The Anthony Hecht Poetry Prize

2006


Two poems from Bruce Berger's Snake Oil

followed by a note on the author

 

Confession

 

My mother gone eight years,
My father thirty-seven,
The attending physician too old
To find himself at risk:
Now it can be told.

A man I still remember
Flipping onto his hands
And walking that way upstairs,
Spent the latter years
Of my growing up in chairs.

Gymnast, acrobat,
Hellion who retired
And took a second wife
(My mom), golfer, horseman,
Chainsmoker for life,

Sixty when I was born,
Still riding an aquaplane
Around the lake on his head,
He spent the inglorious years
After the chairs in bed.

Self-taught, declaiming Shakespeare,
Kipling and the old chestnuts,
His elocution took off.
I listen for the echo
And only catch the cough.

Of course he blamed the weather.
We traveled where he could breathe.
Bad weather remained his fate.
A doctor made him quit.
Of course it was too late.

He squirted mist in his throat.
Every morning he hacked
Midnight out of his lung.
He wheezed, gasped and offended
Strangers we landed among.

In restaurants, in lobbies,
The clientele complained.
One of the minor hells,
Traveling for better weather,
Was getting kicked from hotels.

Dishonored, oxygen-starved,
The head he used to stand on
Started to forget.
As fully conscious creatures
We crossed and never met.

Dreamlike, the wit of my childhood.
Then the repeated stories
Of which I retain a store.
By the time I grew into patience
There was less to be patient for.

Then I was off to college;
My mother, thirty years younger
Than he, a nurse in jail;
My father, forever failing,
Failing, failing to fail.

Nights when he gasped at nothing.
Calls to rouse the doctor
Out of bed to sustain
Lifeblood with a shot
Of oxygen straight to the vein,

Just one, for more would kill,
Deliverance enough that Dad
Woke to hack next day.
Fitful letters from Mom,
So little was there to say

Until a sudden call,
Senior year, that my father
Was lost, and I flew back,
The combat with his lung
Resolved by a heart attack.

My mother gone eight years,
My father thirty-seven,
The doctor now so old
He's surely gone as well:
Now it can be told.

Years afterward, my mother
Needed to speak of something
Once and then no more,
But first I had to swear
To secrecy. I swore.

That final breathless night
My mother, frantic, summoned
The doctor to inject
Air in my father's blood.
Now to no effect.

He reached into his bag.
Exaggerating his motions,
Leaving nothing blurred,
He raised a second shot.
Neither breathed a word.

My mother nodded faintly.
The ending came in peace.
The doctor knew the art
Of medicine and wrote
On the death certificate, heart.

But think of your father's family
By his first wife, who hated
The thought of me, and guess
What they just might now
Call me. Murderess.

I wanted you to know
But what I said tonight
Must never be said aloud.

I said I understood
And, furthermore, was proud.

Now she and those she feared
Are gone, or almost gone.
For reasons of my own
I want it known.
I want it known.

 

 

 

Transmigration


As kerosene climbs through a wick
Or sap through oak by the slow
Fire of transpiration,
So moisture from the saltpan
Has scaled the flesh and feathers
Of this long-fallen crow
And seeded it with crystals.
Alone with its blue shadow
As if on a shield of snow,
Half scavenger with a tough beak,
Now more than half a vessel
That might have served Versailles,
It challenges the sun
With a blistering salt eye,
Easy in the wisdom
That its fellows are nothing at all,
Serene in its lucky fall,
Its dazzling transmigration
From bird to the stabler kingdom
Of the gem and mineral.



©





Bruce Berger was born in Evanston, Illinois in 1938 and received a BA in English at Yale University. He dropped out of graduate work at Berkeley to pursue his own writing and has lived ever since in the American West and Mexico, except for three years working as a nightclub pianist in Spain. His prose books on the intersections of nature and culture in desert environments include The Telling Distance, which won the Western States Book Award and the Colorado Book Award. His poems have appeared in Poetry, Barron's, the Hudson Review and numerous other publications and anthologies, and have been collected in Facing the Music (Confluence Press, 1995). Further information about the author can be found on his website, at www.bruceberger.net.
If you need more, please let me know. Further information can also be found on my author's website, www.bruceberger.net

 



 
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