Monthly Archives: October 2009

Torn

another tear in the fabric
of an already shabby day

as we’re confronted
by a kid in a parking lot
who doesn’t understand
why we’re watching him

we’re really not

but it doesn’t matter
because he’s trying to sell weed
or something
and we’re too close

so he bellows “SOMETHING
INTERESTING GOING ON
OVER HERE YOU TWO LOOKING AT?”

and you shout back
a simple single
“NO”

and nothing happens

but I wish it had
I wish it had

because the torn day
might have ripped right open then
the knife in my pocket
useful for once
in making a hole
I could have successfully
plunged through
on my own power

Blogged with the Flock Browser

Bartleby

you’ve gotten yourself
into this bar argument
with some friends
about the greatest works
of american literature
and when you mention “bartleby
the scrivener,” everyone looks at you
like you’ve lost your mind
and you’re just standing there
with nothing to say
and no one’s even heard of it
so you try to explain and someone says
“that’s fucked up” and you say
“yeah that’s kind of the point”
and everyone ignores you harder
as they discuss hunter thompson
and jack kerouac
and they try to get you back in on the discussion
but you say, “i would prefer not to”
so after a while people drift off
and you’re standing there
not even touching your beer
and at last call
the bartender tells you to go home
so you do.  and at work the next day no one
remembers what you all talked about
last night and you decide
to let it drop but the days go by
and you find yourself doing less and less
socializing with them so you stay home
and stand in a corner
with your arms at your side
and not eating or watching TV
or even listening to the radio and when they come
to carry you out a few weeks later
someone at work the next day says of you
‘that’s fucked up”
and they’re still right.

Blogged with the Flock Browser

Herman Gunther

When TV crime shows
do their work, they leave us certain
that causes can be determined
for everything
that has ever happened. 

But when old Herman Gunther
was found suspended upside down
in his oak tree, twenty feet up and shirtless,
his wheel chair still parked neatly on the porch
a whole yard’s width away,
his eyes wide and staring,
all I could think of was this:

late at night
I sometimes get an urge
to clean my windows.
That doesn’t make sense,
so I never do; maybe Herman
had an urge to fly
and after all these years,
he did, or tried to,
and amazed himself
until his heart failed
and he fell.

Cardiac arrest,
the techs said.  Circumstances
leading to the death
were unclear and the investigation
would remain open.

I watched them
scratching their heads.
I watched them all night
as I wiped the grime from my glass
and thought,
and thought,
and thought some more.

Blogged with the Flock Browser

At Last

At eleven PM
when the news starts,
go into the yard and strip down.

The floodlights will catch you
and the locals will come to their windows,
staring and pointing.

You’ll be naked, your scars will be showing,
but no one will be able to say
you’re not in your own skin.

In the glare, you’ll find yourself growing
like a nautilus, each new curve saluting
the previous curve, and you’ll glide away

into the current.  At last — no longer
contained in a shell you never wanted,
now carrying a sculpture around you that fits.

Blogged with the Flock Browser

Come Back, Area 51

everyone knows
about area 51
and that stuff happened there,
all kinds of stuff.

they say it’s shut down now.
they say they’ve moved it.
no one’s sure where it went
but stuff must be happening
somewhere

that we aren’t supposed to know about.

point at any map
and pick a town.  stuff is probably
happening there
we aren’t supposed to know about,
but we’ll never hear about it.
then someone will move
to another town
and stuff will continue there,

but no one writes books
about that stuff. no one wonders
about that stuff,

about small towns rife with
secret wars
and monsters living side by side
with normal folk.

at least when we still had area 51
we knew where to look for them,
and now they could be
everywhere.

Blogged with the Flock Browser

Cursing

Scribe the circle with

prick

then proceed to
binding
holding fast
and diminishing

pencil dick

indulge your muddy rage with a pause in the proceedings and say

you fuck

before moving grandly into
deeper swamp
and casting transformation with

bitch

and

cunt

This is where we move widdershins
into ancestry and shapeshift
toward

son of a bitch

prepare the newly minimal animal
for sacrifice
through

cocksucker

o and then
pronounce

motherfucker

again and again
dagger handle warm
fangs ripping through to the meat of this

motherfucker

as dark as

damn you to hell

in a patriarch’s mouth

we become
ancient again
as we casually
slap the death spells
on our easy and inadvertent adversaries
in traffic
or in line at daily meetings

motherfucker

cocksucker
son of a bitch
you cunt
bitch
you prick
pencil dick
damn you to hell

in the dark silt
under these words
under our nails
and on our filthy teeth

in the glaze of them
robe ourselves as priests
conjuring horrors
to be slung like darts of dim altar light

ignorant of powers
we have cheapened and denied

that are no less deadly
for the frequency of use

they hang like grease
in the air
we then
must breathe

Blogged with the Flock Browser

City Story

— after Gunter Grass

There is a city,
and there is a man in the city
who is alone.
One hundred eighty thousand people
are said to live there
but he is alone,
so for his purposes we can say
there is no city.

