Jake Adam York

Jake Adam York is a true Southern Gentleman, and his poems are products of his gentility, his demeanor, his wisdom, his manners.  And they are mannered, aren't they?  Extraordinarily civil, regimented in their diction, these poems tell their hard truths gently. To paraphrase the author, their lungs are full of lullabies.  Even when (especially when?) they sing of desolations.

Yeah, I'll say it: reading Jake Adam York is like drinking the smoothest of Bourbons. There's deep comfort in his words, and a hand at the ready to tip more whiskey in your waning glass. "Old as you were when you died / I climb into the range that swallowed you, / kicking through your lizards, / the thrasher’s dig, quail-call / and snow-capped sparrows / to find you reaching out..."  What careful, metered articulations he draws in his work. What sincerity.  Jake Adam York’s poems don't lie.  Ever.

Thanks, Jake.

 

***

 

Letter to a Friend 

          To N., from Denver

 

Friend, I’ve read the letter’s vanishing,

            displaced by e-mails, text-messages,

tweets, and indeed, the largest thump

                        the mailman leaves me

 

is always the Wednesday circulars

            proposing full-priced meats

as sales, though I leaf through every one

                        hoping that an envelope

 

may fall, as I scan my inboxes

            for the occasional name of someone

I’d like to buy a beer, the one message

                        in a month that doesn’t mean

 

more work, so it’s good to hear from you,

            to receive such tidings, and I hope

this finds you well, wherever you are.

                        June is closing here,

 

and the locusts no one should have planted

            are at last in full leaf, including

the one outside my study window, finally

                        clouding away the heat

 

so it’s possible to linger in the empty house

            and hold a sentence on the tongue

like a taste of scotch you breathe over

                        until it opens its story of home

 

and you believe, you truly believe

            you can see some Scottish glen,

the small town where anyone could tell you

                        that shirt isn’t doing anything

 

for your complexion, though

            they’re kind enough to let you stand

as the breeze offers clues of branchwater

                        sweetened by limestone’s kiss,

 

hectares of barley ready to graduate

            from the lectures of the sun, you

can almost taste the place itself

                        and so for a minute

 

are a citizen of this little town.

            More and more, the house

is like that, a hideaway that keeps unfolding

                        into itself and so gets bigger

 

each minute, until Sarah comes home

            and it contracts again, with all

its conversations, like this one we’re having,

                        however protracted,

 

like all letters, exchanges offered in comfort,

            no need to rush. Tomorrow

or tomorrow, when Sarah leaves, again

                        this letter’s here, and I return

 

to this place where I imagine we’re sharing

            a dram or a beer or a cup of tea

and working through some idea

                        of what it means

 

to know each other, how Glissant says

            partial harmonies arise everywhere

and converge toward a generalized disharmony,

                        meaning there is no

 

one tone or center, so everything’s like

            an Ornette Coleman album, everyone

trying to balance one vamp against the next,

                        and the rare chorus involves

 

as much divergence as convergence, one

            horn angling off in another direction,

or those Don Cherry sets from cafés in France,

                        the intros all in English,

 

the music in some other language altogether,

            or the brilliant negotiations

in Mingus’s “Folk Forms I” from the Live

                        at Antibes album,

 

a phrase proposed and repeated back

            and built up until they’ve found

a way of playing off one another

                        that says something

 

about what it means for everyone to be

            in the same place in the same time

in a way that no one has to be silent

                        in order to listen.

 

So Glissant says we renounce the indivisible

            and learn a new way of approaching

the world and this really is how each day is

                        here, the real letters

 

arriving from every quarter and everything

            falling not exactly into place

but into places, so when I read your letter

                        I am here, where you

 

have found me, but also there, and sometimes

            so vividly there you have to be here,

too, to keep everything in balance,

                        so while you are reading this,

 

again the sun rolls iron-bright against

            the cobalt of the Colorado sky

even as the night’s cool still circulates

                        in all the rooms so you

 

won’t get hot until the sun’s about ready

            to set, I am back in Alabama, maybe,

lying in the field my great-grandfather

                        terraced seven decades ago

 

where now only moonlight gathers

            and wait for the dark to deepen

and the stars to double, because memory

                        is like this, not a book

 

or even a room, but like the night sky,

            each point with its own space,

its own system and maybe planets even,

                        some older than others,

 

drawn together in a story so they’re all

            happening at once, or I am

eating breakfast again on the Plaza

                        in Kansas City, my grits

 

and grillades, after a weekend

            of barbecue and barbecue, maybe

better pictured miles south, and maybe

                        you are here too somewhere

 

or we are both back in Denver,

            drawn taut and also frayed

by this relation, and maybe we are both

                        caught in that moment

 

