The Corpse Flower
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The Corpse Flower

New and Selected Poems

Bruce Beasley

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eBook - ePub

The Corpse Flower

New and Selected Poems

Bruce Beasley

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The Corpse Flower brings works from Bruce Beasley's first four award-winning collections together with twenty-five new poems, organizing them around the metaphor that gives the book its title: an enormous tropical bloom that reeks like carrion, and around whose three-day florescence "dung beetles & flies & sweat bees swarm /... pollen gummed all over / their furred feet." The corpse flower serves as a figure for Beasley's coming to terms with birth and death, fecundity and decay, the illusion of death, and the flourishing of the rare and beautiful out of the materials of the decayed. The Corpse Flower traces a spiritual pilgrimage, weaving autobiography into a larger meditation on the materials of language and of the life of the spirit. Beasley's is a deeply physical spirituality - as he writes in one poem, "the soul's / impossible to tell / from the objects of its appetite." Throughout these poems, family mythology, as well as religious and mythic narrative and iconography, become occasions for extraordinary meditations on the physicality of birth and death, beginnings and endings. This substantial selection of Bruce Beasley's work, written over a twenty year period, offers the opportunity to experience, page by page, a poet's evolution, and to follow a unique, creative mind as it reaches, through interrogations of faith, science, and art, toward some form of resolution - a resolution increasingly represented by the beauties of language itself. On Summer Mystagogia "These brilliant poems, often both mythic and demotic, powerfully initiate the reader into a world at once marred and yet suffused by the signs and wonders of an 'irresistible grace.'... A wonderfully resilient and hard-won poetry of witness." - Boston Review

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INITIALS

from Spirituals (1988), The Creation (1994), and Summer Mystagogia (1996)
forerunner—

Witness

I

That’s where your father
had his accident, my father
mumbled, pointing
through the cracked windshield
to the dropoff where he’d plunged that car
into spiky shrubs thirty feet below.
But I knew
anyway from my mother’s
enraged voice on the phone,
then from the barred
psychiatric ward,
it was no accident.
That gesture—his finger tracing
vaguely all he couldn’t talk about—
comes back to me now, through
Caravaggio, where Christ
guides the apostle’s pointing finger
with sexual tenderness
into the smooth, apparently permanent
gash in his breast.
Through his one sentence, my father’s
voice was rough with such regret—
for having tried, or having failed,
I couldn’t tell—
I only knew his scarred
arm on the steering wheel
scared me, and his sweet
whiskey breath, and the broken guardrail
stabbing its twisted metal
over the skidmarks still there down the edge . . .
I thought: he must have tried to make it stop.
But I didn’t want to know,
didn’t want to watch
his headlights scoop out that canyon
or the darkness fill it back up,
or his lips, lit by a cigarette stub,
try to tell me what had gone wrong
and I didn’t say a thing
as he twisted the radio dial
from gospel to Muzak to static,
coughed his dry, frightened cough
and watched me from the side of his eye.
The torn seat squeaking on its hinges
was the only sound as we rumbled
down the brick streets of Macon
where I watched his back
disappear through glass
doors throbbing with dancing bottles.

2

In Caravaggio’s painting, the voyeur
apostles throng
so close around Jesus and Thomas,
gazing hard as the fingertip
slips into the pucker of wound.
They all want to know what it’s like
inside the cut, risen body,
but they’re scared of what
the touch might do; it’s assuring to watch
the curious one
penetrate first. But Thomas
is tense, his forehead ridged,
his throat tight as he goes
deeper into the fresh
opening just under the skin—
he’s mortified, like one
admitted where he can never belong.
Still, Caravaggio has torn
the shoulder seam
on his red robe, which means
he’s as human as Christ,
available to damage too. My father
died a year after that ride, and now
I don’t even know
where the road he showed me
is. At fourteen, I closed my eyes
and let his old Nova
carry me home,
the Ocmulgee River’s
smell of mud-clogged kudzu and swampgrass
washing over my father’s Jack Daniels.
He turns back to me now,
when I want him to, lifts
his shaking hand to the window,
and points again down the cliff,
and the flesh-
colored robe opens, and the finger
pierces just under the heart,
and the hand with its nailhole coaxes
the bewildered witness in.

The Creation of Eve

We lay a long time in the brine of my blood,
Father,
this other
hacked from my flesh,
her side by my gashed side.
Strangers—
How ...

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