There is a man
who is alone in the space
called a city by others, and he
is happy there, so we may say
he is alone and happy
and for his purposes we must say
that the space is solitude,
not loneliness, and he is in it.

There is a city, and a man,
and if he sees another he thinks
the man is a part of his solitude,
so the city becomes a memory,
and for his purposes
and ours we must remember a time
when a city existed, and that time is not now
as there is solitude in its former place.

If the city exists now somewhere else,
there is likely a man in that city
for whom there is no city, and for whom
only solitude exists, and happiness
at the sight of another whom he sees as
an extension of his solitude.
Who truly lives in a city?
Do cities truly exist,

or are we who imagine that we live in cities
alone in misery and cheer alike, moving among
memories while choosing tomatoes
and beer, paying rent to imaginary landlords,
speaking to ourselves as if we could
hear and understand the answers we give ourselves?
Here is a city, here is a man who lives here;
the man is alone, the city his comfortable nest of fiction.

Blogged with the Flock Browser

Rock Organs

Early Saturday morning, ears throbbing,
happily bruised from my first pit in years,
I stagger in from the Aggressions’ reunion gig,
drop the black leather jacket on the couch,
and settle into the recliner
for some “Antiques Roadshow.”

It’s a repeat — Ooh!  This is the one
with the ’52 Telecaster in, like,
mint condition that’s been sitting
in some guy’s closet untouched
since his father died.  Sick —
who the fuck leaves something like this

untouched for thirty years?
A guitar’s meant to be played.
And now the appraiser’s
creaming his gray suit over the fact
that the tweed case is mint too —
not a sticker to be seen.  He’s tossing

some incredible number for its value
at this dork who can’t believe it.
You can see the dollar signs rising
in his throat…while all I can think about
is wrapping my hands around that C-shaped neck,
plugging that mother into a Hot Rod Deluxe,

and burning out
every coil
of both pickups…but that’s
not going to happen, so
though I’m drunk, I pull one more beer
from the fridge and turn the TV off.

I learned a long time ago
that there’s a downside
to having a rock ‘n’ roll heart. As you age
the rest of you
doesn’t keep up, and you find yourself
with a churned up gut every time you see

someone who doesn’t have a clue put in charge
of a perfect tool of the trade.  If I could,
I’d get new organs to ease the burden
on the old ticker — say,
steel eardrums and elbows so I could
get as close to the stage as I want;

a rock ‘n’ roll bladder so I wouldn’t ever
miss a note; a black metal liver,
a hardcore bile duct, a blues rock forearm
so I could shake the strings forever
without my bursitis kicking up; shins
and thighs and feet as steady as reggae

and an ass tighter than Detroit funk.
This old heart of mine does what it can
but it could use a little help sometimes,
especially (like tonight) when I see some young punk sneering
at the old guy whose moves are all wrong
from the outside but whose soul is still eighteen

and ten feet tall and tequila bulletproof
in the face of the certain and unwelcome
slowdown of age.  Gimme shock treatment
and a transplant, a full set of new parts to be abused
all over again the way I used to do it —
and let me get my hands on that Tele,

because you assholes don’t have a clue
as to how to make it priceless.  It’s got no value
until it’s been scratched and dented,
until a thousand forgotten bands have been plastered
all over that obscenely clean case, until it’s worn
and everything’s been replaced at least once.

I should know.  My parts
are all original, and could stand
a little restoration, but they long to sing
and stomp and agress when needed.
Given half a chance, they could still rock the way
they used to.  Given half a chance more

and a new set of knees,
I could pull a Townshend leap
and clampdown like Strummer
on a stale old cover of a fresh idea.
Given a body like I used to have
and my current head still in place,
I could lay a million dollars at this guy’s feet

and steal
that wasted instrument back
to the home
it deserves to have…
and I wouldn’t need a new heart to do it,
because this one still beats hard

and loud.

Blogged with the Flock Browser

Necromancy

When it comes to raising the dead
and giving them a chance to speak,

when it comes to invoking them,
we learn early and often how it is done
and what to say:

“Mannlicher-Carcano,”
for instance,
I learned to pronounce
when I was three years old;

Audubon Ballroon, Commander Hotel, Lorraine Motel;
Presidential Palace, Santiago, Chile;  Jonestown;
easy enough to say.

Say “Flight 11,
Darfur, rape, terror,
Bosnia, Holocaust –”
watch the blood
welling up in their eyes —

O the turns
language makes
through our times!
It’s a grand time
to be a poet
because normalcy
is so full of
shadows
that you barely have
to know the tongue
to play at necromancy.

Blogged with the Flock Browser

Ladybugs

Coincidence
or not, it’s a fact
that seven ladybugs
lit on my window
as I spoke tonight
of seven friends
who have passed on.

I let them crawl
around a while
before shooing them out
into potential doom
in the hard frost
that’s predicted for tonight.

It doesn’t matter
what signs you’ve been sent
or how many laws you follow
as you pursue the meaning
of this life;

you have to put the messengers
out into the cold
and get on with living
as if grief
were something
you can keep at a safe
and practical distance.

