Patrick Rosal
Man Hanging Upside Down
"I never knew the body could bend so many ways…"—Melissa Roxas
Here is a man hanging upside down,
 from a makeshift cross.  
 No credible witness can seem to tell us 
 his name or where he comes from.  
 Let the record show, 
 he did lie in at least seven dozen bits,  
 until the local birds plucked his scraps 
 from the river. They carried first an elbow,  
 then a toe, then half a skull and so on, 
 piecing the body together again 
 incorrectly: left arm for right, 
 an eye for a thumb, a moonlight for knees, 
 until he hung again from the cross 
 he was nailed to in the first place  
 at the intersection of Jordan and Faith, 
 and truth be told, few of us notice  
 how often those ragtag blackbirds
 have come to squawk at every window in town. 
 Who is to say if this man hanging upside down
 was corrupt or loved, only that some birds 
 set themselves in the middle of the night
 to the aerial miracle of silt made flesh, 
 a crew of winged scoundrels, some half-mute, half-blind,
 that plucked a body’s remnants from muddy banks  
 and at the crossroads of Faith and Truth Be Told
 reassembled the figure of a man 
 who must surely ache, the way he strains to turn
 his gaze away from so many nations at once.
The Parable of the Disappeared Man
I’d been alone a long time on the rotting pier when an old man finally  came upon me.  
 And with my first mouth, this is what I offered him: the story of a  soldier who spent six months repairing a beat-up tractor in the  crumbling plaza of a forgotten town. I offered the town’s bright murmur  of children as they came out in twos and threes to watch the soldier  bang at the relic and crawl about it with a rusted c-wrench. And then I  offered all the bells the soldier stole to adorn the tractor, the  ten-foot spire of wire and mesh he erected on the back of the tractor to  accommodate the bells that wouldn’t fit on the tractor itself. I  offered the old man the day the soldier drove the tractor around the  plaza. I offered the children who chased him and the air about that  plaza simmering with chime.  
 The old man didn’t laugh but he gave me a pair of feet, and though they  fit me well, he said I couldn’t yet leave.  
 So I put the shoreline of the east in my second mouth and offered the  old man this story of a boy who ate his own caca and grew to be taller  and stronger than anyone in the village, taller and stronger than the  tallest and strongest men in the surrounding villages, how he grew so  big he bruised his mother’s tit when he suckled, and this is how he grew  up to be ashamed and only spoke when the whole village was weeping or  asleep.  
 The old man didn’t laugh at this either, but he gave me eyelids, and  though they suited my face, he told me I couldn’t yet shut my eyes.  
 I put the battered cities of the north in the third of my mouths and  told the old man next about the dog who saved the rooster from the blade  and the story of the seven identical violins and the story of the  bullet that struck the stone for wine and the naughty old women who  carried that wine nine miles in their mouths to bring it to their  lovers. And I went on like this for days, offering stories until the old  man gave me ears, knees, the nerves of my left hand, everything I ever  had before I was first human.  
 And then I put an archipelago on my last tongue, and what I couldn’t  hold there, I kept in mismatched hands also given me by the old man. I  held out the archipelago and its excess like this, so the old man could  see all its islands, and I told him the story of the lieutenant who  packed all the families of seven barrios — the rich, the poor, the  vagrant — into a mansion, clothed them, fed them well, and when the  people were done feasting in the cavernous salon, the lieutenant told  them to stand together at the mansion’s massive front windows. They were  to face the road. They were not to speak or move. They were not allowed  to cry or else the lieutenant’s boys would shoot them.  
 And the lieutenant tied the conductor of the choir to a hefty post in  the road so that all the citizens crammed against the glass could see,  and the lieutenant pricked the man of music three times with no more  than the tip of a corporal’s bayonet. His squadron followed, pricking,  for hours, the choirmaster with no more than the points of their  bayonets. And the people of the barrios didn’t turn away. They held  their children still, gagged them with their fingers still reeking of  pork and rum. They didn’t cry, even after the choirmaster fell slack.  
 By the time I finished the last story, the sun had come up on a Tuesday  on both the old man and me. I looked at the old man with my only eyes,  and the pupils of the old man on the pier widened. They grew and grew.  They grew until his head burst open, and he reached inside the skull,  through the throat, and into his thorax, and from the grotto of his  chest, he pulled out a sad red bird still beating, and gave that to me  last. I knew then he meant for me to go out and tell the story that  begins: A long time ago, there was a man who gave a stranger a fat red  finch to carry in his bosom, and in those days, you should know, that  was all the sadness in the world.
Guitar
For Shiela who wants to learn to play
The bottom end’s a little shallow 
 and you might need to shim the bridge 
 to hush the fifth-fret buzz. The action’s low 
 and the neck, a tad warped, but I swear,
 this thing sings. For ten years, 
 I’ve accompanied lovers, convicts, and children 
 with this guitar, bought it with my last 
 hundred bucks, fifty more perhaps
 than it was worth that day. 
 I just wanted to touch nylon again,
 to play the way my Uncle Eli used to, 
 ‘til cancer mugged him for his lungs. He sang, Sheila,
 and the guitar did too. And that kind of singing 
 was like eleven acres of sky to a nine-year-old kid 
 terrified of a 50 mile-per-hour hard ball. 
 The summer my father came back 
 from burying his mother in the Philippines,
 he told my brother and me, the two oblong
 boxes he pulled off the luggage conveyor
 were ours. Once home, we pried the cardboard
 apart, tearing the packing tape
 and snapping the industrial staples 
 loose with our bare hands. I ran my fingers
 slow around the slick soundhole edge. 
 I stuck my nose into the strings to smell
 the jackfruit wood stewing inside 
 and when I pulled my face away, 
 the instrument made its first silken hum.
 I don’t know if you believe in time 
 the way I do, but when history touches us 
 it’s like hearing a skinny uncle sing 
 with a cigarette dangling from his lips
 without one note of misery in his dying, 
 and the guitar he’s holding is yours. 
 You might not understand the words sailing
 past you, but one day, years later, on a drive back
 to Rockland maybe, where an old woman 
 scolded you as a child or kissed the small bones
 of your shoulders, you may find yourself 
 singing, out of nowhere, that tune. I mean to say,
 I never thanked my father for that first guitar. 
 I smashed it in a tantrum against my heel 
 and didn’t own another until this one. 
 I should warn you, every guitar has its ghosts,
 and they’ll ask you whom you love and how much. 
 As for learning. your hands are going to ache  
a little while, but one day, when the chords come easy, 
 the guitar will whisper to you some old secret. 
 Whisper back. The most beautiful intervals are ancient
 and imperfect. They will teach you to love 
 something so deep, you will want 
 nothing better than to give it all away.
