it.
   CON MOTO
   While swallowing a prenatal vitamin before bed, I’m watching an MTV interview
   with Rick Ross about how
   you taught him to see music in colors.
   He calls you Ye, pronounced yay, dropping Kan.
   Musical terms, held onto from Italian, found on printed music, begin with con
   because they begin with
   with.
   Con espressione, con moto, become, informally,
   espressione, moto, spirito, affetto, dolore, forza, gran, molto, fuoco,
   larghezza, slancio, sordino, anima, brio, amore. Shook free.
   And we should love our own sounds.
   Feeling, movement, spirit, affect, sadness, force, great feeling, much feeling, fire,
   broadness, enthusiasm, muted tone, feeling again, and vigor, and tenderness
   or love.
   Another connection between you and Italy, between you and music. Another
   way to say beautiful things that I have learned tonight.
   If bellies stirred before babies were big enough, mine’d be kicking.
   JESUS WALKS
   This poem could start, “I love you,” instead of ending there.
   It could start, “Music.”
   The key to this poem is connecting this sentence,
   from the lyrics of Kanye’s “Jesus Walks”
   to this sentence,
   Show ’em the wounds
   from a making of video that follows
   the making of the third music video
   for “Jesus Walks.”
   Kanye said, after the first two videos, “I still felt like I didn’t have the hood, and that’s what Jesus walks for, it’s for the hood.”
   I can think, have thought, of great line breaks for that quote. Already had to think of punctuation.
   The man who said, “Show ’em the wounds,” is, I imagine, a friend of Kanye’s. But Kanye’s not around for this:
   “I’m here with my n****, Romeo, looking smooth and shit. You know what I’m saying. Official, n****. How many times you got shot?”
   “Nine,” he’s grinning and lifts up his shirt.
   “Nine times goddamnit, and he ain’t even no rapper, bitch.” Pause. “I’m with my other n****,” the man to his left, “how many times you got shot, n****? Tell ’em.”
   “Five times.”
   “Show ’em the wounds. Show ’em the wounds, show ’em the wounds.” And he adds, “I ain’t never got shot but my n****s did.”
   Stars all across my paper. Stars when I look at something blindingly beautiful. When I fall. When I first learn of stars.
   Someone on the production crew yells out, “Come on in pigeon holders.” Someone says, “I got dirt and blood standing by.”
   Many voices behind Kanye’s repeat, “Jesus walks.”
   An actor—the one lit on fire for the video, the one carrying a cross big enough to carry him—says to the camera, “I hope people take it the right way.”
   My favorite music video of the three has this man in it.
   Maybe for the fire behind Kanye that rises and recedes in that hallway like the breath.
   Maybe because when the police cut open a pack of cocaine in the trunk of a car filled with packs of cocaine, a dove comes out, shaking powder from its head. I count at least fifteen flying from the trunk.
   A woman sings that she wants Jesus with the fullest lips I’ve seen in years, a voice like no woman I know.
   I believe in her, in Kanye.
   But what is it when I believe bullets leave the shapes of stars?
   Kanye, if only I could write a poem for you and not about you.
   THE WEEK KANYE JOINED TWITTER
   We find there are fewer dinosaurs
   when we learn how the skulls age.
   Shifting horns, bones that thin
   and smooth, holes that form like
   some desires do. Changes we
   couldn’t anticipate, knowing mostly
   our simple, fusing domes.
   You begin tweeting.
   I learn about your suits, videos,
   jets, pillows, the new words you
   picked up overseas. You take
   a picture of your diamond
   and gold teeth. You make a joke
   about a crown so lovely I see
   it on nymphs in daydreams.
   Sometimes I see
/>   my curly head of hair outlined in
   the morning dark and think I’m
   the lovechild of actresses and lions.
   But today I see the functionality
   of my face and not whether
   I’m beautiful. I’m so very animal.
   I remember and flare my nostrils.
   KANYE’S DIGESTIVE SYSTEM
   This I taught to a sixth grader—
   mouth, esophagus, stomach, small intestine, large
   intestine, rectum, anus
   —but there’s so much more to it than that.
   The bile from the liver.
   The sections of the small intestine—
   duodenum, jejunum, ileum.
   The sections of the large intestine—
   ascending colon, transverse colon, descending colon.
   And some go so far as to note the sigmoid colon.
   Wikipedia says,
   of this in particular,
   “normally lies within the pelvis,
   but on account
   of its freedom of movement
   it is liable to be displaced”
   Oh god, the uneasy organs.
   All the sphincter muscles (just like the ones in our eyes).
   All the peristalsis.
   Even a vestigial organ.
   I love the digestive system. The bits about how long the small intestine is.
   The small intestine in an adult human measures on average
   about 5 meters (16 feet), with a normal range of 3–7 meters.
   It can measure around 50% longer at autopsy
   because of the loss of smooth
   muscle tone
   after death.