Tag Archives: poems

Loud, Louder, Loudest

Originally posted 1/7/2012.

Some days
are just one
turbocharged
evocation
after another;

then there are the ones
where you sit around
wondering why
it’s not one
of the other days.

Frankly, I could do with
a few less of
the former
and a lot more of
the latter.

Every moment of every day
doesn’t have to have a point
and I’m tired of getting stuck
and bleeding almost out
because of the ones that do.

Right now, for example,
all I want it the road,
the wide open engine, and
the loud, louder, loudest
three-chord songs;

a day with nothing to escape from,
no reason to be driving that fast
except 
that’s how
loud, louder, loudest songs

sound best.


Post-American Song

Originally posted 3/24/2012.

It’s of no larger importance how any one of us dies, including me —
the inevitability of the event is king
over the madness of the method  

Don’t care if it’s from gun or blade or germ
Don’t care but don’t want it to happen too soon
I know it will happen and I wish you could see it as I do

As wave of the star enveloping
As wave of the earth encompassing
As wave of the wind embracing

Then the next minute moment second instant
must be suddenly different — suddenly not this
All I want to know about that moment I cannot know

So I sit here speaking of death, fingers tapping, waiting
Oh the damn notion of all of us having to wait
You wait as you will but I will be calm and resigned to it

How we die is trivia though it does not feel so
Every death I’ve known has been in some way most trivial
Every individual an inconsequential body gone

(except — I admit — each was a wave
of earthquake within me that felt as large
as how I had loved them)

But I am the broken acolyte of continuance
Death and aging hollowed me out a long time ago
Now all  I yearn for is my choice of method

As wave of desire punctures my reluctance
In this country devoted to living forever
To never reading the sick bulletins of its unconscious satisfactions

I don’t care how any of us live, no
Live and let live is here practiced as apathy not compassion
Does it look the same when it’s not about love but instead about disinterest

I don’t care how anyone anywhere dies, no
Do you think that is awesome or troubling or false
Wave of suspicion engendering my breakdown

Come as you are, all of you
come incorrect
to the throne of mirrors

Look at AMERICA the hall of just in time history
AMERICA the holler the chorus the cadence
AMERICA the man in the trembling suit

Look at the gun in the hand of the —
what is it today anyway?
Who are the current heroes of our vigilante songs?

We don’t care how others die
as long as the lettuce
stays crisp

Method is ghost
is memory
is suggested mask for the inevitable

I am wearing the mask of a wave all-encompassing
I am wearing the mask of a wave of righteousness
I am wearing the mask askew from its moorings

I will take off this mask
and look at America
Wallflower with its back to the fourth wall

or is it behind me
watching the others
Is it in front of me on a player’s mark

I don’t care if it dies or how it dies
if it makes sense to the plot, no
I don’t see that death as being all that surprising

since I never believed
that the rockets and twilight should lead for certain
to dawn’s early light


Bedside

Originally posted 3/14/2013.

Maybe that clock of yours is sick,
or maybe time itself is ill, but 
either way, trust me — it’s not time yet.

You’re going nowhere,
not at least until the daffodils in the front yard
are fully up and open.

There’s bad television to watch yet,
lots of it, enough that we could get tired
of watching and go for a walk.

You can’t go until we’re both tired of bad TV
and we decide that even a walk up and down
this terrible hill of a street is better than that.

I know I’m right. That clock of yours 
is sicker than you are, or time itself is what’s ill — 
you’re going nowhere until the daffodils

have bloomed twice 
and we’re in great shape from walking away
from bad TV.  Then once we’re in shape — 

not this spring but next — we’ll replant the beds
out front and get something
other than daffodils in there;

I know you love that yellow but face it,
everyone’s got daffodils.  When we walk
the hill, you’ll see all the daffodils

in all the yards.  You’ll see — 
the robins are back.  You’ll see
the sodden trash of after winter

and how much still needs doing.

Just listen to me, please:  your clock
is sick and so is time itself.  Please
don’t agree with them in their fever.

Please don’t agree with time,
with how it’s burning you up.  
Say you’re going nowhere, please.  Say

the only place you are going
is to the couch to watch bad TV with me
until it’s time for our walk.  

Say the clock
is delirious, is making a huge mistake,
is too sick to be right. Please.


My Body Steals This Poem From Me

Originally posted 3/19/2014.  

Tonight my body’s not working right
and I’m trying to keep it
from writing this poem.

It’s trying to steal itself from me,
attempting to work in first person.
I respond

butter pat,
maple sauce,
meaty arms of morning.

