July 7, 2021

Roy Bentley

THE DEATH OF THE BOX TURTLE

I’m pretty sure that when she was dying
and sang “Amazing Grace” to him, she wasn’t
recalling running after him down the long hill 
of Comanche Drive, spitting up burst bubbles
of blood from some dark place deep inside her. 
He was her grandson. Old Devil, she called him. 
The before-and-after photograph of a kid falling 

from the top of the playground slide or executing 
a dive off a refrigerator-top, educating the knees
of the umpteenth pair of Levi blue jeans
with kneeling in tar and brake fluid blotted 
from the carport floor. Once, as a sort of joke, 
he tied her apron strings to the slats of her rocker
as she dozed before Search for Tomorrow.

When Bobby—that was his name—was 8 or 9, 
he would go out and come in, come in and go out, 
slamming doors until there was no escaping him.
And he announced his boredom one afternoon
by jimmying a steel crossbar from a swing set
at the edge of the orchard behind our house
and bludgeoning a turtle to death with it—

where the steel had gone in, a shell fracture
revealed bloody interior curves. Bobby and I
recalled the death of the box turtle years later, 
after the other wreckage of childhood 
had retracted. We were driving back
from my having read poetry for a good fee
at a university in the Midwest. I was buzzing,

full of Merlot and poached salmon. Nothing 
could’ve been further from my mind than
his handiwork come back in the phrase
Granny always liked you best. We were men.
Such things should have been put away long ago,
left to drift like the odor of rotting windfall apples
in orchards at the end of autumn. They hadn’t been.
I want to say the turtle expired easily, bled out,

the beneficiary of some unexpected grace loosed 
like manna from the sky over Kettering, Ohio.
Truth is, it’s going took forever—someone else 
had filled in the turtle’s wound with clods of earth,
some plump child perhaps trying to reconstruct something 
in his or her image. Maybe some future veterinarian.

I want to say Bobby healed and all that pain fell away, 
sloughed like shell a reptile head telescopes in and out of 
to touch smell hear see bright Nothing, if nothing else.
But healing is part forgetting, a search for tomorrows.
He didn’t heal. He might have, had the song gone on 
and Granny Potter, weak of heart, diabetic, come back
from the country of memory, some “holler”—

up from the deathbed of her terribly important one life.
Which, come to think of it, was what she did, 
choosing Bobby to sing to before she died:
her piercing a Capella dirge of “Amazing Grace”
sounding in a hospital room by a creek where turtles
drank (had forever) and trudged off, small,
liminal, pitifully slow in the light.

from Rattle #72, Summer 2021
Tribute to Appalachian Poets

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Roy Bentley: “Bob Ramsdail’s mother and my mother and father were from Letcher County in the eastern part of Kentucky on the border with Virginia. A little town called Neon. So we’re hillfolk, first generation out of the hills. Hopefully, a poem strips away the ‘shell’ of practice to touch a place of strip-mined hillsides and cruelty for breakfast, lunch, and dinner—part of who we are.”

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December 11, 2013

Roy Bentley

RINGO STARR ANSWERS QUESTIONS ON LARRY KING LIVE ABOUT THE DEATH OF GEORGE HARRISON

First, Larry King mistakenly calls Ringo
George then asks him whether his passing,
George’s, was expected. He answers that it was.
Says they knew he was sick. Had lung cancer.
I’m watching, though it’s none of my business
how grief-stricken Ringo Starr was and likely
still is or whether he was there, at the bedside,
at the moment George left his life for some other,
if you can believe what George believed, which
was that we keep coming back till we get it right.
And when Ringo is about to let down his guard
and be a bit more self-disclosing, even honest,
Larry interrupts, asking, Do you ever want to
pinch yourself?
And Ringo Starr says, Sure.
In 1988, years before, in another interview,
with George, this years after Lennon’s death,
Ringo confessed that he was the poorest Beatle
then laughed and blew cigarette smoke upward.
Which must’ve seemed terribly funny to George,
an inside joke, because he said Hello, John to
the smoke like it was Lennon (by virtue of his
acknowledged wealth) or some spirit he used to
conquer worlds with. Ringo says he was shocked
upon hearing the news of the death of John Lennon,
but that George’s death was another thing entirely.
He doesn’t quote from the Bhagavad Gita, but it’s
as if he wants to say we continue on, are these spirits,
a sort of outrageous bliss even to think it, dumb luck
on the order of being hired as the Beatles’ drummer.
Maybe he would have said it, with respect to George
or ventured his own beliefs, if Larry hadn’t butted in
to ask him which of the Beatles was the best musician.
You mean, now? And I want to laugh now because
maybe Ringo’s imagining how hard it is to move
your hands after you’re dead, or to move at all,
and how impossible it must be to keep time
and tempo in all that anonymous blankness,
the dark become your most imploring fan.

from Rattle #40, Summer 2013

[download audio]

__________

Roy Bentley: “I’ve been writing since I saw the movie Easy Rider in Dayton, Ohio, in 1969. Writing poetry seemed like letting your hair grow long, which my father would never allow. Writing was an act of defiance. Of course it soon became a way to make sense. And then I heard Dylan Thomas read ‘Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night’ and there was no turning back.” (www.roy-bentley.com)

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