Diane Seuss


[I want to zero-in on what he looked like, for posterity if nothing else, there was more]

I want to zero-in on what he looked like, for posterity if nothing else, there was more 

than a little bit of Nicholson in Chinatown, the hairline but not the toughness, not the hetero 

gaze through half-closed eyes or the nasty gash on the nose that Nicholson wore through 

most of the movie though toward the end Mikel did have lesions on his nose and ear and neck 

and temple, definitely some Neil Young, the mouth, the lowering of the chin and looking out

from behind the hair that fell over his eyes when he was very young, getting called a faggot 

by the football boys, art class, we drew together, what I took for romantic interest was interest,

actual interest, and later when he was full-on dying he made complicated arrangements for me 

to inherit his car to replace the piece of shit Oldsmobile I was driving, in the end his friend sold 

his car in San Francisco and sent me a check to put toward a used Chevy Nova, maroon, scarred 

but it ran ok, now and then he’d say I’m Suck Owens and these here boys are my Fuckaroos 

and sing Tiger by the Tail, but more often in his upstairs room on Locust Court he’d play the piece

of shit guitar, always such a light touch, sing helpless, helpless, helpless, helpless, you know 

that song, mattress on the floor, I didn’t mind, alarm clock on the windowsill, the wind-up kind.

 

[He said it bummed him out his dick didn’t work anymore]

He said it bummed him out his dick didn’t work anymore.

But it was never about dick for us. Was it. Though for a while

it was all about dick for him. San Francisco dick. Far far away

from his brutal fireman father. And me. He could finally do what 

he wanted with his dick and other people’s dicks. And dress as I 

Love Lucy. And write a serial featuring Dyke Van Dick. And refer 

to himself when not wearing dress and wig as an existential cowboy. 

“The charismatic impresario of all we did” Alan said of him. But that

wasn’t how it was for us. We did not waste our charisma on each other.

Did not dress for each other. Or did I dress for him a little bit. Did

I perform for him. I knew no other way. The last time I saw him.

Before he lost his mind and filled with ocean. Died. He said Di 

your body changed. I’d just given birth to a ten pound baby. Jesus 

Christ. What do you want from me. What did you ever want from me.

 

[Death does not exist in poetry. A line may fade into the silence past its breaking]

Death does not exist in poetry. A line may fade into the silence past its breaking 

but that is not death. No choking sounds in poems, no smell of blood. I can describe 

the sounds, the smells, but description is in fact a hiding place. There is no nobility 

in description. Is there nobility in poems? Let’s hope not. Nobility is another place 

to hide. “Through all these myriad felt and mostly scorned and disreputable realities" 

Alan wrote in a poem. I hope it is OK that I have quoted you, Alan. It is a poem 

about love’s nuance but maybe Alan would agree there is no love in poems. There is 

no love in a mushroom, in a handmade wedding dress. No death in a funeral hankie 

embroidered with the words “Try not to use it.” I looked at a worm and I thought 

it was an angel. I looked at an angel and thought it was a storm. What is wrong 

with the mind is what is wrong with the poem. It is difficult to get the news 

boy to be a news boy. He keeps turning into a girl carrying a fish in a cloth delivery 

bag to her grandmother who is really a wolf dressed as a grandmother singing a line

from Ulysses: “So stood they there both awhile in wanhope, sorrowing one with other.”

 

[I saw a little movie of a person stroking a small bird with two Q-tips, one held between]

I saw a little movie of a person stroking a small bird with two Q-tips, one held between 

the forefinger and thumb of each hand. It tipped back its head to receive the minor 

tenderness, which to the bird must have felt like being touched by a god. For a moment 

I knew what it would be to feel at the mercy of love, small-scale, the kind shown but not 

spoken of. I was afraid to touch you. I was afraid of the lesions you’d described to me 

over the phone, their locations and the measurement, in centimeters, of each. Jesus-marks, 

you called them. All so I would be prepared and unafraid or less afraid but still I was afraid 

of dying like you were dying. When I first arrived I looked so long into your eyes you 

shivered and ordered me to look away. You were imperious in your dying and yet courtly 

about my fear, you understood, as if I were a child afraid of lightning storms, which I am, 

having at age ten been struck. Out of the blue you said that once you were dead I’d never 

be able to listen to Blue again, Joni Mitchell’s Blue, not just the song but the whole album. 

It was a minor curse you lay across my shoulders like a fur dyed blue, and so I listen now 

in defiance of you. In the listening the pronouns shift. We are listening. There is no death.

 

[The sonnet, like poverty, teaches you what you can do]

The sonnet, like poverty, teaches you what you can do

without. To have, as my mother says, a wish in one hand

and shit in another. That was in answer to I wish I had

an instamatic camera and a father. Wish in one hand, she

said, shit in another. She still says it. When she tells me

she wishes I were there to have some of her bean soup 

she answers herself. Wish in one hand, she says, shit in another. 

Poverty, like a sonnet, is a good teacher. The kind that raps your

knuckles with a ruler but not the kind that throws a dictionary

across the room and hits you in the brain with all the words

that ever were. Boxed fathers buried deep are still fathers,

teacher says. Do without the. Without and. Without hot

dogs in your baked beans. A sonnet is a mother. Every word

a silver dollar. Shit in one hand, she says. Wish in another.