My body brushes that aside, barricades itself
in my hand, takes my intentions hostage
and demands the poem as ransom.

I balk at this and make
a counter offer, 
a good faith gesture with 

iron pendant,
bronze cuff,
stone talisman,

but my body rejects it
and again demands control
of the first person.

Defeated by my body’s insistence
upon its version of this moment,
I find myself once again with

elm tree,
granite slab,

late afternoon shade

no longer standing firm
on their own but chained
by my body to meaning.

My body scorns my hope
that I is not the only true word.
Perhaps I should agree and

let my body rail and fail its way
into this poem and all the others
I have not yet begun.

I am not at peace with this
but not at a loss for words,
exactly; no, 
I still have plenty

of those but my body
will surely steal them
and ground them in its own venality.  

My will being as weak as it is,
I fear I will not be heard
in the midst of that

so I sit and shiver
within, silent, watching my body
own me.


A Little Bit Of History Repeating Itself

When I opened the door
to my wing of darker rooms,
I expected to let something out
but did not expect 
so much more to get in 
and make a home there.

When I broke into song
by the lake of fire, 
I expected to take heat
but I did not expect 
my lungs to become
so hard-scarred,
did not expect
my voice to become
so brittle.

When I eased my knives
back into the block
after butchering, I did not expect
that they would rattle me awake
night after night, hissing out
from their wooden slots,
“more, more, more…”

When I shook hands
with you, salt-hearted 
snake, rhymer for the offense,
herald and praiser of all that blood 
can destroy when it breaks loose,
I did not expect to end up
shaking for so long after
I let go of your hand.  
I did not expect you
to keep shaking me. Somehow,
I never expected
to become

such a weary fool,
such a well worn tool,

such a gleeful singer

of fire’s ancient song.


Reincarnation

An infant soul drowses
in clear Hands,
waiting

for a return to human life,
or for a return from human life
back to the Center.

Which it will be
it does not know
in this moment before it wakes.

It knows that if it is destined
to return to a human form,
it will not have peace like this again

for a long while —
but it will have sunsets and dawns 
and seas and snows and love

and striving and sweat,
and perhaps worse things but 
perhaps better things too.

It knows that if it is destined
to leave human form behind
and return to the Center,

what will come will likely be
unchanging, and sweet as
honey, and unchanging, and 

soft as a warm spring, and
unchanging, and filled with
joy, and unchanging.

The infant soul
opens its eyes as it is released by
those shining Hands 

into its next place. 
What it knows then
is a question,

given those possibilities,
about what to hope for 
and what to dread.


That Lost World

that lost world
of revered light
and startling beings

prim grandma
stealing sugar packets
tucking them into an old purse

odd uncle
pulling quarters from nowhere
as if the air were a bank

fading faces
of mother and father
and siblings barely to be seen

but sharp pencil sketches
of schoolmates recalled
as if drawn yesterday

kissing till breathless
in dark corners found
throughout that lost world

that lost world
of plentiful work
and good sweat

party laughter
on worn porches
all weekend long

rare moments of petty anger
dispatched with handshakes
after flurries of small punches

music that made
laughter and struggle
easier somehow

sound sleep
unpunctuated by thunder
or trauma 

what seemed to be
hope sifting over all
of that lost world

that lost world is
now rolling out of frame
a stray marble

later to be stumbled over
sending a body flying
to hard landing

never as ideal as imagined
it was built
to hide itself

even as it swallowed all
in its illusion
of raising all at once

still it held
much joy and much love
in its pockets

as that lost world
fades from sight

it does not feel wrong to weep


Ending

What else is there
for him to say except

that an ending can be as lovely
as any beginning

that not all endings are
also beginnings

that some things end and
there’s beauty in recalling

what is gone
and shall not return

He says these things
in fear of the next morning

that he knows
will not come for him

says these things
as the sky lowers toward him

says these things
as the light begins to flee from him

says these things as if they were
spells 

They are not spells and
there’s no magic anywhere

that can resolve this ending
into a fresh start 

But he lies as always
as if it will be true in time to save him

as if truth were as much to be feared
as ending 

as if truth mattered at all to the narrative
happening here

 


Pipe Music

My daddy used to
ride a motorcycle
long ago. Put it away
before I could get 
enamored of it but
I knew and loved that
pipe music
almost before I could
speak. 

