Deer Stream
A programmer copy/pastes
an indestructible buck
onto our screens, and lucky us,
we have toned, cervine gluteobiceps
to occupy our eyes. We, like, realized
to replace human with deer
is to replace the whole
human. Virtually.
Virtually as in near to,
as proximity blesses belief,
as I just missed you this afternoon,
which trended with promise,
but ends in this knock-off handbag
of an evening, which is to say
we’ve already seen this sunset,
felt it work its invisible efficacies.
How we want to want:
with indiscriminate energy,
to need and need dearly, say,
the satchel’s precise silhouette
of Vermont country barn,
golden zipper teeth and
HENRI BENDEL NEW YORK
all caps across ample folds
of tenebrous leather,
a whole night’s bondage,
perhaps. Not that we
kept up appearances, knowing
it’s not money spent, per se,
but attitude of spending;
the deer feels immortal
is what matters.
Just think: some creatures
do what they want,
not what floats into view.
When you put your world
together, how is it finding
you’ve elected so few
of the feelings? Is this
what thirty-one was like?
I can hardly remember.
If it happened only once,
as ages must, I retain none of it.
On the screen’s simulated Los Angeles
you might find one good conversation
but forget to exchange names.
You return to the café,
but you aren’t looking for the person.
You look for what you left there:
a name. Later, in a world
of limitless digital possibility,
you have to choose what your car
says about you. Or to not
have a car, which means cash
in the purse, means having to steal
a lift, occasionally.
Look at this animal: what seems
intrinsically human in its eye
is merely rent-to-own,
dilation of any mammal
caught wanting.
For a moment, there’s
peace in the blind. Tonight,
how about quiet
isn’t stewing. How about
the first one to shout
loses.
Vessel
Do you not think this is ominous of good?
—Keats
Maybe clouds in the east
are past weather, ancient
Greek, obscure products
of telemetry needing
to become clear signal.
They are just clouds
copying how clouds looked
when they approached
from the west and were
younger, possibly prodigal,
they lent auspicious
shade to the meadow.
Tonight, I stand before
a mine shaft, this
deduction of hillside.
Pills lend a lavender light,
and lavender has a little pluck to it.
But you know this.
You have seen these vessels
yourself. That’s the point
of shipbuilding. The vessel. The end.
biography
Originally from coastal Maine, BILL CARTY lives in Seattle, WA. He has received poetry fellowships from the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, Artist Trust, the Richard Hugo House, the Sorting Room, and Jack Straw. He is the author of Huge Cloudy (forthcoming from Octopus Books) and the chapbook Refugium (Alice Blue Books). His poems have recently appeared (or will soon) in the Boston Review, Ploughshares, The Iowa Review, Willow Springs, Conduit, Poetry Northwest, Pleiades, the Volta, Oversound, Sixth Finch, and other journals. He is an editor at Poetry Northwest.