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2014-12-09_TwoPoems_Shaheen.jpg

Two Poems by Glenn Shaheen

December 9, 2014

JUBILATION

 

Let’s party. Like, I want to be a believer in the power

of dance, the point of the party. There are individuals

in every corner, bellies filled with animal something.

Is it desire-- I don’t want to crush it. I have playlists.

The pulse that reminds us of being held close to a chest

in safety. Feelings, nothing more, pushing their way

out. Who knows how to dance? I’m willing to shuck

this shell. You know me, and you know me well. Nations

of concern filling the floor, talking up their best points

in intense negotiation. Politics, pollution, individual

translations of all our venoms. Let’s talk it up, let’s get

some kind of dance going here. All I have is fantasy,

a good enough start. Outside, the neighbors hear the music

drained of treble by the walls. Tell me they’re not imagining

a dance, and I want to give them one. Let’s give them one.

You can dance close to me, you can dance on the other side

of the room. Forget what exists underneath this floor, what

graves have been covered over. As vocals are drowned out

by the drums, the party erupts unstoppable beyond the walls.

 


 

SUGAR LAND

 

Holiday shopping – I don’t hate it, the bows

strung up along the windows of all the chain

stores, angels, nativity murals. What’s wrong

with a little brazen capitalism, the paper

suits of restraint thrown away for the season.

Who cares about the corporation, and all

the little evils it’s done, and who cares about

the company? When I was younger, a coworker

wanted me to watch <em>Gone With The Wind</em>

at her place. I had never seen it, I was not

interested in a Southern Narrative. Afterward

she showed me her Scarlett Room, done up

in collector’s plates, a canopy bed. Some

worship of the antebellum, I hated it, living

there, the movie almost as much. A Civil War,

the country is always divided. It is just

that Sherman burned Atlanta. Outside

ice formed on the cars in Kissimmee,

but nobody had scrapers. It was winter,

it was shortly before my brother went to Iraq.

On television when they announce the death

of the infamous terrorist in a special forces

raid, they make us relive all of the evil

he’s caused in clips edited together

with a dramatic orchestral score. Here

it is Texas, and Christmas colors the suburbs.

In Sugar Land there are shopping malls, but

that’s not wrong. All of the onramps have

the Imperial Sugar Company’s old crown

carved elegantly into them, but the factories

were turned into luxury hotels years ago,

they earned it. I don’t eat sugar, I shop only

in times of need or desire but what does

that mean. Ants spilling from the seams

of the hotel rooms, cars crowding into lots.


Glenn Shaheen is the author of the poetry collection Predatory (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2011), and the flash fiction collection Unchecked Savagery (Ricochet Editions, 2013). Energy Corridor, his second collection of poetry, will be published by the University Of Pittsburgh Press in 2016.

Photos by Christian Sorensen Hansen, West Coast based ocular illusionist. See more at http://christiansorensenhansen.com/.

In Poetry Tags Glenn Shaheen, Poetry, Jubilation
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