February 8, 2024

John Yohe

THE GHOST OF FRANK O’HARA

The ghost of Frank O’Hara taps me on
the shoulder whispering
and what about
the humor what about talks with the sun
and things that happen at the movies out
of sight of parents don’t forget the thirst
of being in Manhattan in the heat
and Coke the drink
remember too your first
love passion music though it might not come out
in words it’s there in you but I was sad
and said what good is humor in a poem
when people die Manhattan Fire Island
we
bought falafels which we thought weren’t bad
and walked to Central Park for space and some
children were laughing and he said ask them

from Rattle #32, Winter 2009
Tribute to the Sonnet

__________

John Yohe: “I wrote this poem in late 2001 or early 2002, and found working within a form helped me say things I wouldn’t have normally said. I had been thinking about the 9/11 attacks, wondering how Frank O’Hara would have responded and, in the same way he talked to the sun, I decided to talk to him. The phrase ‘the ghost of Frank O’Hara’ was in iambic, the rest of the poem sort of flowed out.” (web)

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May 24, 2017

John Yohe

MID-JULY TRIPOD LOOKOUT

around the rock island
butterflies aggregating
rubbing antennae

two robins attacking
a squirrel in white bark pine
for collected nuts

blue grouse startles
barely flying from a doug fir
into sage and lupen

light southwest wind
keeps flies off the catwalk
playing guitar on a bench

no clouds just one hawk
circling high in warm air
over High Valley

hummingbird hovers
snatching gnats from around radio antenna
dispatch broadcasting weather

monsoonal moisture
bringing thunderstorms by Sunday
chance of lightning

thinking about days off
in Boise with girls and women
emailing reviews

what to do come snow
where to live or travel
in October

from Rattle #55, Spring 2017
Tribute to Civil Servants

__________

John Yohe: “On and off, I’ve worked for the U.S. Forest Service and the National Park Service for sixteen years as a firefighter and now a fire lookout.” (website)

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July 25, 2013

Review by John YoheTen Thousand Voices by Rick Kempa

TEN THOUSAND VOICES
by Rick Kempa

Littoral Press
622 26th Street
Richmond, CA 94804
ISBN 978-0-9889694-0-7
2013, 80 pp., $16.00
www.littoralpress.com

I continue to think of Rick Kempa as the Poet Laureate of the American Southwest: Based in Rock Springs, Wyoming, Kempa is an avid backpacker/explorer, especially of the Grand Canyon. He’s also busy: In addition to this latest book of poetry, Ten Thousand Voices, he has an upcoming book of his own essays on hiking in the Colorado Plateau, as well as two anthologies he’s edited, one of poetry, one of essays, about the Canyon (through Vishnu Temple Press). And though Ten Thousand Voices does have poems about the Southwest and the Grand Canyon, including the great, “What the Canyon Teaches,” it also contains poems about Kempa’s travels elsewhere in America, including Vermont, and my old stomping grounds, Michigan. In fact, this book is about America, and Kempa reveals himself, not as just a regional poet, but as an American poet.

Although the general theme of the book is travel, the real subject is the people that Kempa meets and talks to along the way, their voices become the poetry, showing that voices are poetry. The best example of this, and one of my favorites of the collection, is “Invitation,” which begins:

If you come here tonight, I’ll show you everything
that shaped my day: How Megan put the tail from the pig-
roast in my hand, and Jack shouted, “Stop! Two lady-
bugs are fucking on your head!” Found a marble. Larry
said, “Work is prayer.” Women in Tibet use cow dung

for mascara. Climbed a sycamore. Sartre wrote, “Being
is doing.” Heard the first cicada drone: No thing
too big we can’t join hands around, and you will show me
what you found, if you come here. …

“Invitation” is also a good example of Kempa’s use of the prose poem, which, I feel, allows for a more casual-sounding (although that description is deceptive) language, maybe because it invites in a more story-telling/narrative style. Meaning more approachable. Meaning closer to a “spoken” voice. The human voice as poetry.

