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Also in this issue, an excerpt from Yael Shinar’’s poetic documentaryAWAKE, ALERT, ORIENTED

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Contributor Notes




Yael Shinar

Yael Shinar

Yael Shinar




Suicide

 

 

How do I speak

without synonyms?

 

I could say that she died,

by the digits of her hand and perhaps ofher mind.

I could say that the usual thingshappened:

the muscles stiffened,

the bowel moved,

the urine leaked

 

onto her casual clothes, down to herblack socks.

Her eyelids went a little blue and tearsdried on her face.

Then professionals came.

 

Had she let me, I would have taken her toa surgeon,

to implant my love a little deeper.

Then to remove the anesthetic mask thatcovers her now like a prayer shawl.

 

Over a year, my grief leaks out of melike sweat, and my bowel moves.

I restore stores, I remove waste, and Iscour fleeting illnesses.

 

Part of the whole story goes like this:

her brother found her, hanging, still hisown as ever.

Her mother asked “yes” and “no” questionsabout the past.

Satisfaction from sugar became morefleeting after her burial,

and also more sufficient.

I began to chart distances betweensynonyms.

 

It was noon, probably, when she began todie.

Evening came, and I cried with my boyfriend.

 

Next, the sun rose, distinct in thesky-blue sky.

 

 

 

 

IfGod Does Not Sit in the Nostrils of the Starling’s Beak

 

 

1

 

to wake alone

to open the window tospring chill—

a stranger to the dew

 

to wake alone, wanderroom to room,

turning on lights,

turning them off—

 

the heater turned on, atourniquet to

quiet this mind—

the birds outside—

their feathers tremblein the breeze—

 

 

2

 

This world, a substantiatedadjective meaning God,

which means,

 

alive and looking, or

 

pressing my thumb intoan old wall to taste and erase the dews of the ancients, who built it, or

 

the anchor that holds no ship

in the shallowest duneof the sea,

the chain billowing up

to the surface of thewater,or

 

hearing gaps between thesinging and the sung, my heart, or

 

memories, like ripe, wetbones in flesh.

 

Orthe one by whom

we take the long view—         

we see our children,

one of them will behappy

of this land

 

The one who, when I asknow, “What land?”

says at one breath inone time,

“The one you stand on.”

“The other one.”

 

 

3

 

Stranger, consider theneighbor

who wakes and makescoffee,

straps leather over thearches of her feet

in the same gulp of time—

 

on loan from theheavens, or from God,

or from whatever wedepend upon

to rewrite confusion,each morning,

in sconces of blessing—

 

as the blue blurs intoyellow,             

the way light,

but no human pigment

can—

                                                           

we have an analogy forthis:

the child moves fromsounds to words,

intention has alreadybeen there some

time—

 

thisis no drastic or lamentable change,

it is the mysterybecoming the writing,

the air

becoming the breath—

 

 

4

 

Morning dews                        

on blades of grass,      

across the down ofbirds,

intothe veins of leaves.                     

 

 

The leaves, they arethis polysemic,

polytheistic prayer,

bowing all around

to seek the old shoot              

 

that vanished long ago,

last winter.

The song of the leaves

sings quietly

 

one history of onepeople

to many

unswaddled souls.

They are looking

 

for the name of theirGod,

whose call they heardall winter

who created limbs forthem

they only now see— 

 

—If God does notsit in the nostrils of the starling’s beak,

the veins of the eye

writing their script

on the new world.

 

 

 

 


Twelve Starts

 

 

 

You’ll have twelve starts from beginningto finish,

and when you get toeleven, we lose count, we start over.

 

 

The city gate

cannot tell us

by what hand it grew,

was cleaned

arched its back to letthe night through

its narrow veil

of stone.

 

 

The city,

so many times torn

and born

 

 

The sun set, having noregret—

 

 

There are long daysavailable to us.

 

 

Available to us, water,the sun setting.

 

 

Apples will ripen,someone will bake yeast bread,

even in seasons we liein bed and grow thin, thinking.

 

 

A woman in a blue dressis native to this country in the sense that, like it, she mimics the sky.

 

 

Guilt echoes through ourorgans like organs in church bathrooms.

 

 

Have I nothing to saythat will etch

into emptiness

 

a sign of justice?

 

 

Etchings

 

seem wise investments—

 

 

not to hang, but tomake,

 

to get to know the wrist—

 

 

a solitary lovemaking

 

to time

 

 

Which way to the beginning?

I’ll follow you