Category Archives: poetry

Ganesha

I broke the chain
which held my medal of 
my patron, Ganesha,
lord of learning, letters, 
success, of taking it all in —
I broke that chain.  

Now I’m lying here, turning blue;
I have worked hard to earn that hue.
I’ve become a fat
gap-toothed man like him.
I don’t need to carry myself
everywhere, and no one
would mistake me for him
but still, I took heed of concerns
for over-identifying with him,
and broke that chain.

When they find me, when they
rescue me, surrounded by books
and past due notices,
the last thing they’ll think of
as they trundle me off for repair
is Ganesha.  I’ve broken that chain

and if at the hospital they ask me
what spiritual path I follow, I will tell them
nothing at all.  If they can’t tell it by looking
at me (gap toothed, blue skinned, long nosed,
fat necked and full of useless books)
then it’s nothing they should know.  I broke that chain
anyway, like an elephant gone rogue.
They ought to do me like that,
and shoot me.


Hokum

Hokum 
they called it

lowdown pun-funny blues
about
putting fruit in her basket
or
grinding his meat
or
how much she longs for 
a little sugar in her bowl

Tampa Red said
it’s tight like that
and Ma Rainey agreed
and just this side of all that
even Robert Johnson
had hot tamales (they’re red hot)
for sale

and people smiled
and some no doubt got laid
though no doubt
few got paid
Got to trust the hokum
to pick you up
on a Saturday night

Way back then
a couple of White boys
called the Allen Brothers
liked what they heard
laid down a few songs like that
They did a fine job
So fine a job
their songs were released
in their label’s 
“race records” series
by mistake

They sued
for damage to their reputation
and left their label

I read a scholarly article
on hokum once
that said the best of the genre’s lyrics
compared favorably to Chaucer

Some comparisons
evidently
are more favorable than others


The Dinner Party, The Marsh Hawk

While dining with assorted friends
and near friends
at a private dinner party,
Professor Alternate Jones,
“Al” for short,
announces to those of us
by nature or profession inclined
to listen to such things
that “upon reflection
on the things of this world,
the only right, righteous thing to do
is for me to spit, hard and often;
the taste otherwise is too rich
and I am so easily overwhelmed.”

Several at the table laughed
and offered similar cavalier thoughts,

but I stood up and sought and found
the view over the salt marsh, looked out
at a marsh hawk hovering, so still
over the tips of the yellow
shore grasses; saw it

taking everything in,
waiting for prey, waiting for
a sign of weakness, a flash
of motion arrested just long enough
for it to drop and rise
fulfilled, with a victory
in its talons.

I turned from the window
back to my friends and near friends,
back to the learned professor still talking,
my mouth drying up as I did so,
feeling the sharps so strongly
I had nothing to say.


A Painting

The Hammond organ:
wet wide brush,
thick colors. Warm
tones.

Fender P-Bass:
smacks down dark hues,
richer, deeper, rounder
shapes.

Telecaster:
pointillist stinger
chattering spatter
patterns everywhere.

Ludwig kit with
an old Gretsch snare:
possibly, under the paint,
an ancient figure rising?

Let the baritone sax
call it out,
all-dimensioned,
sketching then filling in details.

Remind me, please:
why do we need a singer?
Why frame this work
that already works so well unframed?


On No

No. 

Great timesaver,
good regulator, 
mediocre philosophical stance,
bad bottom nature

except for those born 
to it,

those for whom 

yes

is just the counterbalance
to their weight, the froth
on their darkness.

Two halves of an ecosystem.
Neither complete
unless matched
to the other;  lovers

cloaked
as warriors.


A Life Of Service

A slice
of pink Milford granite
serving as a coaster

on a small dark desk
several decades old at the least
which serves as an end table

next to a ratty couch
that serves sometimes
as a bed

A man
who serves sometimes
as a pain in the ass

a scapegoat and
a glory hound
sits on the couch

He is half-listening to
a huge television which serves
as teat and manacle

A question remains
as to whether or not
he will ever emerge full grown

from this apartment
he claims is serving
as his cocoon

to serve
as the thing
he was meant to be

some kind of man
uniquely his own being
resistant

to being repurposed
by anyone except
himself

An unwrapped man
serving as
object lesson

by being of total service
to others
without bending his knee


Conversation

A place to start
is with a simple request:

show me
your racist bone.

If you can reach for it
at once, 

it gives us at least
another place to start.

If you’re proud of it,
I don’t know where to start.

If you’re ashamed,
it’s a place to start.

If you’re angry
that I asked,

it will be difficult
but we can find a place to start.

if you don’t have a clue
as to where to look,

we can find
a place to start.

