Author: AngelfromMontgomery
Pulling Down the Sky (the Sistene Chapel) by Matt Donovan
Pulling Down the Sky
(the Sistene Chapel)
Matt Donovan
Piece by piece the sky was hacked, the star-flung heaven made years before,
its sheen of gold & ultramarine. And the firmament turned to pigmented dust
that caked & stained their forearms & necks & rained down in wide, benedictory arcs
into the space below. It grew dark, of course, & they worked torch-lit
& a man said said plaster, bucket. A man said scaffold, whore. And the hammers
mauling the sky from that height swallowed up the sounds from below:
a robed boy scurrying from the candles, the sunset vesper thrum.
And when they rested, they saw the ruin they had made & knew what was needed
would be done. To pull down the entire barrel vault blue, each starred width
of heaven. To prepare the space where they sky had been for, yes, a god
& the shapes of god. Of cloth, a mule, a knuckle. An axe, a bowl, some bread.
R.I.P. Orion
Home from sky, fall
Christmas present: her words
So hungover I wanted to die. All I ate all day was currants.
Grandma Jean and her gorgeousness.
MA candidate stuff II
Kate’s poem’s speaker didn’t want to write about HIM, but she did, and Kate got such a beautiful poem out of it; lucky Kate, that she can do that.
Dr. Hayes said you should never refer to a poet as the speaker in her poem and poked fun of people who’d done so, but he also bought us pizza and Coke and said we were occasionally brilliant.
Walked home from school slowly, again, lucky life, and still frequently feel lucky in libraries and while looking at and walking around old buildings like cathedrals and less ornate things as grand in scale like wind turbines.
In Northfield I felt lucky the question Did I know how many people he had made happy? found its way into “Johnny Carson Poem”; lucky, lucky life.
Sunset by Rainer Maria Rilke
Slowly the west reaches for clothes of new colors
which it passes to a row of ancient trees.
You look, and soon these two worlds both leave you,
one part climbs toward heaven, one sinks to earth,
leaving you, not really belonging to either,
not so hopelessly dark as that house is silent,
not so unswervingly given to the eternal as that thing
that turns to a star each night and climbs–
leaving you (it is impossible to untangle the threads)
your own life, timid and standing high and growing,
so that, sometimes blocked in, sometimes reaching out,
one moment your life is a stone in you, and the next, a star.
How To Like It by Stephen Dobyns
These are the first days of fall. The wind
at evening smells of roads still to be traveled,
while the sound of leaves blowing across the lawns
is like an unsettled feeling in the blood,
the desire to get in a car and just keep driving.
A man and a dog descend their front steps.
The dog says, Let’s go downtown and get crazy drunk.
Let’s tip over all the trash cans we can find.
This is how dogs deal with the prospect of change.
But in his sense of the season, the man is struck
by the oppressiveness of his past, how his memories
which were shifting and fluid have grown more solid
until it seems he can see remembered faces
caught up among the dark places in the trees.
The dog says, Let’s pick up some girls and just
rip off their clothes. Let’s dig holes everywhere.
Above his house, the man notices wisps of cloud
crossing the face of the moon. Like in a movie,
he says to himself, a movie about a person
leaving on a journey. He looks down the street
to the hills outside of town and finds the cut
where the road heads north. He thinks of driving
on that road and the dusty smell of the car
heater, which hasn’t been used since last winter.
The dog says, Let’s go down to the diner and sniff
people’s legs. Let’s stuff ourselves on burgers.
In the man’s mind, the road is empty and dark.
Pine trees press down to the edge of the shoulder,
where the eyes of animals, fixed in his headlights,
shine like small cautions against the night.
Sometimes a passing truck makes his whole car shake.
The dog says, Let’s go to sleep. Let’s lie down
by the fire and put our tails over our noses.
But the man wants to drive all night, crossing
one state line after another, and never stop
until the sun creeps into his rearview mirror.
Then he’ll pull over and rest awhile before
starting again, and at dusk he’ll crest a hill
and there, filling a valley, will be the lights
of a city entirely new to him.
But the dog says, Let’s just go back inside.
Let’s not do anything tonight. So they
walk back up the sidewalk to the front steps.
How is it possible to want so many things
and still want nothing? The man wants to sleep
and wants to hit his head again and again
against a wall. Why is it all so difficult?
But the dog says, Let’s go make a sandwich.
