"In the Hopeful Future," "Keats Isn't the Problem," and "Bowie Second Line"
In the Hopeful Future
—for Vincent Cellucci
when I picture you at a party
you are arriving
scraping a foot on the front step
you kick caked mud
from the toe of your retro Jordan’s
on the welcome mat
whisper the word Jump
under your breath
domesticated as the dozen carnations
you carry where you used to carry
a dozen dead elephants
inside a dozen dead snakes
you pat your pockets
as if you never left home
feel for your phone and keys
your fire hydrant heart
the memory of your younger face
reflected in a red motorcycle
passing you by
what a pouring down outside
memory puddles behind you
what the hammer and hot blade of it
the chain and anvil of it
the devil and lesser devil of it
somehow you ended up on this porch
you say to yourself
the way a river remembers
the only path is to the sea it ends in
then ring the doorbell
I can’t remember half
of anything I can remember
Keats Isn’t the Problem
is not the t-shirt shot
from the cannon
but I wanted to say— Thanks,
Custom Ink!
and have it on Brett’s doorstep
before Brett
could canonize
the masses meaningful
without them knowing
anything
ever happened
I’m feeling the right costume
cape and smile
could really move
the books
off the shelf
but then again
the TV poet on Transparent
just said lostness
and everyone
applauded
maybe my gifts are best given
in another world
where we ain’t afraid
of no ghosts
where Brett tells a moving story
the one we’ve all heard
the one we’ve all told
the one with the books and not
all of them can go
the one when the move
from uptown
to tracks
really gets clackin
the one when every time Brett
says
to Kamenetz
Keats isn’t the problem
something meaningful happens
Bowie Second Line
hard to say if we both believed
Bowie died for our sins
when the woman
who had been heavy-breathing
her wild mom-breath
into the kitchen cabinets
all morning
came into the living room
wearing her best Bowie dress
to find me uncertain
if a couch is a sleeping baby
or a sleeping baby a couch
either way it seemed
reason enough to call for a sitter
either way something dead
inside us was squirming
in its heavy sleep
either way the New Orleans sky
hung above
the crowd in the Quarter
like a sheet slowly falling
over a sleeping baby
These selections are from Meaningful Poems, a forthcoming collaboration with Brett Evans.
Christopher Shipman (he/him) lives on Eno, Sappony, & Shakori land in Greensboro, North Carolina, where he teaches literature and creative writing at New Garden Friends School & plays drums in The Goodbye Horses. Recent work appears or is forthcoming in Denver Quarterly, Iron Horse Literary Review, Fence, Pedestal, Poetry Magazine, Rattle (online), & elsewhere. His experimental play Metaphysique D’ Ephemera has been staged at four universities. Getting Away with Everything (Unlikely Books, 2021), in collaboration with Vincent Cellucci, is his most recent collection. More at www.cshipmanwriting.com.