Vagrants & Accidentals
eBook - ePub

Vagrants & Accidentals

  1. 128 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Vagrants & Accidentals

About this book

Vagrants & Accidentals, the second full-length collection from poet Kevin Craft, is part vade mecum, part songbook, whose taut lines and adaptable stanzas traffic in the personal effects of emigration and estrangement, exile and return. In ornithology, a vagrant or accidental is a bird that appears out of its natural or normal range, blown off course by a storm, or inadvertently introduced into a new environment by human trade. Likewise, Craft is interested in things taken out of context--Greek myths in the Pacific Northwest, the potsherd or megalith stranded in a museum, excess carbon in the atmosphere, American pop songs in a Roman piazza, adoptions, estrangements, dangerous migrations, the constant shuffle of human beings from place to place—asking how we reorient ourselves in the crossfire of constant, rapid, global transformation. Organized into four parts, the collection moves from the deeply personal to more global issues of interconnectedness. In language intensely lyrical, grounded in prehistory and science, Craft evokes questions of family and belonging that underscore a lifetime, gradually revealing the forces that shape us from the deepest reaches of time and place. As some birds sing to define their territory, so his poetry calls between the raggedness of daily life and our deeper yearning for coherence. Listen to an interview with and readings by the author via KUOW: http://kuow.org/post/what-i-learned-my-feminist-mom

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Yes, you can access Vagrants & Accidentals by Kevin Craft in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & American Poetry. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
image

III

Poor travelers, I thought, seeing myself among
them: always somewhere else.
—W. G. Sebald, Vertigo

Transparency

Years later (43) my father offers a name—says
I looked over the desk, saw the paperwork stray
when the caseworker ducked into the backroom—
says this casually, over the phone, in the middle of some
playoff talk about the Phillies or the weather in Florida,
recounts it as a known fact, something I must have
learned long ago, and forgotten, like the allegory
of the chariot pulled by two horses—tells me her name was
Madeleine, just like that—I thought you knew—
as if everyone in Wilmington, Delaware knew—
knew the circumstances, the chemical shame,
1967, the indelible fact of having gotten herself
pregnant by no name my father can recall seeing—
just Madeleine of the typescript, Madeleine
of the dotted line, Madeleine of the horse & buggy split.
image
I’m thinking 17, I’m thinking dropped out
of high school, sight unseen, I really don’t know,
except in one iteration my name is Michael,
that I knew by 8th grade, at least, when Lori Wiedner
started calling me that, Lori the first flute,
Lori the perennial September crush who sometimes flirted
though usually not, though she would offer up
magnanimous middle school warmth and alarm
and thus in her eyes did I begin to live that other
boy’s life as well as I could before the World Book
Encyclopedia—peeling back layers of see-through anatomy
to get to the nervous system—autonomous
if not sympathetic—the skeletal remains,
the blank page wavering behind it all—
I have been poring through your absence all these years
scratching out name after name

Linear A

I am the city
as you remember it,
save one.
I am a dark
incision—cat’s eye or claw
in a field of slash and burn.
No sooner said than
waves will slosh
on a half-moon beach—
fond of their habit
and the leisure of five
wild swans.
(My rival’s an archive
of miscarried fleece.)
Divulge what you will,
embryonic kri-kri swimming
circles around our knuckles,
gold goddess hovering
like a hornet
in a thumbprint epiphany.
Even stones
have pastimes—stepping down,
weighing in.
Now hindsight flickers like a bull’s
bright horn
cleared by a headlong
running leap.
(We’re beginning to tabulate
our livestock in dreams.)
When summer
fills the lustral basins
with green water, terrapins
ringing the cistern
like a loose archipelago—
when the whole
sluggish island nose-dives
like a foundering whale—
I am the ladle they call
Diaspora,
I am the rhyton
whose measure is tears.
Drink up. Wish me luck.
(Cuttlefish thrash in a whirlpool cup.)
So that blue monkeys swing
in turpentine trees,
so that blue women
chatter like chickpeas in jars:
all the figs of Memphis
are not sweeter than your fingertips—
so long out of touch, so long out of touch
they trace their lineage in scar.

Persona Non Grata

. . . and indeed were not particularly welcome in any of the states— the vagrants, old soldiers, travelling theatrical companies, pedlars— all these silted up on the frontier like floating rubbish on a river’s banks.
—Penelope Fitzgerald, The Blue Flower
I wore a mask made of holes,
none of which weep. I was armed
like a gladiator to face assimilated sheep.
I could only nod or shake, never blink,
never strike like a bowling ball
in a back alley brawl. I was a chain letter
composed of missing links. It wasn’t my style
to menace or gloat.
Here’s what I learned: like a bowling ball
tossed into the drink, half of us sink
and half of us float. Which is why it took ...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title
  3. Copyright
  4. Dedication
  5. Contents
  6. Little Big Chief
  7. I
  8. II
  9. III
  10. IV
  11. Notes & Acknowledgments
  12. About the Author