I also love the juxtaposition of the quote from Sartre with the quotes from Larry, and even Jack, all three equally meaningful bits of philosophy (should not we all pause to observe the small miracles in life, like ladybugs fucking on our heads?). At first I took this poem to be an example of how poets find the truly interesting people in life, but then I realized that Kempa is saying everyone is interesting, all ten thousand voices of us, and it just takes noticing them. That’s what a poet does best maybe, is notice, which serves as a reminder that we could too.

That said, another function of the poet is as “wiseperson” and teacher of, and for, the tribe, and Kempa’s voice has a compelling power, especially when used in a musical, chant-like way, using lists and repetition to build energy, like in another favorite of mine, “History of My Water Bottle, June 20th 1986,” in which each line is a description (one more voices!) of all the people who filled a younger hitchhiking Kempa’s water bottle on one given day. Or in the aforementioned “What the Canyon Teaches”:

… How few are your needs. Sip, nibble, nap, lack nothing.
How strong is your body, forgiving of abuses and neglect.
How simple is your task, a sequence of sure steps.
How safe you are on this earth, if you attend to it.

How intricate, how lush, life is. Sit still, know its wealth.
How precious is each moment you are privileged to draw breath.

__________

Born in Puerto Rico, John Yohe grew up in Michigan, and currently lives in Portland, Oregon. He has worked as a wildland firefighter, deckhand/oiler, runner/busboy, bike messenger, wilderness ranger, as well as a teacher of writing. He has lived in Mexico, Spain, France, and traveled to six continents. His first full-length collection of poetry, What Nothing Reveals, is out now. His work has appeared previously in such journals as Fence, Rattapallax, Rattle, and The Hat. A complete list of his publications, and poetry, fiction and non-fiction writing samples, can be found at his website. (www.johnyohe.com)

 

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March 12, 2009

John Yohe

YOU MIGHT

Some women let you feed them chocolate chip cookie dough ice cream
            spoonful by spoonful
Some women let you brush their hair before going to bed
Some women seem so terrified of contact you feel sad
Some women wonder why you are so scared of contact
Some women like to be alone, but not a lot
Some women have good relationships with their mothers though I don’t
            know if they’re in the majority
Some women dress sexy then get mad when you want to have sex with them
Some women just laugh at you
Some women write poems you want to fuck
Some women will tell you stories while you masturbate even though they
            would rather you fuck them
Some women will fuck you

Some women seem to decide whether they want to marry you or not in the
            first month
Some women get confused when you don’t want to
Some women don’t want children but will rarely admit it in public
Some women have children alone because fuck it
Some women don’t watch tv, but not a lot
Some women go to movies alone, though not a lot
I don’t know any woman who will go backpacking alone
Some women play guitar or saxophone and you want to be with them just
            for that, even if they have a history of insanity in their family

Some women eat spaghetti with chopsticks
Some women smoke pot daily
Some women talk about writing screenplays
Some women actually do
Some women marry rich men because they think the men will be good providers
Some women even tell themselves that they love these men
And when they eventually divorce they marry other rich men for the same reason
And though some women might marry men who earn less money, this causes problems

Some women wanted to be vampires when they were girls
Some wanted to be mermaids
Some wanted to be catwomen with purple fur and tails
Some women act more like girls than some girls, and versa vice, and both are
            more attractive because of that though you’re not sure you want to
            be with either

Many women will take any excuse to skinny-dip
Some women like sex though many need some catching up to do
Some women have more porn on their computers than you
Some women take their clothes off for money, though these women are not
            recommended
Some women are more attractive when they have a boyfriend or husband
Some women bake pumpkin pies and carry them on the plane as a present
            when they visit you in New York
Some women sound relieved when you call and say you just can’t move to
            Seattle to be with them
Some women keep trying to interest you even after you have moved out,
            which hurts more than the moving out
Some women have been fucked (up) by their fathers and will never be right
            and it’s not your fault though it maybe seems like it and feeling sorry
            for them is not a reason to stay
Some women are fine with being with you for the month you spend in
            Salamanca and won’t even necessarily cry when you say goodbye in
            Madrid, though you might

Some women like men
Some are scared of men
Some seem to feel both at the same time, which makes you feel weird
Some women will wait for you to decide to get your life together, though not
            a lot, and not forever anymore, if that was ever true
Some women are right there, visible, with bruises
just like yours

from Rattle #29, Summer 2008

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