Blogged with the Flock Browser

Factory Edge

A new knife
needs a better edge
than the one it’s sold with,
said the guy behind the counter
who echoes my father’s words
and everything else my scars
have led me to believe.

It’s a beauty, this piece,
with an assisted opening feature:
a little pressure on the thumbstud
and the black blade snaps into place
quick as my intent.

But it’s not ready, so

I pull
the diamond stone
from the drawer
and begin to stroke
the blade against it
testing it on my skin
until it lifts the hair
and leaves a bare patch behind.
It could open skin now,

so I put it aside
and think about
how I’ll put it
into my pocket
the next time I go out among

my friends and fellow townspeople,
my dearest connections,
my family.

All around me the shiny cars,
the perfect finishes,
the factory edges,
the belief in happy endings,
the misplaced hope for things to work
the way they’re supposed to
right out of the box.

I know better.

Blogged with the Flock Browser

Artifice

frog.
status.
lingua franca.
redoubt.

build the bridge between them
or leap across?

flora.
wrench.
mixed results.

thick answers form
around the library tables.

sunspot.
ignored signs.
curbstone.
face.
jawbreaker.

witness the decided
and determined attempt
to capture the flag
and own a meaning
never intended.  no design
worth mention except as it is
created; literature as a roll of dice —

vinyl.
commitment.
trash box.
sticky bones.

on the way home, realization:

burning.
burning.

repetition is as random as it gets
anywhere.  no reason for discrete
sounds, as any will do:

finale and symphony,
sycophant, blind-eyed,
lugging, baggage,
passage and lockdown,
screwheart, fingerling.

we sleep on the wet,
pretending memory
of a dry crossing.

Blogged with the Flock Browser

Dinner Plate Garden

Supermarket china patterns
show up on the shards
we are always finding
in the dirt next to the walkway
where no grass ever grows
despite our best efforts.

Still, there’s always a big sunflower there
looming over the stupid fairy statue
some previous tenant left behind,
and it always sports blooms as big
as dinner plates.  Maybe
someone knew something
about this weird mystic horticulture
and they get that big
because of the platters
under their roots? The birds
seem to understand the logic
because they start to feast on it
the second the seeds are ready,
so maybe the shards
feed the welcoming flowers
and the sacrifice of cheap plates
had a purpose after all.

Think I’ll buy a few dishes tomorrow,
smash them and lay them
below the soil on the other side
of the house,
just to see what happens next year.
Think I’ll scrap my plan
to move that statue to the basement
and let it be for another winter, spring,
and summer; it’s not hurting anything,
and that cheesy concrete smile
is kind of growing on me.

Blogged with the Flock Browser

Flour Invocation

As if flour had been flung
onto a gas flame,
all the words
we have ever uses for God
are in the air,
and the air is on fire.

The birds
are alight and falling
to earth now. Earlier
I saw a robin on the sidewalk,
still smoldering, still singing
praise.

I brought it inside
and tended it as it died,
then set to work transcribing
the hymns of combustion
it gave me as it coughed
and choked.

Who but a crazy man
sits inside writing of God
on a Saturday night
surrounded with the smell
of burning bread
and feathers?

Who indeed,
I ask myself, invoking
sacrificed birds
while the earth piles deep
with bodies. But this is how
I pray in these last days: inside, silently —

but I keep a bag of flour
near the stove in case
the silent words ever become
too oppresive to bear.
I know this can kill me.
I know it will be

a horrible way to offer myself to God
but when I do, at least
I will fly up singing
and fall back
in light
and heat.

Blogged with the Flock Browser

Question

To answer your question:

Yes,
I can see
a way forward,
but nostalgia
holds me back
although
there is nothing
to which I long to return. And

yes,
this is nonsense,
but it is also
true.  I want to cling
to what has passed,
although I longed
to be free of it
while it was happening.

It was all dull and
heavy and I was weak,
or unwilling and lazy,
angry that I was not
a giant or sorcerer or both
though I neither studied
nor built my strength.  The question

of whether I wanted what I chose
never occurred to me; I simply
took what came
and then whined and puked along,
my belly never full enough
to hold the bitter with the sweet:
I had expected all to be sweet,
did not accept that balance
mattered, and did not work
to hold them both.

What needs doing
for me to go on is clear, but
my arms ache, my legs groan,
I have never transformed
anything into another thing —
ah, here I go again
with being the same man
I always have been, slave to the magic
and brawn I still think I once had
but for which there is no evidence.

In rare moments
that are becoming rarer, I can still be
wonderful, immobilized but awed
by a possibility of an easy progress,
a liar at peace with a future
in thrall to a fabricated past;
more often I just want to lie down
by the roadside and be forgotten,
real at last, my story left untold
except as a cautionary tale…

and then, the One comes
who baffles me: how is it
that I may be this wrecked
and still be loved enough
by anyone?

She calls me up
from the dirt and when I do not rise,
comes to my arm and raises me,
filthy with my own damage and neglect,
and holds me there until I can see
something, someone
other than myself,
and asks me a question:

can’t you see a way forward
now?

Blogged with the Flock Browser