at the convenience store when we

            come up short for the Gatorade

and the granola bar and the dude behind us

                        kicks in the fifty cents

 

and says What’re brothers for? or we

            are in Atlanta at dinner where someone’s

talking about how the moons

                        of your fingernails could be

 

taken as a measure of race and they look

            at mine and say You sure

you’re all white? You know how this is,

                        whoever you are,

 

you’re also the character in the story

            someone else has in mind, and so,

you’re always two or three or more

                        different people, which is why,

 

friend, though I can’t remember right now

            where you’re writing me from

or even where we met, I guess it doesn’t matter,

                        because when you’re quiet

 

and anonymous, I imagine you

            are the part of me that imagines me

in a photograph or a kind of movie,

                        that watches me do

 

everything I do, that sends me a drink

            from the other side of the bar

so I know I’ve been seen or a letter

                        from the other side

 

of the country, say L.A. or Ithaca

or New Orleans, that lets me know

I’m also there, the story of me

                        having brought me there,

 

invited and so invented into a room

            where the light’s strange enough

to be peaceful, compendious,

                        and we can settle back

 

into some talk someone else might

            overhear and repeat inexactly,

creating yet other versions of ourselves

                        that stay there

 

in some conversation neither of us

            will remember or forget, one

we might even imagine when everything

                        goes quiet and these letters

 

fold in on themselves again,

            into everything. Then, friend,

wherever you are, you are also here,

                        wherever this is,

 

and you don’t recognize anyone

            but the bartender is leaning over

and putting the full glass on the napkin,

                        from your friend.

 

***

 

Gambel Rose

          after William Gambel, ornithologist, naturalist, doctor — 1823-1849

 

Old as you were when you died

I climb into the range that swallowed you,

kicking through your lizards,

the thrasher’s dig, quail-call

and snow-capped sparrows

to find you reaching out

in the one deep-lobed oak

the Rockies know, the tree

that returns your reach

by taking in and giving off

all it can, grasping Turbinella,

Chinkapin, Mohr,

the Harvard, the Arizona, the Gray,

the one fiber that ties them all

the thousand miles on to the sea.

On one rare leaf

your ten fingers reach

to every point on the compass rose,

and I wish I had your maps

to know the proper turn,

what each direction means,

which stream to pan for your bones.

Your chickadee leads on

into cold and snow,

and I see your passing through.

I’ll be slow following, far behind

with nothing left to name

except this place where I turn back,

which I name for you.

 

***

 

Somniloquy

 

What I say dreaming

drifts out the window,

collects itself

beneath the hedge.

Accent, inflection

go out walking,

a stop in each Broadway bar

where what I say

buys drinks and everywhere

tells my I love you

to someone new.

What I say

is having fun

in the porn arcade,

the techno clubs,

beneath the bridge,

this echo that says

I’m there,

evidence coalescing

in some unknown listen

till someone says

they saw me last night

and I am left

to wonder them

outside my building,

three-story stilts

or tall ladder catching moon,

and someone else asks

who’s that girl I was with

or why I hate them,

till I see myself

split at intersections

walking four routes, more,

through the town, a pollen

drifting for fertile ears,

while suggestion’s children

crowd beneath my window,

notepads open,

lungs full of lullabies.

 

***

 

About the Poet:

Jake Adam York is the author of three books of poems—Murder Ballads (2005), winner of the Elixir Press Prize in Poetry, A Murmuration of Starlings (2008, Southern Illinois University Press), winner of the Crab Orchard Open Competition and the 2008 Colorado Book Award, and Persons Unknown (2010, Southern Illinois University Press)—and a work of literary history, The Architecture of Address: The Monument and Public Speech in American Poetry (2005, Routledge). Originally from Alabama, he now lives in Denver where he is an associate professor of English and Director of Creative Writing at the University of Colorado Denver. He edits Copper Nickel with his students and colleagues and serves as a contributing editor for Shenandoah.

On the identity of The Nepotist:

One version of me imagines The Nepotist is me, and that I'm waking up and editing in my sleep. Another version knows it's someone else and that, when the Foetry.com was torching everyone, I had a conversation about this sort of thing with someone I know who is not me, but that version of me doesn't remember who I had the conversation with. A third version of me begins to speculate and creates a list of candidates, based on visible contacts: John Gallaher, G. C. Waldrep, Aaron Anstett, Kevin Prufer, a sentient Facebook cyborg, Richard Greenfield. A fourth version believe that for The Nepotist to maintain the secret, he or she will have to publish him- or herself eventually and the answer will lie among the included, which again, leaves open the possibility that The Nepotist is me.

 

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