April 22, 2022

Mike Bove

TO MY SON ON SEPTEMBER 15th

It matters that your grandfather is dead.
My father, who spoke to you as equal
and let you help refinish furniture

and hunt for sea glass. It matters
tonight when I find you crying in bed
with his photo. We talk, and when that fails

I try the only other thing I know:
we go outside to walk the dog and watch
the leaves twitch with moon. I see the stars.

Your grandfather taught me about the stars, I say,
and right then we see a bright tail flare and fade.
You tell me it’s your grandfather who heard us

talking, and your sobs call the dog to nose your hand.
Later, your voice is whisper when I tuck you in.
It was him, you say, that shooting star.

It wasn’t. But I can’t bear to say it, so I hold you
until goodnight, and afterward I consider the sky
and its voices, words shared with my father

before he died, the movement of space, pushing
corners of our universe together, pulling others apart.
He didn’t hear us. He couldn’t have, but

in my room much later, the house asleep, the sky
above, I move to the window and watch, because
what do I really know about anything?

from Rattle #75, Spring 2022

__________

Mike Bove: “These days, I write more and more poems about memories and small parts of my days. There’s plenty of big things going on in the world right now; I like paying attention to things that feel a bit smaller.”

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June 24, 2015

Mike Bove

OUR NERUDA

My mother gave me a book
of Neruda’s poems
with a beautiful inscription
and when I got mad
I tore it out, sold the book
in a yard sale. Christ,
I wish I hadn’t done that.
Not for Neruda
but for her,
for that inscription
as the last part of her,
last evidence
of her influence and care.
Neruda wrote with green
ink as a symbol
of private hope and desire.
Halfway between duty and desire
I lay awake trying to remember
what she wrote, something
about lasting love
and the slow grind of years apart,
something beautiful,
but I’ve said that,
something I’ll never
remember because
I tore out the page,
sold the book
in a yard sale.
And now every day
feels like a torn page,
like my Neruda in a stranger’s hands,
so each morning I write
a new inscription
on my mind’s first page:
always beautiful,
always in green.

from Rattle #47, Spring 2015

__________

Mike Bove: “The older I get the more important poetry becomes. So many of us forget the wonder of the world as we age, forget the strangeness of common things in the face of routine familiarity. The poetry I love always restores that wonder, and I try to be mindful of that when I write.”

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