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10-05-07

Tim Seibles

Trying for Fire

Right now, even if a muscular woman wanted 
to teach me the power of her skin
I'd probably just stand here with my hands 
jammed in my pockets. Tonight
I'm feeling weak as water, watching the wind 
bandage the moon. That's how it is tonight: 
sky like tar, thin gauzy clouds, 
a couple lame stars. A car rips by — 
the driver's cigarette pinwheels past 
the dog I saw hit this afternoon.
One second he was trotting along
with his wet nose tasting the air,
next thing I know he's off the curb,
a car swerves and, bam, it's over. For an instant, 
he didn't seem to understand he was dying — 
he lifted his head as if he might still reach 
the dark-green trash bags half-open 
on the other side of the street. 

I wish someone could tell me
how to live in the city. My friends
just shake their heads and shrug. I
can't go to church — I'm embarrassed by things 
preachers say we should believe.
I would talk to my wife, but she's worried 
about the house. Whenever she listens 
she hears the shingles giving in 
to the rain. If I read the paper
I start believing some stranger
has got my name in his pocket — 
on a matchbook next to his knife. 

When I was twelve I'd take out the trash — 
the garage would open like some ogre's cave 
while just above my head the Monday Night Movie
stepped out of the television, and my parents
leaned back in their chairs. I can still hear
my father's voice coming through the floor,
"Boy, make sure you don't make a mess down there."
I remember the red-brick caterpillar of row houses
on Belfield Avenue and, not much higher than the rooftops, 
the moon, soft and pale as a nun's thigh. 

I had a plan back then--my feet were made
for football: each toe had the heart
of a different animal, so I ran
ten ways at once. I knew I'd play pro,
and live with my best friend, and
when Vanessa let us pull up her sweater
those deep-brown balloony mounds made me believe 
in a world where eventually you could touch 
whatever you didn't understand. 

If I was afraid of anything it was
my bedroom when my parents made me 
turn out the light: that knocking noise 
that kept coming from the walls, 
the shadow shapes by the bookshelf, 
the feeling that something was always there 
just waiting for me to close my eyes.
But only sleep would get me, and I'd 
wake up running for my bike, my life 
jingling like a little bell on the breeze.
I understood so little that I 
understood it all, and I still know 
what it meant to be one of the boys 
who had never kissed a girl. 

I never did play pro football.
I never got to do my mad-horse, 
mountain goat, happy-wolf dance 
for the blaring fans in the Astro Dome.
I never snagged a one-hander over the middle
against Green Bay and stole my snaky way 
down the sideline for the game-breaking six. 

And now, the city is crouched like a mugger 
behind me — right outside, in the alley behind my door, 
a man stabbed this guy for his wallet, and sometimes
I see this four-year-old with his face all bruised,
his father holding his hand like a vise. When I
turn on the radio the music is just like the news.
So, what should I do — close my eyes and hope 
whatever's out there will just let me sleep?
I won't sleep tonight. I'll stay near my TV
and watch the police get everybody.
 

Across the street a woman is letting
her phone ring. I see her in the kitchen 
stirring something on the stove. Farther off 
a small dog chips the quiet with his bark. 
Above me the moon looks like a nickel 
in a murky little creek. This 
is the same moon that saw me twelve, 
without a single bill to pay, zinging
soup can tops into the dark — I called them 
flying saucers. This is the same 
white light that touched dinosaurs, that 
found the first people trying for fire. 

It must have been very good, that moment 
when wood smoke turned to flickering, when 
they believed night was broken 
once and for all — I wonder what almost-words 
were spoken. I wonder how long 
before that first flame went out. 

-from Hurdy-Gurdy, used with the permission of the poet

Half the battle—if not more than half—is in finding language that seems both accurate (with regard to the subject) and inviting to a reader. If I didn’t care about communicating I’d wouldn’t write poems; I’d simply write in a diary or journal. A poem, in my eyes, is a public document of experience— meant to be shared. I think people read poetry to discover things about the world and about themselves. A poem is an invitation to think hard about the human condition, to recognize differences in experience and to see our own struggles in the lives/voices of others. If a poem is carelessly obscure it can’t reveal anything worthwhile, and poetry is about revelation, not adding confusion to an already difficult world.

 

Tim Seibles is the author of several collections of poetry including Hurdy-Gurdy, Hammerlock, Buffalo Head Solos, One Turn Around The Sun, and Fast Animal, which was a finalist for the 2012 National Book Award and winner of the Theodore Roethke Memorial Poetry Prize. His New & Selected collection, Voodoo Libretto was released in 2021. His next book, With No Hat, will be published in 2026.

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