Daily Archives: August 17, 2010

Frog

If the frog you struck
in the road tonight
had had anything to say
as you spun him into the brush,
it would surely not have been
an expression of surprise.
They live like that all the time —
in constant expectation
of being spun into the void
by a predator or car. 

And we
are the delusional higher beings
who find it strange that others
might accept with no surprise
the honesty of death
that usually comes suddenly
and often in the strangest of ways,
often at our hands but with no malice
at all as a simple consequence
of living as we do, moving along
blindly, carried by our large lives.

When you sit at home tonight,
think of that.  Listen
to the corking and uncorking
of our bottled confusion
whenever these things happen
and to the gigantic roar
of What Is Coming.  Think of how
the frog said nothing and accepted
his last flight, his broken body,
mouth torn so deeply
that any last croak would have been
pointless.  Then,

say what you want to say,
what you would want to say
when it is your turn.
Say what you need to now,
for it will be drowned in the roar
when it happens at last…
don’t let it die stifled behind
your slack jaw…

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Hemlock

You will say “selfish,” and you will say
“crazy,” and you will turn from my last bed
to those left behind and say
“angry.”

You will say “asshole,”
you will say “waste,” you will say
“crazy” and “angry” again, you will say
“loss,” you will say “missing,” you will say
“there are no words,” you will say
words that say “nothing” in many ways —

but the one thing
you had damn well better not say
because you cannot say it and mean it
with a poker face after knowing me
all those years is
“why.”  You will likely be a liar
if you say “I don’t understand…”
and if you truly believe you do not understand,
if you are sincere in thinking that,
you really should say nothing at all.

Just put your arm across my cold chest then
and pretend to be close to me,
even though what you will feel
won’t be me at all anymore.  Perhaps
as you realize what it feels like to embrace
that no longer aching heart
in that no longer failing body,
the words will come to you
and they will be the words
you never thought to say.

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The Last Lecture (Revised; was “The Last Talk”)

It was around seven at night
when I finally got out of my mother. 
I started talking at once. 
The family was astounded. 
“Keep it up,” they urged,
and I struggled to think of things to say. 

There was a time when I considered
myself
the best talker in a family of talkers. 
Whatever.  It was a means to an end. 
That end was that I talked
myself
out of everything. 

Myself.
I used that word a lot.
It was a ratchet handle,
could be switched
from install to extract
with one motion.
Slap any socket,
any word on it,
and I’d make it work.

Myself,

I don’t care for legumes.
Myself,
I’m indifferent to rockets.
Myself,
I’m a big fan of radicchio
dipped in sea salt.

One evening
I made a mistake
and stopped talking for a moment.
It didn’t bother me
but a lot of the family thought I was nuts
and I ended up in a bare room
with a cheese grater wall to lean on,
in a pleasant sense of dislocation
without my usual tools at hand.
There was sand under my tongue.
My breath smelled of comic books
and colorfield theory
and it was so nice,
for once, to not speak
unless I was spoken to.

I got out and found a living
that made the talking
not so much a tool but a brace. 
The ratchet handle
slipped in my hand as easily as ever,
and I could talk about
myself
endlessly,
even when I used borrowed sockets to make
myself
seem like a chokehold. 

The family soon fell asleep —
why listen to things
that didn’t concern a fact at all?
I found new families to bore. 
I found new nuts to turn
and kept using
myself
to gain leverage.

Over time, I lost the urgent sense
of sand and blood in my palm.

Over time there was
too much wolf,
not enough sea snake.
Too much noose,
not enough bowtie.
Too much pistol,
not enough summer squash.
Too much fuck,
not enough no touch at all.
Too much rain of monkeys,
not enough snow of shillings.

This was so easy.

The alley girls,
the backstage boys,
those who called
from the shadows for the opportunity
to hear my disturbances,
they all wanted to eat the same things
every night, and I let them.

It was so easy.
Who was I to say I was not what they thought?

I though I could talk my way back to
myself.
I tried, but now the power’s off
at seven at night
and I’m sitting in the heat
of a small room
built from smooth, sweating walls. 
There’s no money
to speak of. 
Every dollar is a laugh
giggling good bye
and the cat is barely moving without the AC. 

I’m barely moving.

The wrench called
myself
is splintering, the receiver for the socket
worn, the switch that changes direction
finally swinging free and no longer engaging.
I talk more and more, trying to gain purchase,
work the bolts on what I need to construct or destruct
in one slippery increment at a time. 

Right here, on the desktop of this old computer
is a document named
“Everything I’ve Learned.”

The lessons themselves are scattered
around a lot of places
that exist in public and only in public.
I didn’t have a private thing to put in there.
This is what I get for a career in talking

The family would get a chuckle out of this if they could see me,
but I keep
myself
a little far from them these days. 

They don’t want to see
or hear me like this, the wrench rattling useless and repetitive
on steel. I can respect that. 

I sit here at seven every night
and strip my threads trying to make
myself
so useless
it’ll be understood and even appreciated
when at last I choose silence,
and throw myself away.

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My Little Oysters

I call your eyes
‘my little oysters’
as if they were each

a world
I could own

I know better

I can own nothing
of you

but it helps me
to pretend

that your eyes
contain everything I need

and that I could
take them in

in one swift swallow

and that then
you would see
what is inside me

insane, insane

I tell myself

but still
I am
so hungry

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