Daily Archives: December 24, 2013

Future Anthropology

When they find our fossils
(if someone is alive and seeking
those parts of us we will have left)
scattered among the bones
as telling as flint points
or Venus totems

will be checklists,
thousands of
fragmented checklists
asking:

have I eaten
the right breakfast,
taken the right pills, 
done the proper number
of reps, laps, poses,
eaten the right portion sizes,
slept the right amount,
breathed through 
correct nostril, played
with the right literary forms,
assumed the right positions,
smiled and kissed and 
hugged enough,
shat the right shits,
pissed the right color,
hit my marks, 
saved enough to die on,
lived the right amount of years,
died well and peacefully
with a minimum of trouble
to others?

They will speak of us
as a people
who lived long lives,
though it will be hard to say
whether or not
we lived well  — as hard for them
to determine
as it is, apparently,
for us.


In The Clear With Robert Johnson

In the clear
with Robert Johnson,

his hellhound
far behind for once,

a crossroad up ahead
but it’s noon and with nothing

left to deal 
there’s not much fear 

of encountering anything more
than a bit of traffic.

It’s all so ordinary.
You would think

that having Ghost Bob
silent at my side, 

his Kalamazoo slung caseless
across his back, 

would be reason enough
for fear sweat — no.

He’s a comfort, with hand 
on my shoulder, a nod

for every choice I make.
On the rare occasions

he sits and plays, almost never
a blue note’s heard.  

Once I begged him
to stop and bend a string or two

for my sake. He turned away
and played twelve bars

of what he still had inside,
and I broke a little.

I’m still broken — hence, this journey.
I feel a need to apologize

for making him
give me that

when he so clearly
wanted it left behind him

with the big black dog,
with the hat tipper

at the last intersection
who had mocked him

for going somewhere,
anywhere,

as if he could outrun
his Creditor

by simply not playing
the blues.

We’re stuck together,
Robert and me,

by our compulsions 
but not today,

today it’s by choice
and the sun’s out

and Bob plays
“Every Man A King,”

a song neither of us
believe in,

but it’s fun to pretend
now and then

that we can’t hear
the Dog behind us,

and that two roads crossing
is just a mark on a map.