Seth Simons - Poem Series

Pandemic Variations

I. First as Tragedy

Everything seemed bad 
& was. I lost the weight  
I wanted to lose. Fall came 
in an explosion of dead trees. 
Boom! went the trees—I kid.
They went quietly as old dogs.
Cheese softened. Little men 
scaled the porticoes & pointed
their guns at us. I was offered 
as sacrifice—no, I offered myself. 
Aha! Foolish little men, always
stuffing sand into your pockets.
Here is one fistful more.


Everything seemed bad
& was worse. I couldn't
sleep. Teacups shattered 
all night long & smog fell,
crystallized & diced us 
from within. I rose above 
it all, or was hoisted.  
Some days you’re executioner, 
others . . . Two centuries 
later the monks untied me 
& I asked for you. For who? 
I had already forgotten . . . 


Everything seemed bad 
& was fine. Bread rose. 
We made love in the kitchen,
on the patio. For a time light
was not something we saw by 
but dissolved into—snowfields, 
pastures . . .  
to have seen so many ghosts 
you no longer think of them
as ghosts, more as shells 
under your feet, shells  
becoming sand . . .  
& this dread 
like bats in the chimney. So be it.
We shook dirt from our boots;
we shook dew. At last the fleet
arrived, but not to save us.


Everything seemed bad 
& then it was over. 
& it was better.  
& no one screamed. 
& rain plinked  
against the rooftops.
& filled the gutters.
& filled the streets.
& we were two frogs 
on separate lily pads. 
hello! I said. 
who? you said.  
& the river swelled . . . 


II. Second as Tragedy 

Everything seemed great  
& I couldn’t see it, my eyes 
coated in a thin slime 
undecipherable by scientists 
& sages alike—malodorous,  
warm as honey & giving off 
a faint radioactive glow.  
Shuttled from specialist  
to specialist I developed  
a sort of echolocation 
by whose means I mapped  
perfectly the marbled institute
to which I was inevitably  
condemned. No, abandoned—
left like seeds in some Norwegian vault 
to sit motionless until the future 
cracked & I was called to save it. 
Or so I told myself. Alone, I sent 
my little beeps & they returned
magnificent balustrades, lunettes,
bay windows & the unreachable
country I vowed to destroy. 


Everything seemed great
& I hated it. Implacable 
as a starfish, I told whoever
passed what I thought  
of their happiness, how 
I considered it a form  
of torture crueler than  
the sun, how like the sun 
its cruelty astonished me,
blinded me, wrested me  
daily from the sleep I love.
They laughed at me; they 
floated past me like pollen 
crusted on the surface of a lake. 
I would have to drown myself 
in their happiness, maybe then 
they would listen.


Everything seemed great  
until I got closer. Trees  
drooped. The edges of what  
I loved peeled like wallpaper.  
My mother & father were not  
my mother & father but an artist’s 
rendering of my mother & father 
below an umbrella, a clear umbrella 
splattered to the point of opacity. 
What a disappointment! I said. 
What a disappointment! they said. 
Walking back to the hotel I pretended
I was not the sum of my mistakes
but the remainder, each one siphoned
out of me like venom, only a few more 
(love, ashes; how I pictured us—) to go . . . 


Everything seemed great  
& I didn’t want it.  
Or I wanted more.  
Or I wanted what I had 
lost. Or was losing. Or what  
like fog receding left me 
with a clarity so clear 
it sliced me open. & what 
spilled out was less the shape 
of me than shapes I’d nearly 
grown into—old skin I dreamed
I might wear once, cruelties I almost 
thought forgivable, slights I swore 
I'd forgive . . . What was it you told me,
last we told each other anything? 
I’ve forgotten. That’s not true. 
I remember perfectly. It’s what I said, 
it’s what I said back I’ve let vanish. 
And the meadowgrass, shaking. 
And the meadow.

Karolinn FiscalettiIssue 7