Little Pharma Encounters the Spine
By Laura Kolbe
Power travels down and out,
feeling travels back. Not coal
so much as dam, not sex
so much as combing his hair
by fingers, not the Charlottesville
Exxon pumping the night into
the night so much as the black
boughs of soda dispenser
in the station’s strange, eggy
inner room and the cups all
frothback response when
the fountain’s plastic levers cast,
or the public tennis court
uphill from the Exxon shirring
wattage on the players’ lines,
how it will scare up a game simply
because light’s coming down.
Here not immanence but vector,
a cord you could hear
beneath hearing, easy as crossing
your eyes. Now cross. Come in.
This rope in bone broth,
tender as a leg by Watteau,
who can carry one behind
the heart and not feel she must
have plundered all this
hid museum under skin?
Lucky then to be bred
collective in ignorance of breaking,
enspecied blithe. Mercy blanked
as protein whites the fish’s dimming
market-eye. Do not tell us
we live fragile. The word eats
sinkhole into bone. Mr. K,
middle-many years of age, forbade
me speak it—when the tumor
wedged alongside cord and spine
it wandered neck to floor,
unmooring dermatomes.
At first he lost
the governance of breakfast.
Then, world’s slowest snowfall,
sensation to the back.
The morning he was called
to surgery found him at the bathroom
sink, attempting dance, clutching
the faucet’s chrome swan neck
in sacrifice. And not to fall.
When, pre-electric, we gave birds
to gods, we must have known
a snapped neck broke a downward
power, emptied space for other
currents in descent. We also
by this gesture cut off
feeling seeping center-up.
Perhaps explaining why we never
sensed an answer. Summer nights,
faint hawking of tennis balls
across and replied, sweet contagion
colloquy, who believes we will
not have perception as a fleshly
proper right?
Source: Poetry (July/August 2020)