In “Stay Thirsty,” Ten New Daily Poems [by David Lehman]

LEHMAN splash Stay Thirsty

Stay Thirsty Magazine
 is honored to present the following ten, never-before-published, original poems by David Lehman and to continue our special relationship with him that began with a Conversation in the Fall 2014 edition of our magazine.

From my work-in-progress, which will reflect my practice of writing a poem every day since August 1, 2020.                                             — David Lehman on the following ten poems.

Mudcat

(June 12, 2021)

Mudcat Grant died today

possessor of one of the great baseball monikers

victor in game six of the 1965 World Series

the year Koufax refused to pitch game one

because Yom Kippur fell on that day

and did more for Judaism with that one gesture than

even Harry Belafonte singing Hava Negilla,

but I stray from the point,

the passing of Jim “Mudcat” Grant

who won twenty games that season,

and even though he pitched for the opposition

I couldn’t help admiring him

on the mound on the day before

Koufax shut out the Twins on two days’ rest

The Master of Gamblers (II)

(June 23, 2021)

You begin with a title,

“The Master of Gamblers”

by Caravaggio,

and you run with the idea,

the words, not the painting:

a school for gamblers

with majors in casino science

(roulette, poker, blackjack)

and track management,

the stock market,

and the aesthetics

of athletics (the next big thing)

with required readings

in Pascal, Baudelaire,

Dostoyevsky and

mandatory viewings

of Guys and Dolls

and The Cincinnati Kid.



The French Revolution

(July 15, 2021)

The French Revolution

still leads the league

with the Russian Revolution

a distant second

and the gap is widening

as the Jacobins stage an uprising

while the Russians renounce the Soviet idea

(except for the KGB)

and we wonder: can we expect

dictators along the lines of Napoleon before long,

and what about Metternich and the Congress of Vienna?

For the other seven poems, all from Summer 2021, click here for the rest of the feature in Stay Thirsty.

Stay Thirsty Magazine

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Author: The Best American Poetry