MaverickMagazine

Feature Poet 5: Mac Oliver



    Mac OLIVER  earned his degree from Tulane in 1994. Currently he studies poetry in the Doctoral program at the University of Minnesota. He has written reviews for Metre and Thumbscrew. His first book of poems, Ham & Mercury is being printed privately.

    ------Keats

            Asthmatic the beggar, clown
            Waking frowns drunk as dawn's not,
            Tongue caked with dirt.
            Uncanny, he yawns,
            Such a bender, carbonated
            Veins, spins, your throat an abyss-

    CONSOLAÇÃO


            Buried in her hands, her covered head
            Below her shoulders, sags of despair,
            Her robe is flowing like her hair,

    HEREAFTERMATH

            Even as Babel crumbles, to endure,
            You're willing to endure,
            You care. As you see the figures soar
            (Others recalling caves
            Safer than rooftop flats flee,
            Their lots shaken, hoarse litter of
            Hands let go & wounded
            Mouths agog) of ones pinned by rods,

            Walled old Babel, I canter
            Through moist palms, marvel at your
            Languorousness, Madame,
            Ducts of water. Names

            Have been rubbed from the stones,
            Strippings to boss your stores, plunder
            So vast thighs bruised on floors


        Let her hair wind round your hands, ignore
        A while you were once yourself so leased,
        A regular gawker with mouth agog,
        Chewer down of a page a day, demanding

        His exact double: Esmeralda mirrors
        A troubled self-image, mocks him for having
        Dreamt of a run through his old ruined garden,
        To plunge again hands into gooseflesh folds,


            She, even she, overrun,
            Has regarded, forced to, the stiffness
            Of death, sunk into spells into
            Drinking puddles, out of breath,
            Empties green upon
            The pavement's gray. Doorslammed, her hem drags
            On the road. She has had to re-
            Consider, turned by crowds into a fe-
            Line stray, though shapely still

    NORTHWEST WIND

            Now the light drains to bleak, the crow
            Like an oil pump pounds its beak
            Into stiffened turf of fall, bloody
            Factories & idle bones,
            Stacks, paths depeopled;
            No afternoon, it's done, the moon
            Blows in, the leaves now long
            Since gone: face the loss,

    PRIME

            Dawn on the levee, an old painter & I
            Watched the sky change & talked.
            Ohio, god forgive her, is where my
            Father's father's from: wade in tanks of pork
            And corn, thank chemistry to come.