Author: Ernest Hilbert

  • Poem: Chimera Times

    Chimera Times

    You’ve lived beyond your relevance—
    Another song, another age,
    Another line while in a trance,
    Routine by prompt, an empty stage.
    The art lives past the life, and all
    They want is what you did when young,
    The bright first thing, the curtain call,
    When fireworks flew and bells were rung.
    Yet still the audience appears.
    The props are now collectible,
    But all creation’s in arrears,
    And art is imperfectible.
    A shiver slices to your core.
    Your fans will get the eulogy
    Before you end the trilogy
    You started many years before:
    A snowball with a granite shard,
    The encore to an emptied hall,
    The dance all done, the classics played.
    Back then it was not so hard
    To be the major act, enthrall
    Your fans, at least the ones who stayed.
    A fad will rise, a bubble pop
    With the slightest touch. The greatest hits
    Came out before you called it quits,
    And “timeless love” was set to stop.
    You won the day but lost the war,
    Remembered as the one who did
    That thing, you know, the thing he did,
    The thing he does for one more tour,
    The thing he did, the thing he did before.


    Feature Image: The Chimera, by Louis Jean Desprez, 1777-1784. Source: The Metropolitan Museum of Art

  • Poem: The First of February

    The First of February

    Well, here’s a pile of puke on a bank of snow,
    Yoga-pants-purple, budget-cocktail-blue,
    Lava lurid as a toy volcano,
    Day-glo confetti frozen stiff as glue.

    The fire hydrant’s calked in hardened gum.
    A Phillies Blunt’s in a bottle of Pepsi
    Inside a purple Shark Week Slurpee,
    And it looks like someone pissed all over them.

    A ghost-ship umbrella is partway jammed
    In the snow heap’s side; its tattered black sail
    Of nylon flutters; a stroller is crammed
    Into a dumpster nearby. I’m stuck, a snail

    Inside a crusted, slowly draining tank.
    The chill in me is deeper than I’d like,
    My pockets packed with lint, the blue snowbank,
    Spiked with pink spokes of a Barbie bike.

    Lingerie spills from a cast-off backpack.
    The neon tubes are dismal, dark at dawn:
    DRAFT BEER now drab, the BAR sign simply black,
    Latimer Deli’s knife-steel grate still down.

    The stained-glass windows of McGlinchey’s Bar
    Are dead. The only thing that holds a light
    That’s real is melting snow, the run of bright
    Rills altering to echoes in the sewer.


    Feature Image: Daniele Idini

  • Poetry: Ernest Hilbert

    Spolia Opima

    Models, slender and famished as cheetahs,
    Shed their imperial haute couture
    Already in sweatpants, they hail their cabs

    Behind the Grand Palais before
    Applause dies down inside around
    The vacant runway. Afternoon sunlight’s

    Lambent overhead on friezes of Lutetian Limestone.
    Violinists grimace at their scores—
    Haydn, Hollywood, the B’s and Broadway hits,

    Rehearsal house-lights hard above,
    Rosin fine as cocaine settling on the boards.
    They’re not arrogant. They’re bored.

    They’re paid to make the beauty go.
    Why else? We all make beauty pay.
    Gourmands’ are all aglow as it arrives— 

    Voila, another flambé. Cherries, drenched
    In century-old brandy, burn like coals.
    The waiter itches to check his phone. He grins.

    I’m given to hyperbole, I know,
    But something’s got to me. It’s all around.
    You have to learn to make it pay you back.

    The bathroom’s OUT OF ORDER. Sewage seeps
    Into the restaurant. The manager’s
    Frantic, alone today. The line’s

    Become a mob. A voice from an SUV
    Barks at the drive-through speaker. In the back,
    Children cheer a whirl of color on a screen.

    I feel the boredom underneath the beauty.
    It’s weird, and getting desperate these days.
    In auction rooms, the arms go up. And . . . sold.

    The next exquisite investment’s on the block.
    The views—the hills, the seas—are still pristine for those
    Who can afford the heights. Who’s this beauty for?

    Beauty’s boring. I do go on and on,
    Don’t I? Oh, you have a nosebleed.
    Here, drip some in my drink. See this?

    Flick this switch. Now listen. Someone will scream.

     

    Crypt

    The cities burn above me as I sleep.
    I’m walled by trophies looted long ago
    Along the routes of conquest, centuries

    Of funereal remains, gold that’s dimmed
    By dust and bound by web, as valueless
    As the dirt that slowly takes it back again.

    I wake and wonder where I am. I move
    My arm and bottles clink. I raise my head
    Enough to see I must have drunk them all.

    I’m underground. I know because the light
    That works like stars in chinks is far
    Above me. Even in this dusk I find

    There’s something left inside a bottle here.
    Sitting up, I take a swallow and get it down
    Before I choke, and spit out warm urine.

    I half-remember falling off the edge
    Of the world. Then nothing else. I barely breathe,
    The air’s so thick and sapped of oxygen,

    A gas of churned-up worms and sporous loam.
    I want to learn the way back up. I try
    To name the things I see—sextants, I-Phones.

    An avian chorus summons me. What years
    Have gone? I fall toward sleep again. The soil becomes
    A lake that’s darker than the night. My dreams

    Are long as centuries, of wars and new words,
    All telling me “you are gone,” but I’m still here,
    Curled up, and cold, in my crown of amethyst.

     

    Apollinaris, Medicus Titi Imperatoris hic Cacavit Bene

    I check my e-mail. There’s nothing there for me.
    I check the wall. Not much, some recipes
    I’ll never cook, some boasts, some oaths, some jokes,
    Advice, little different from graffiti

    Scrawled on Roman stone two thousand years ago,
    Small bursts of unofficial human hopes,
    And on we go, unchanged, forever griping
    Era to era—it’s almost comforting—

    Election slogans packed in ash at Pompei,
    Billboards on the Temple of Bacchus at Baalbek,
    Winged lions tagged on the Great Enclosure,
    Signs of the Khufu Gang left in Giza,

    So many words, like air exhaled to air,
    Like tiny helium hearts escaping
    In a delirium of approval up a wall,
    Or displeased emperor’s thumb aimed down.

     

    Visit Ernest Hilbert

  • Visitations

    Come on in. Try our new Chicken Selects.
    Forget food. We should send them luggage.
    Watch this sexy star win in just five words.
    Do you like who your party elects?
    You could always reverse your mortgage.
    A better demographic is diehard nerds.
    We’ve never seen a storm like this before.
    Get cash: Sell us your diabetes strips.
    What’s worse than all is that the world won’t end.
    Buy “Flip This House” and be a millionaire.
    Call now to book amazing summer trips.
    You’ve typed up your break-up. Now hit send.
    Won’t you take a moment to show you care?
    We’ve never seen a storm like this before.
    Here’s one weird old trick to get rid of belly fat.
    Go on. Guess who just got a Guggenheim.
    It’s true. Everyone says you drink too much.
    A great run of growth has finally gone flat.
    It’s pointless in our time to use rhyme.
    You really are just entirely out of touch.
    We’ve never seen a storm like this before.
    A mob has formed outside the convention.
    We have no way of knowing what’s kept offshore.
    Please hang up now or choose an extension.
    We’ve never seen a storm like this before.

     

    Ernest Hilbert is the author of three collection of poetry, Sixty Sonnets, All of You on the Good Earth, and Caligulan, which was selected as winner of the 2017 Poets’ Prize. He lives in Philadelphia where he works as a rare book dealer, opera librettist, and book reviewer for The Washington Post. His poem “Mars Ultor” will appear in Best American Poetry 2018.