Daily Archives: December 29, 2009

The Chicken Speaks

I crossed the road,
punk,
because it was there.

You bought it
when someone said it
in reference to a mountain,

you bought it when
that Frenchman
walked between the Towers,

so I can only conclude
that it’s because I’m a chicken
and you’re prejudiced that you keep cracking wise

about why I did it.  Lemme
tell you something: I
can’t fly, and I enjoy

risk as much as the next bird —
more in fact: I wasn’t waiting around
to become soup or Sunday dinner.

I’ll go on my own terms,
and that road
looked as good as anything I could think of…

I made it, but the attempt,
that’s what counts.
I took a chance.  I wlll again…

so listen, punk,
think of that next time
you gnaw on a drumstick:

you are what you eat.
Laugh all you want,
but you’ll never get me.

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Whiz Kid Announces Comeback Tour

Gimme a wig and a mask
and something to write on
I’ll be your poodle
yelping for your pleasure

Gimme a gun and a facial
Lovely revolutionary
Stunner in the grass
with a good target in sight

Gimme the lonely charring
of a clean fire on an old life
I’ll plaster the ashes into a wall
and hang a good photo there

Gimme your answer do
o daisy o flower of passion o weed
Lumber into my forebrain
and hand me a reason to lie

Gimme some tumbledown
some relic some ancestry to defend
I’ll open a window and shove a stick in the sash
All for you and your temporary needs

Gimme a reason and a flimsy premise
I’ll be gone before my voice is thin
Ragged as childbirth in a hospital gown
I’m a dog for the training and I’m all yours

Then gimme a bed and a nightfall or two
Get me up when I can be myself
Get me a bus ticket for a long long ride
I’ll be there before morning and do it again

What I remember is that I was always the gimme
the go to the response the left behind genius
I was young once and thought I could be myself
So gimme a face and I’ll try to make it my own

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Way Station

Over there, behind the gas station,
something is ending. Nothing uplifting
about it: a man older than his age
falls asleep and freezes sitting up
on a flat rock, all his possessions around him.

In front of the station
a family fuels up, cleans out the car,
heads out to fun and frolic.  They’ll collect presents
and memories, turn around, head home
when it’s over.

The station remains.
Journeys are its business,
endings and beginnings
and transitory stops.  The attendants
barely notice the ambulance in the field

until it’s pulling out and they wonder
what happened.  One goes out back, shrugs,
collects the apparent trash, tosses it in the barrel.
It covers the diapers and the juice packs.
When it’s full, someone on another shift

will put in a dumpster and it will be carted
to a barge, sent elsewhere to rest.  In a thousand years
an archaeologist will pull it out of the earth
and demand it answer him when he asks
who these people were who left so much behind.

Nothing is going to answer him honestly.

No one’s going to understand the significance
of these tinfoil bags entombed
with a laminated, fragmentary photo of a young man
with his arm around a Vietnamese girl
and his helmet perched devilishly on his head.

They will make up stories then
of a culture full of warrior honor,
long-term family ties and care for tradition.  The infants
in the arms of the elders. The relics
were preserved together as a map of where these people had been.

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