Monthly Archives: February 2015

Cartography

New Poem.

Set your pen upon
the following points
and draw lines

connecting dusty walls
to corners full of hair from long-dead pets

Draw a line from high-piled tables
to near-empty pantry shelves
and sparsely populated refrigerator

From bills in a heap
to nothing in the bank
with small hope of ever having more than that
from week to week

Draw those lines and
you’ll end up with a map
of seeming disintegration

that will somehow
never touch upon
how the people
who live in this territory
manage to smile
care for their children
imagine joy
and build toward a future
situated somewhere within
these borders


Teacup Blaze

Originally posted 12/14/2013.

You’re such a compact bonfire.

A little heat
would be welcome,
and yours
is no little heat.

Charring
can be a cleanse.
The healing that follows it
is your doing too.

I want to put you
in the cup of my hands
and hold you
away from
rain and snow,

hold you from sunset
to sunset again.

Such a teacup blaze.

I want to drink from you
and stay warm
for all our remaining years.


Whiteness

New Poem.

I’ve taken to calling it
“Whiteness,” that 

low hum,
that cloud of unknowing.

It just keeps running.
I don’t know how to turn it off.

It’s caused amnesia 
at a cellular level.

Try to put a finger on Whiteness
and it slides away

like mercury:
liquid, metal, baffling.

If I spoke magic I’d conjure it thus
and try to hold it still: come, be bound,

tsunami of broken mirrors,
snowfield of washed crosses,

tangle of lilies, thicket of oleanders,
angular dramas, spoiled seeds…

Can you truly say
it is not its own distinct thing?

It cannot be defined any longer
as absence or default.

If I stare into Whiteness
long enough and hard enough 

I lose myself in it — no surprise;
it was built in such a way

that one can’t help
but stare into it:

the far end
of a hall

of locked doors.
A television permanently tuned

to a news station that promises
your story will be read soon,

right after this word,
right after this word from our sponsor.

It’s not about the nature
of individuals, exactly,

except when it is —
except when

one of them doesn’t see how
they’re soaking in it;

except when they call it
“the norm”

to cancel out
“the other.”

It’s not about how hard or soft
someone has

or hasn’t had it, exactly,
except when it is —

except when
it silently opens a stuck door

and things are even a touch easier
for someone who denies

or doesn’t even realize that they
carry that key with them everywhere.

It’s not about
anything other than 

itself, really, and that
is the problem: how

slippery it is
with its privileges, how slick it is

without admitting it,
how invisible it is to itself.

But I can see it tonight
as I stand under the eaves

of my father’s house, rain coming down
just beyond my nose; there’s

Whiteness in my face, in my ear,
in my blood, all over me

whispering,
be one with me…

I don’t know.  
Maybe

it’s that flag
of bones it’s wrapped in,

maybe it’s knowing how many bones
were abandoned

in deserts far and near
under that flag, 

maybe it’s knowing
how many bones drifted down

to the seabeds
of the Middle Passage. 

Maybe it’s
the long goodbye 

I’d have to make
to my otherness

once I accept
the name for my own, 

or maybe it goes back, all the way back
to those childhood Saturdays 

where the question at playtime
was always

whether I wanted to be the cowboy
or the Indian

and I always chose what felt closest.
It was fine until

one day
someone asked

why I always wanted
to be the bad guy

and never
the cowboy.

Hello, Whiteness,
is what I should have said then

but I was young and uneasy,
afraid not to play along.

I hung up my cap guns
soon after that for safety’s sake — 

but we were just getting started,
Whiteness and me.

Whiteness started haunting me, needling me,
kept repeating:

why do you always want
to be the bad guy?

in that supple voice.
It spit that

a million different ways
and they all meant the same:

why celebrate
difference? why you gotta 

be like that? calm down
and sink into me

like you would a milk bath, 
like you would surrender to

a horizon wiping blizzard.
Go to sleep. I promise

it will be warmer
eventually.

That voice eventually faded into
a low hum, a cloud of unknowing.

Whiteness, let me tell you,
maybe I’m wrong, 

maybe it’s amnesia
at a cellular level,

but maybe I fear you so much
because

I can’t recall anyone
ever saying 

it made them warmer
to die a little.


A Master Of All You Desire

Originally posted 5/27/2010.

I made beautiful meals
which fell apart —
overcooked and fussy dishes
that crumbled into fibers and mush
as I set them before you,

so I made harder, plainer foods.
These curdled into leather
and hardwood — they proved
impossible to chew,
and you turned away.

I made an effort after that to balance
the artful and the hearty
in one meal, tried to be 
master of all you desire.
You just looked at me and said,

“It’s…interesting…”

Now, we just order out.
You seem happy. 
You seem to like this better. 
I am trying to consider this an improvement
although to be honest,

I’m feeling more than a little unnecessary.

 

 

 


The Gutbucket King

New Poem.

In our mitten-shaped city 
the poor neighborhoods 

cup the wealthy downtown 
like a thumb and palm

George lives in the palm
Crosses the rich streets every day

to make coin at a job in the thumb
At night he walks back just as poor

On Wednesdays he plays
gutbucket bass in the backing band

for a blues jam at a local bar where haughty boys
bearing new Strats and vintage Gibsons

come in now and then to try and finesse 
that muscled art with their prog-conditioned heads

but count on George (who lives by his rocking palm
and two-finger slam on old thick strings)

to steady them and calm it down
to twelve bar lope when things get floaty

George leaves the palm in the morning
and crosses those rich streets to his job

Now and then on his way he catches the eye
of some Richie Rich he’s had to school

who will nod
eager to catch a second glance from the Gutbucket King

George only rarely and incompletely
acknowledges this

as they both know which side of the mitten
he comes from and 

in this life
as is in the blues

nothing is likely to make either one
forget it


Greenspring Dark

Originally posted on 2/23/2011.

In the greenspring dark,
your foot finds a rock.
You trip and fall
as the neighbor’s daughter

skips down the far sidewalk.
Lying hurt on your belly,
you can’t get yourself up
to get inside, so you stay down.

You stay
while the grass
under the moon
swallows you.

Her mother calls her in
for the night and you’re alone.
Ah well. It’s warm out here
under the moon in the grass.

There’s a fence fifteen feet away.
Something moves along its base.
Possum or skunk, no telling.
No scent carries to you,

so something else perhaps. 
It stays away.
Maybe it smells the stink
of your draining health.

It’s getting cold out here
under the moon.  You’re on your belly,
you’re cold, you’re hurt — it’s fine. 
Under the greenspring dark,

it’s not hard to consider
ending here
among animals
who will eventually draw near to you

as at last you drift away.  By day
it’ll be so easy for the neighbors

to see you there, dead
on your belly,

never knowing that your last thought
was a memory
of their skipping child
in the lowering greenspring dark.