Let’s make the tallest sandwich anyone’s ever seen.
And that’s what they do and that’s where the man’s
wife finds him, staring into the refrigerator
as if into the place where the answers are kept–
the ones telling why you get up in the morning
and how it is possible to sleep at night,
answers to what comes next and how to like it.
Giant sparkler
I love time (“It’s still burning,” etc.).
New York Life Eagle Kicks Off Summer ’09
Why I Hate Being Single
Because I am.
Because I avoid making eye contact with normal-looking couples.
Because Janis Joplin said freedom is just another word for nothing left to lose but she was a hypocrite and an alcoholic.
Because he called me crying from his iPhone, telling me not to forget about him. Because I still haven’t.
Because there is no one to talk to on Sunday nights when I am tired of Facebook. Because of the picture of two people I miss posing in front of a double rainbow with a happy-looking girl from Illinois. Because she looks like she realizes how amazing they are.
Because when he asked me if my past relationships were good I only nodded. Because I lied to him about how long it has been. Because there have been times that I don’t count. Because there is the chance he doesn’t care.
Because I am self-conscious around people to whom I am attracted. Because I don’t have anyone besides myself for whom to plan. Because I am so good at planning.
Dream (01/19/09)
In a gymnasium in natural mostly gone dark, I sat on the floor watching a small, old-fashioned television set.
It was cold, and when I pulled a blanket over my legs, he took some too and also put both his hands over my hands and moved closer.
When the performance ended he stood, asked me in the light if I wanted to go
to a movie.
“Sure,” I said, my heart beating fast; people still did this? We walked outside. He opened the door to his Saab and we sat, didn’t talk, just drove.
He wore sunglasses, looked over once, smiled.
“Will you drop me off so I can take a shower, and then pick me back up again?”
“Sure.”
I looked out my window, smiling to myself. The next twenty minutes or so would be the best I’ve had in years; the sunshine, the chances.
"Like" by Jevin Boardman was selected as this week’s What Light winner by Duluth Poet Laureate Jim Johnson.
Like
Meaning a preference for something.
She enjoys the beach, likes it. Meaning he’ll want
or choose, do as he likes. Meaning similarity,
a winter morning like that first in Minong, Wisconsin.
Meaning one thing typical of another, lying in bed
between the windows, the frames caked in frost
like eyelids crusty from sleep. Meaning as though
it would or should be. She said the clouds
look like rain. Meaning such as. A room lacking
in subjects, like physics. Meaning counterparts,
a group similar, and the like. Meaning resemblance.
Lovelike. More precise for what there was?
A man lying in bed beside a woman, about whom
he wrote poems of love and never did.
Jevin Boardman is currently a Master of Fine Arts candidate in Hamline’s Graduate School of Liberal Studies program. He is unpublished (until now) and resides in Saint Paul, Minnesota.
MA candidate stuff
When the professor handed us an “example” answer to one of the essay questions, written by a former student, Carla started crying. She had to have known ahead of time they were going to do Dickinson, Carla whispered angrily after he left, her small face silently overtaken by red splotches. There is no way she could have written this otherwise.
We all knew it was Annie’s paper, and the general consensus was that Annie had known prior to the exam that it was Emily Dickinson’s “Poem 435” students would be asked to explicate. I walked out of the room, away from Carla, and smug-smiled Lisa, and Louie with his constant Gardetto’s and energy drinks, and whoever else was in there. I walked home slowly for once, concentrated on my breathing, ate an apple.
