Saturday, May 14, 2016

That Album Creeped Me Out

The first time is on the floor, arms locked round knees.
They are playing Hair. She cracks up
when she sees me, rocking side to side.“He’s getting off!” she squeals—and then I realize it, too.
She is older—twenty eight or twenty nine,
living with a man who scares me.

That album really creeped me out,
being the butt of its stale joke—
andas it seemedhers as well.

Monday, May 2, 2016

Campaign Overload

campaign overload:
ph’losophers, poets, political thinkers,
cigar smoking bosses of the left and the right,
dancers and dreamers, scotch whisky drinkers,
bikers and bankers and girls of the night,
real estate agents and rodeo riders,
the preacher, the teacher, the doctor, the nurse,
sales girls, shoe shiners, and wall street insiders
a transgender dude with high heels and a purse,
‘lectricians and plumbers, lawyers and judges,
embattled spouses, harboring grudges,
high strung sopranos and indulgent maestros,
busboys and waiters, headshrinks and psychos,
citizens all—what a motley collection--
and they all get to vote in every election.

Boots on the Ground













yesterday--a wiser man than me
wrote in the morning paper
that we should happ'ly send our troops
(seven thousand will do)
into the jaws of hell
fourteen thousand boots upon the ground
times ten, tiny toes their mothers kissed
this little piggy went to market
this little piggy stayed home…forward, march!
while those who welcome death
could hardly be more pleased
may each marching combat boot
find my buried bomb
oh, you clever Prophet (PBUH)
who doles those virgins’ thighs
to all your faithful cohort
that in your service dies--
while angry Moses hurls his stones
--and gentle Jesus cries

On Stealth
















On Stealth

if you could prowl the forest, so stealthly, 

that you would not arouse a browsing doe—

if you could linger by slow waters

to gaze upon Diana bathing,
yet not stir her wary hounds—

if only you could stand so silent
that you heard the clouds collide—

--and if only mighty wings would sprout
from where your arms now swing,
then you could leave your cares along the path
and with the eagles fly

Madonna in Gingham

Madonna in Gingham



last leg home last night, a red-eye from Atlanta in a boxcar with wings, teeming with families from lands where Zika thrives.
several families, too, in garb I associate with the Amish: men in grey trousers and bland plaid shirts; their women in ankle length gingham, hair pulled back in tight buns and capped with white lace kepis.
or am I mistaken? how do the shunners of cars and tractors, and drivers of teams along Rte 30 justify travel in Boeing 757's?
regardless, by all appearances they are a fecund lot. One of these women, buxom, and 22 at the oldest, carried a six month old of indeterminate gender, and led a tender 3 year old boy in a straw cowboy hat. The boy was carrying a steaming dinner in a bulging McDonald's sack. His father carried the middle child of this sequence, and I have little doubt the mother carried a fourth, yet out of sight.
Long of leg and weak of bladder, I had selected the aisle seat, but when the mother looked at me with those weary eyes--eyes the color of the pale blue gingham that draped her, and a complexion matched only by Raphael's Madonna--and asked if I would take the window seat--what could I do? She took the aisle, and the little boy--himself sprung from Raphael's brush--sat between us.
As the plane climbed among the stars, the boy's tiny fingers worked through a bag of french fries. Gastric juices flooded my mouth. The father, in the middle seat before him, passed some lurid colored iced beverage back and forth with his wife.
By the time the plane had swung round toward its destination, the boy had fallen asleep, his head in the crook of my arm. The infant issued a few subdued squeals and thrust out its arms and legs--and then--judging by the odor no less dense and permeating than the french fries--released its bowels--then sank into slumber.
Save for the two plangent voiced swains seated behind me, who laughed and bragged the entire flight about their prowess at golf and women, the cabin fell silent.
Sleep impossible, I pulled out the yellowed edition of Tortilla Flat. I had read Steinbeck's little masterpiece when young, and recalled many of the vivid passages. But only now did I hear its lilting voice, and understand the pathos that underpinned its gentle wit.
It was fitting, then, to read the passage about the fertile but husbandless Senora Teresina Cortez.
Teresina's body "...was one of those perfect retorts for the distillation of children," Her house was full of "...creepers, crawlers, tumblers, shriekers, cat-killers, fallers-out-of-trees; and each one of these charges could be trusted to be ravenous every two hours." And each one, the issue of a different father.
A study in contrast, then, in all visible respects--Teresina and our blue eyed Madonna. But what hidden commonalities did they share?

4-6-16

Yes, He's Breathing

It could have been hilarity,
it could even have been rage,
the bellowing that rang across the busy street--
it could have been a woman,
it could have been a child,
I could have turned my head to see--
but so intent was I
on dodging filthy mounds of snow,
and the pleading eyes of panhandlers
sprawled against the wall--
but then he lurched across the street,
through traffic willy nilly,
and collapsed, fetal like,
against a rank of rental bikes.

I doubled back and whipped out my phone
as he uncoiled, and kicked out so hard
bikes went over like dominos.

--Yes, the corner of ellsworth and fenton
--Yes, he’s breathing
--Maybe 30--or even younger still
--Yes, I will wait til they arrive...

Squatting, I grasped his fist--
--can you tell me your name?
ARRRGGGGG!
--it’s ok, help is on the way...

Then he kicked again,
spinning himself on his hip--
three more bikes went over.
I stood to give him space
as another man in business dress
caught the action on his shiny phone.

...and yes of course I stayed until
some lanky boys in blue
sauntered from the ambulance,
snapping on their rubber gloves--
one even knew the man,
and called him by his name.

The crowd began to leave,
and I went on my way,
in search of sprouting daffodil--
knowing that they're weeks away.

To Any Chick Willing

Calling, scrawling, on a cat tail pod,
Wallowing in the billowing breeze--
A redwing black bird, trilling, shrilling,
To any chick willing, to share his seed.