Pulled it
out again
only after he retired,
thinking, I guess,

I was safe enough
by then from
two-wheeled lust
for him to throw a leg over,
get back on. Later his hips

messed up even that
short run for freedom, 
and the bike was sold

before I could speak up for it —

now, I’ve never owned a road bike
and only ridden small ones a few times
in the woods and then only
when my daddy wasn’t around

but somehow

I dance to pipe music more these days

and somewhere in the dark 
beyond my father’s eventual

departure, I can see myself
throwing a leg over
something big and loud and
noisy and all mine

before my own bones tell me no,
before I become
deadened to that rough skirling
clatter,

before I forget him completely.


Blood Or Blues

Blood or blues — time
to choose my drink 
for tonight — to sip
rage or rue —

It’s afternoon —
dark’s not terribly far
off — some light
remains — do I choose

blood or blues —
do I sit in cold
with sadness in
my mouth or

raise heat and roll
with the rising —
go out hot
to smash or soar

Blood or blues — I could
go either way but it’s time
to choose — move or slump
or dance or dim

until I’m barely here — or
ball myself into fire and 
go out burning —
time to choose

blood or blues 
Living past dying or cooling
and sliding into darkness —
do I choose blood or blues


Fears

tree-shadows
outside the window

what’s under-bed
whose hand you’re imagining
under there

how to fix this

suddenly
trying to recall
what you forgot
what might burst into flame
what you left behind

how to fix this

how should you have phrased that
did he mean what he said
did you misinterpret it
how could you have been
so stupid

how to fix this

word salad clumsy
rose petal mistakes and
what might it mean when
they are often

how to fix this

does pride go before
a trip and where could
you go where you might
feel pride again

can anyone seeing you
see all this
hear all this and are they going to wait
for you to fix it
do they fear you fixing it
do they care anymore if
you fix this

knowing exactly how to fix this
exactly how to fix this
how to make it stop
make it stop 

never being touched again
OH

how to fix this
exactly right
perfectly well

how much will it hurt
is there a way to fix it
that won’t hurt
that will be like sleeping

finding nothing there once it has stopped
finding no way to restart once it has stopped
finding this fix doesn’t fix it

trees

hands

to be touched again


Portrait

Cross with the 
olive skin
of others, angry at
accommodations
being made for
others, saddened by
changed hearts of others,
furious at condoned loves
of others, terrified of
the desperation of others,
worried about the money
of others, enraged by
all the ways of others,
explanations of others,
reasons of others,
reasons for others,
art by others, music by
others, the taste and flavor
of Otherness itself…yes,

it’s in the eyes.


Birthday

Each birthday you reach
is your last until 
you reach the next one;

what are you doing
for your last birthday?

It seems only right
that there should be
some symbolic flame to it,

some burning down
of the previous years

as in a warrior’s funeral
or the high leaping fire
of any pyre anywhere

for at heart a birthday party
is the performed hope

concealed in the hot core
of the myth
of the phoenix.


Descent

Descent is
a word for 
downfall, as in

I am of 
mixed
descent, as in

I am descended
from and thus
am no longer

a part of.  
I’ve fallen from
and landed below.

My current name
was pasted upon me
to cover up

whatever name 
slipped off
during my

descent.
I do answer to it:
a sound

of hard landing
in a place I’ve grown 
to recognize though

it never feels like home,
which some suggest
is better considering

how much hate
is attached to those
old names. Better, they say,

to have landed
and be renamed
as if I’d fallen

naked and new
and unconnected,
though I am not.

I don’t feel better
for anonymity and
erasure, considering

what distance I’ve fallen 
to get here and how
broken I was upon impact.

It’s my descent
we’re speaking of.
I’d like to know

what the heights
I fell from 
are like and I’d like

to think that someone
up there would know me
if I somehow returned,

could call me by name,
could help me find
my way back

to who I once was.


A Lacewing Fly

you’ve fallen into
gloom, feel
you’re drowning
in murky water, 
think you have no
choice but to be forever
dimmed.

dearness, 

darkness isn’t
all-inclusive simply because
it’s hard to see through.
its mystery
isn’t everything, doesn’t hold all 
there is worth knowing.

look.

it’s full morning, long past
dawn.
a lacewing fly
has landed upon your forearm,
shining among your own
fine, shining hair.

you bring your face close
to see its glassveined
wings glowing, flicking
as it rests there upon you,
connected
to you through 
sunlight. dearness, 

if it were midnight,
you’d slap this miracle aside for 
making your skin crawl. instead,
by having allowed it to stay

you will feel it
shining within you

for long years to come.