Everything
is a place to start.

You may have discerned that
and have begun to wonder:

where is
the place to finish?

I must tell you:
I don’t know.

What I do know 
is that starting is all we have

to work with
at the moment

and if we don’t do that,
we will never finish.


Doing It Wrong (12/30/2013)

A wave inside says
punch
maybe even stab
so often that 
each fresh anger’s become
just another cobweb
to brush aside

They’re piling up into
quite a gray heap
in a corner
You recall hearing 
that if applied swiftly
they can clot a wound

You start looking
for a wound to stanch
Finding none
you make one
and toss your rage onto it
like a dirty blanket

Your last thought is
that you must be
doing it wrong


Listen, Just Listen

When she protests,
they kick their sand at her
till her mouth is full.

When he protests,
they bury him in their old rags
till he’s smothered.

When people gather to protest,
flood gates open
and they are swept out to sea.

No protest goes
unchoked.  No word
gets out ungagged.

A cry rises from
all these closed throats:
“listen, just listen.”

No one’s going to though.
Too busy crying their own cause,
drowning those inconvenient messengers.


Swinging

It’s early and I’m at the stove
eating oatmeal cooked from scratch;
steeping good tea in a great big cup
while thinking about what I know:

that I am probably going to die
from self-inflicted wounds someday,
and it’s likely the bombs that will do it
are these that I know I’ve already set.

One of these days I’ll start exercising.
Maybe I’ll be good at it.  Maybe the diet and
activity will pay off. Maybe I’ll soon be smaller,
lighter on the earth.

None of it will change a thing.
I’ll die anyway.  I’ll die because
dying’s what we do.  I might do it tomorrow,
I might make it another twenty years

before I go, but I will go.
If I go today while standing at the stove,
spoonful of mush falling from my hand
and the tea spilling as I flail and drop?

I hope I look silly down there on the floor.
Not tragic; not resigned
to ending up a punchline in a poor man’s bed.
Let them say too little too late,

chuckle a little when they picture the scene.
Let them say whatever they want
as long as they include the phrase
he went down swinging, swinging to the end.


Rewind/Fast Forward/Eject

is the title of a soca song
I love to sing
a soca song I love to sing
from an album
released in 1994
released in 1994 on vinyl CD
and cassette
in 1994 when those words
made sense
to a cassette owner
a cassette tape owner
someone who owned and listened to
cassettes
someone who fell in love with a song
and rewound it and replayed it
until it broke
and had to be discarded
had to be ejected and tossed away

less than a generation from now
no one will understand this song
the way a cassette owner understood it
watching the tape gather on the left hand reel
thinking is that far enough?
trying to interpret high speed backwards noise
hitting play to see if it was far enough
hitting rewind and fast forward
and play
and then one last rewind
to position the tape
right at the beginning
of the wanted song
hitting eject when the time came
to change 
reluctantly
to another song

it wasn’t just about 
hitting repeat
or choosing a track number
love
and obsession used to be
analog processes
that took time and precision
took attention and 
esoteric understanding
of what little you could see and hear
how to read subtleties
how to fall back satisfied and then
how to move on

love was a soca song
played endlessly 
over and over
beginning to end to beginning again
until it was over
until it was over
until it was at last over and done


Urban Warfare

That unexpected but familiar sound
of glass bottles breaking 
on the street that dead ends behind my house.

Someone owns a paintball gun
and shoots from inside some apartment
at empty forties set up on a junk car

which at one time was blue
but now is mottled pink and red
on one side.

I have watched and been unable to decide
which floor of which three decker 
he or she is shooting from.  

At this point, I’ve lost most interest.
The firing range is over there.  I’m
over here.  I don’t like being awakened.

That’s about it.  Not my land,
not that fearful a firearm, not my car.
Not my business.  Welcome 

to the city of picking your battles,
closing your eyes, covering your ears,
getting by.


No Mood To work

Cold enough outside
to be the frozen part of Hell —
people forget that there’s a
frozen part full of Satan and
traitors, at least that’s what
Dante Aligheri said and he
is one poet who
actually seemed
to know things.

It’s cold enough outslde
that my anatomy isn’t buying it,
commenting through
the fingers and nose tip
that I ought to get inside
before one wince more
slices through.
In other words:

better to be inside, even if
I’ve nothing better to do than this,
even if that sounds like a betrayal
of the Work.

Though I can think of things
I could be doing that would hurt less
than this, I’ll do this
and stay warm,
braving Hell’s cold rage
for taking its name
in vain.


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.