Monthly Archives: June 2011

Craquelure

Foxing. 
Craquelure.
Mildew where the frame
meets the paper. Loss
where the canvas 
has been eaten away.

Lily pond
of silver mottling to black
under the glass
of the mirror.

Tarnish and rust
in the etching
on worn hilts.

My forehead
iced with dry skin
after a day in the sun;
brow wrinkles
that won’t disappear.

This is what 
outlasting your moment
looks like — and

it is not
entirely
unlovely.

 


My Names (from a prompt by Curtis Meyer)

I never knew the name
“Tom Delaney”
but I’m sure there was a “Tom Delaney”
who did something for me I should know about,

just as I’m sure there’s a “Diego Sandoval”
in history who provided me with something
I need to be here, and a “Shamara Patel”
who saved an ancestor through some incidental effort,

a “Obiwahi” whose atoms still course my lungs,
a “Maria The Seer” who gave some great-great-great-
great-great-great grandmother a glimmer of hope
for a good love match, a “Thog Arm-Carrier”

who defended his genes and therefore mine
against some depradation or raid.  I don’t know most names
of those who got me here.  I have my short list
of family and friends, the longer list the teachers

insisted I should know, the odd names of those
who have popped up in varied reading and listening.
When it comes to it, at last, I ought to know
the names of everyone who has ever lived —

but I can’t.  I call them, instead, nothing
at all.  I call them “Anonymous.”  I call them 
namelessly, and shamelessly, every time I take credit
for simply being here by stating the name I carry

when asked, “Who are you?” as if it was enough to say
“Tony Brown.”  I ought to see them in the three syllables
that proclaim my survival.  I ought
to fall to my knees crying out for them in praise.

 


Flavor

Flavor,
the spirit of the tongue
dancing with the ghost of
what’s being consumed,
is a fickle romance;
days on end I long for the company
of vanilla, salt, and pepper,
and then banish them in favor of
adobo, cocoa, curries, hablanos.

Flavor,
inside me as much as
entering from outside
occasionally demands as much travel
as it can stand,
but it always falls back
on good bread
and rich cheese
and the stately, almost stationary taste
of cold water.
It demands, in the end,
to come home
to the universal
that is found everywhere.


Nourishment

Coffee and soft skin
under hand
for breakfast.

For lunch, a good thought
well-expressed,
sweet steamed fish and rice
in a gray-white china bowl.

At dusk: figs, apples,
prosciutto, wine, a poem
on the tongue, an embrace
on the steps that lead
to the garden —

and at night,
before sleep,
drowsy agreements and
a tart left over
from the previous day’s
festivities.

Not every day,
not most days —
not even often.  But
often enough
to know what it means
to go without
contact,
without nourishment.


Catalog Guitar

I have a voice
that recalls
the Sears and Roebuck catalog
and the guitar
perused ordered and delivered
to our distant farm
played passionately for six months
and then discarded into a closet
as chores and other interests
took hold

I have a voice
full of herds of starving deer
running wild on abandoned pastures
pawing through the snow
to eat the smothered grass below

I have a voice
dithered and dimed by college arguments
and first love 

I have a voice
later smoked brown by long work nights
spent on projects no one remembers
discarded by bureaucracy
before implementation
with not a word of thanks or praise

I have a voice
painted blue by self-induced chokeholds
rendered red by angry desires
purpled in beatings and yellowed in age
and bleached back to empty before
one word’s ever uttered

I have a voice
which doesn’t feel much like the one
I grew into
which has no trace of inheritance
I can detect

which is no more than a wind now lost
only knowable by the last trembling
of the slightest leaf it once stirred
somewhere

is my old guitar
playing now?  is it still 
my guitar all these owners later?
is it any different at all
from any other catalog guitar
for my having owned it once?

 


Scar Tissue

Lifted into my scar
for a moment by a random touch, 

I’m raised from sleep
into the pain I once felt.

Settling there for now,
I tolerate it well enough;

if there’s one platform
I understand, it’s this one.

