ISAAC CATES


Fidelity and the Dead Singer

Image

for Michael Donaghy

If I set a new stylus on an old record—

my mother’s teenage single of Roy Head and the Traits,

a second-hand Howlin’ Wolf, the B-side of Hey Jude

I played until I couldn’t hear it—it’s the same catch,

same scratch, same scratch again, same clouds

of static subsiding into soft focus. The first beat

brings it all back home, the dead singer’s voice

alive like a recurring dream, or like a ritual

as a ritual wishes it could be, unreeling perfectly

over rhythms cherished to the point of sanctity.

Not so for poems. The blank before the words

has no voice of its own, and when the verbs

unfurl they change a little every time

—not in errors of transcription but in changes

of the throat the poem courses through:

grown lazy, gruff, impatient through the years,

or passing from your mouth to mine like a flu

then passing limply through a stranger’s lips

incognito, stumbling, in strange accents.

If only you were in the words, or between them.

I want to hear them again the way you said them:

the pauses, in accordance with your wishes;

the full stops, rough with markings for your breath.

from The American Scholar