Monthly Archives: November 2007

Poem for Chris Branch

I met him
on a bus full of poets
in Baltimore

Funny guy, long
fellow always trying
to stretch out and sleep

in those cramped seats
with his cowboy hat pulled down
as low as it would go

Knew him for
five whole days
before the night

we argued about medications
outside a Boston club
Leaning against the wall

he told me he’d never agree
to take them
if it meant losing his poetry

I told him I’d rather
lose the poetry and keep
him alive

My bracelet matched his tattoo
I gave it to him
He hugged me and tugged

a woven silver ring
from his finger
and set it on mine

It was too big
I wore it
on my thumb

Several years later
while scouring the Web
I came across the news

that he’d hanged himself
a few months before
I dug out the ring

that now fit my fatter hand
I wear it still
on the nights

when I’m on stage
and feeling a rope
might fit me better

I wear your ring, Chris

I did not know you well enough
to bear your legacy
just well enough to remember it

Weary of its weight tonight
I remember
you had a son

One of these days I’ll find him
Give back the ring
Tell him the little I knew of his father

How you wore your hat
How you wore your ring
How you snored for miles and miles

Gentle on stage
Played a wooden flute
Hugged a stranger when it seemed right

I did not know you well
but I still have your ring
When I take it off for the last time

and hand it to your son
I will tell him of my promise to myself
that I will never learn your final secret

of how it feels
to let the man go
and leave the poetry behind


Incident on Mott Street

When she crossed Mott Street
toward me, her blonde-gone-to-gray hair
straying back in the evening wind,
I thought I might have known her once.

I thought I might have known her
when she was named Sandra
and she lived near me for a year or two.
We waited together
at the bus stop for school. Puberty
was just a morning hint then,
the kissing years were a year or two away.
I never really had
a full on crush upon her
(and she moved away soon after)
but many mornings kissing her seemed
all but inevitable,
I didn’t know exactly how
but suspected that
I’d kiss her someday at a party
because there were parties all the time
where older kids kissed,
the neighborhood was flooded with kissing
back then.

And now here she was on Mott Street
crossing toward me
again. We did look at each other
but it was evening.
She kept going.

I stayed on the corner
for one moment more
then turned and walked back
toward the Bowery,
turned down Elizabeth Street
past the few shops still open and the
impossible women who waited
to pour out onto the sidewalks,
heading for the bus stops,
ready to be kissed now
in the last warm rain of autumn.


NYC

Great time at the November 3rd club reading last night at the Bowery Poetry Club. Good poems and good friends — those who missed it missed a lot.

Thanks to ocvictor for organizing the night and maintaining a great and important site.


I swear, sometimes, that the biggest snobs I know are the people who most despise snobbery in others. I think it’s an American characteristic these days that we justify ourselves strictly by how much better we think we are than other people. It’s so damn insecure.


Tomorrow night in NYC!!!!

At the Bowery Poetry Club, 308 The Bowery, NYC:

6:00pm – 8:00pm
The November 3rd Club -$7

A diverse collection of writers read to promote an online literary journal of political writing.

Poet and Nov3rd editor Victor D. Infante hosts, featuring: Tony Brown, Jane Cassady, Brian Dauth, Lea Deschenes, Guy LeCharles Gonzalez, Gary Hoare, Lynne Procope, Skip Shea, Jackie Sheeler, Rachel McKibbens, Michael Cirelli and Patricia Smith

Who’s coming?