Like a body before
the burying times, 

I’m laid out upon this scaffold
to decay and dream.

All this merely from touching
a thick white line on my body

that I barely think of
most of the time.

When I think of how I got it
and what I had to do to survive it,

I’m curiously unafraid
of the memory.

It’s not comfortable, exactly,
but it’s not a horrible thing either;

most days I can ignore it
because no one can see it.

But there are those nights
when I’m not alone

and I have to explain it 
to someone.  

Later, I awaken 
thinking of the story,

reliving its plot and characters,
its surprise ending.

It is not horrible
but not comfortable to do this;

to consider what I learned in blood,
what I gained, what I lost.

Only in intimacy can I explain it
well enough to recall its lessons,

so to rise into the scar and dream again
is why I’m driven to this.

Exposed and naked in the myth each time
it happens, I become the once-injured party

and take another chance to touch
the scar that underlines my healing.

I only visit it now and then
to show how far I’ve come,

how comfortable I am, how not horrified
I am to harbor such a ghost within.

 


I’ve Got issues

Looking to you
for support
is like longing for
validation
from
a pterodactyl:

not only would I likely
age and die 
as I waited,

I’d have to forget
you were dead
to seek it
in the first place.

And if it were possible,
if by chance you were
to come back to life,

what are the chances
that I’d survive
coming face to face with you
after the pilgrimage
to your lair? 

Still, I’m saying this
out loud

as a way to pretend
I’m not scanning the skies
even now. 


Yet Another Poor Life Choice

Once your ears are folded and stitched in
to block the voice of Outside,
you’ll sit back and expect to hear
what you’re really like.
You’ll be disappointed.
Once you realize
how much of what you tell yourself
is a lie, you’ll need to seal your eyes.
Seeing how much of Outside
rejects your Inside, rebukes
your thinking, and negates
your perspective, you’ll want
to be blind.  You’ll want to be deaf
too, but it’ll be too late for that. 


Dark Toast Epiphany

I love dark toast.
If the tips of the texture
of the slice are just singed,
just enough to hint of carbon,
so much the better.

I love a bad note
dropped into an aching run
by a horn player hanging on
to the edge of music
by the love of music. 

I want the crestfallen temporary failure,
the dinged-in-the-attempt, the just-ahead-of-broken.
I want imperfection
that praises perfection while knowing
how boring perfection can be,

that honors the pursuit
without exalting the capture.

Also, I prefer hot
and fleshy curves
over cool, gentle slopes.
Give me real skin that rebukes
all the popular defaults.

I want a little warfare
in my personal peace,
reminding me
of why I value peace
without submitting to its tyranny,

its demand to be all of time
and all of history.  Give me a Bronx cheer
over undeserved praise. Give me
an obituary that tells the tale
of me as constant bastard and frequent fool,

of my fits and starts, my graces and my stumbles
toward extracting moments from undistinguished time.

Give me sun in a pre-tornado sky.
Give me a beach
scoured of its tourists by storm.
I always cheat in favor of the emptied,
the desolate, the contrasting view.  

I yearn to be with those like me
who smell a rose in the compost
even if we won’t be here to cut it;
the ten year old kid with broken sunglasses
singing loudly off key at the local open mic

while his mother shoots phone video
and beams and struts and smiles.  
I love the way I applaud him
as if it was the last time
he’ll ever do this,

and maybe it is. Maybe he’ll go home
and never sing again after seeing that…but I doubt it.

I applaud and seek
any grand charge
toward the rejection of oblivion’s dominion
however it manifests, even when it manifests
as a mistake. God doesn’t make a mistake,

it’s said.  God leaves us to make them
and when we now and then fail to do so,
God reminds us in the next second
that while divinity is not impossible to touch,
it skirts away from us as quickly as it arrives.

I munch on near-burnt toast 
with a possibility howling inside me.
I hear a music I can’t imagine how to play.
I scramble for the ring I can’t quite see.
I call on a God who will pull it away.

There’s that edge, so bright it hurts.
So slick, so smooth, so present, so hard to seize.