Miss you Christmas, always
Books I’ve Read since A Million Little Pieces (12/29/05)
Charlotte Bronte: Jane Eyre
Kim Barnes: In the Wilderness: Coming of Age in Unknown Country
Elizabeth Gaskell: Mary Barton
Charles Dickens: David Copperfield
Fan Shen: Gang of One: Memoirs of a Red Guard
Frank McCourt: Teacher Man
Wilkie Collins: The Woman in White
Bram Stoker: Dracula
Kent Nerburn: Neither Wolf Nor Dog: On Forgotten Roads with an Indian Elder
William Stafford: Down in my Heart: Peace Witness in War Time
Paul Mariani: Lost Puritan: A Life of Robert Lowell
David Kalstone: Becoming a Poet: Elizabeth Bishop, Marianne Moore, Robert Lowell
Audrey Niffenegger: The Time Traveler’s Wife
Sylvia Plath: The Bell Jar
Emily Bronte: Wuthering Heights
Nancy Milford: Savage Beauty: The Life of Edna St. Vincent Millay
William Faulkner: The Sound and the Fury
Jonathan Safran Foer: Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close
Stephen Greenblatt: Will in the World: How Shakespeare became Shakespeare
Nicole Krauss: The History of Love
Michael Cunningham: The Hours
Elizabeth M. Gilbert: Eat, Pray, Love: One Woman’s Search for Everything…
James Joyce: A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
—–: Dubliners
—–: Ulysses
Richard Ellmann: Ulysses on the Liffey
Harry Blamires: The New Bloomsday Book
Esmeralda Santiago: The Turkish Lover
Charles Johnson: The Sorcerer’s Apprentice
Marie Luise Kaschnitz: Circe’s Mountain
Patricia Francisco: Telling: A Memoir of Rape and Recovery
Jamaica Kincaid: The Autobiography of my Mother
Ann Pancake: Strange as this Weather Has Been
Dream (10/25/08)
He leaned in very close, scrutinizing numbers with me at a desk. I could feel how he smelled and how he breathed. Eighty-six, he said. I was on a Tolkien horse as I watched his finger trace a dotted line on my paycheck to another column.
Asking him out for coffee has been my plan since Friday over cocktails and edamame. The words were on the tip of my tongue when he stood up and told me that we were going to have to sort this out over coffee: that this type of thing could not be negotiated under these circumstances. Only I don’t think he said the word, thing.
We are going to have to get this sorted out over coffee and a walk, he said. I will follow you, and carry a dung stick. I doubled over with laughter at the top of the stairs he’d already descended; he stood at the bottom looking up at me the way you do when someone laughs at something you say. In real life I woke up smiling.
"About me" practice
Summer 08:
30, sushi eater, garage painter, lunch waitress, Hamline writer, Minneapolis mover, Olympics watcher, scrapbook putter-together, cot sleeper, dog, cat, and squirrel lover, angel.
Goodbye TPY
How to Save Your Own Life (after Erica Jong, I’m sure)
1. Don’t give other people too much credit, especially the ones who seem like they want to bring you down! It is realistic, not pessimistic, to believe that they probably do.
2. Believe you can do things.
3. Don’t take things personally. Realize that other people are probably thinking of themselves and have their own problems and agendas… even your very best friends and family members.
Jean Buehner
Decision time
This summer is wonderful. I have my own place, a bike, a job, rainbow sherbert, and uninterrupted hours to figure out what to do with the next phase of life, which, since I am unattached (no pets, even), gets to be whatever I want it to be.
I was accepted into Hamline’s Fine Arts in writing program. The closer it gets to fall term, the more intensely I think about my own writing. When/where do I write the most/best? I haven’t been writing long enough or seriously enough yet to find that out.
Is school the best way to take a serious look at what one can accomplish? I tend to lean towards yes, but then I think of writers without advanced degrees whose work I love. But then I think of how many more of them I will find out about and/or meet…
How wonderful and frightening, and exhausting, to be thirty, with so much life that could still go anywhere.
"About me" practice
29, Vegan, Dog named Annie, Reader/Writer, Housepainter, Waitress, Big sister, Bob Dylan fan, Sucky volleyball player, World traveler, Perrot lover, regular lover, optimist, believer.
Pragmatism and parentheses (04/01/1987)
School was normal except for library reading. Everyone is supposed to be quiet and read a book for fifteen minutes, but without any warning I snorted very loud like a pig. After school came my third birthday party. Two of the men insisted on spanking me 9 times. I was thinking god damn it you two! It seemed like it was more their party than mine. I got an art kit, clay mask, and a stuffed bunny.
Mommy stuff (11/18/03)
Found language
DILL pickle relish
some potatoes
Miracle Whip
carrots (fresh)
2 cig. lighters
Big weiners
2 ZEST soap
2 mini wheats
cigs-100’s
Ramona Forever
![Sitting on the back porch steps tonight my dad said it is so still. And he said let's go see if the deer is back there [by the fruit trees], and we went, and she was, and we watched her and she watched us and ate grass; I was crouching down watching her. My dad, on the other side of the wall, whispered to me very loudly that he was watching her too which was funny because I could see him watching her through the cracks.](https://angelfrommontgomery.org/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/2011-feb-nov-13001.jpg?w=685)








