By James Croal Jackson
The Wedding Poem
I was asked to write a poem
to read at your wedding.
I have been writing for weeks.
I don’t know what I’m trying to do
but I know it’s something new.
Mostly the poem has become my life.
Mostly it’s a poem of longing
for what the poem in me longs for.
Mostly it is a poem of the fight between desire
and desire.
Mostly it is a poem of desire
from the poem’s point of view.
Maybe the poem is a poem of love.
Though like most loves, the poem is a little
exasperated.
The poem seems at the moment
to be in the middle of a struggle.
The poem says the poem is struggling.
The poem says it wants more
than this.
The poem wants to try and try again.
The poem wants you
to write a new poem for it.
It hopes it will then write a new
vow.
I don’t know why I made myself
the center of this.
I don’t know why I seem to be
the only person in the poem.
How’s this: I said I was going
to love you forever.
I believed it.
I believed in it.
I didn’t expect the word forever
to seem anachronistic.
What do you mean,
forever?
Who told you
the wedding poem is for you?
Who told you the wedding poem
has to mean anything?
The wedding poem is a poem
about the poetry we dream.
I see you on the stage.
You are on the stage with me.
You found a poem you loved
and someone reads us its vows.
We try to see the future.
We try to see the poems we are
even though we might not know them.
We try to see the future.
I try to see the future.
We try to see a poem about to happen.
This is a poem about the dream.
I try to see a poem about to happen.
This is a poem about to happen.
It has become a poem for you.
It has become a poem for me.
This is a poem about the poem that isn’t
yet.
I struggle to see a poem
about to happen.
I struggle to see the poem about to happen.
Purple Paint
on your bed was revelation a coming to know purple paint with third-floor view the pines and run-down houses all strangers because we too once only knew each other in name then your cat nuzzled nose against my legflesh and we sipped on beers we left on the nightstand to finish later when the last bitter note lingered on our tongues
Hide and Seek
We turned off the lights and counted to a hundred in a house more familiar than our aging hands. I found solace deep in the cockroach closet– you, beneath the brown beanbag. We waited in these surroundings for our lovers’ eyes to adjust. We never wanted it so quiet.
Celestial Egg
They’re not deviled eggs
because Lucifer was once an angel
Anth
At the bar you order a small white plate of celestial eggs. Holy mayonnaise yellow topped with chives. They are gulped except for the last, which you offer me through telepathy. I am the egg. When I stop throbbing is when I live so I hold it high in our five spotlights. The arena cheers. I see many doors. Five floors: on the bottom, death, but each row above a plethora of possibilities. In your car, you say I am feeling unmoored, my shoe half-out your door. The renaissance is what we make. It is brown paint over everything, the oil light– you ask, what is on your mind? I don't know how much you know but I felt the warmth of the machine beside me thrumming on the street. You were on the phone, I think. I glared– I think the end is coming faster than fresh ideas or the universe’s rate of expansion. The fact you drove saved me from running through the dark city in the center of my existence. In the shadow room inside my house, I did not process emotion. The throbbing sprain in my foot. It was that death issued a rain check when I smacked my head in the basement bar of the indie theater. I was the movie everyone watched. I left everyone waiting for me to emerge from the sewer. I swear I will not group up next time. I want each synapse comprehended. To succeed would be the stretchy fabric of my living. Nylon for the brain. Procrastination for the ascent. I say you need not worry because I am not worried. Depression is a shovel deep in soil and I am buried in my mind, thankful to be given a second heaping of kindness when I never deserved the first. Hard to learn you when my body is uniformly jagged and growing hairs sharp like knives eternally out of every inch. I want to be tender with you, but once I eat, all mysticism is lost to time.
A Red Container
I am worried about the return to normalcy the work of going to work the work is what I am doing what capitalists want is your drive to drive x miles with a red container of gas that fuels us bright limitless stars
In Lieu of Help, Send Flowers
On the job I steal time already stolen from me. Taxidermied deer on beige walls. Nature in a protein bar. Yes, I am consuming. No, I am no consumer. I push hard but age miserably among antlers while day flees into night flops into the far future. My family will want bouquets but you’ll know what to do.
Temporary
I often dream of simpler times– driving my car to a customer with a bag full of food, and poof– gone. Then the memory fades in an instant. All of time passing. Right now. Into the ether. The clock has dropped its weary hand a tick downward. The other hand desperately reaches toward the sun.
After the Zoo
the offense was claws in which I tore
the seams of treaded jeans we admired
of hornbills suspended in the space
between freedom and constriction
and contrails the zest of the situation
lingered in halves the happening and aftermath
a baptismal drizzle of your departing hatchback
entirely left to the discretion of satellites
Cannon Town
long voids of violence I am a citizen a city telephoning the dark fodder fear full of black spherical iron that killed in a prior era mouth such force vertically above the city center arrive with the words of an impending meteor
For Exercise and Variety
walking around my home wearing sun glasses FitBit records silent steps on white wood floors creak a silver SUV whirs past window no peephole a dead end slightly darker shade how my eyes reckon in multiple lights their very veins stretch and pulsate spectrum my entire field ever present ever pressured the world in layers I perceive body as hunger pushing into all frames of frames of knick-knacks I need to donate but fear the gift-givers will find out one may ask that yodeling pickle wasn’t good enough of course not what was ever its purpose but to transfer to another hand or be buried deep in dry and dying land
James Croal Jackson works in film production. His most recent chapbooks are Count Seeds With Me (Ethel Zine & Micro-Press, 2022) and Our Past Leaves (Kelsay Books, 2021). Recent poems can be found in Stirring, White Wall Review, and Vagabond City Lit. He edits The Mantle Poetry from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (jamescroaljackson.com)

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