Tag Archives: poetry

War Dance

AR-15s frolicking their butts off.
The happy song of the bayonets.
Gates of paradise ground open by grenades.
Claymores bouncing,
bombers headspinning,
bunker busters diving
into the earth. Such joy,
and all because
we’ve allowed them to play,
pushed them into this abandon,

clucking like chaperons standing around
just to be defied,
recalling how we once did this
with our own cave-roughened hands.

“Kids these days,”
we chuckle,
forgetting for the moment
that we made them.

“In our day, we did it
up close and personal,
and we never wiped
blood from our hides
until we were sour
from the smell. 

They don’t know
what they’re missing.”

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Lego My Ego

It’s got a lot of pieces —

and it never looks like the picture on the box
when I’m done;

I build a lot of things
and sometimes am inordinately proud
of what I’ve created,

but more often,
I end up screeching my frustration
at the vague resemblance.

Lego my Ego!

is the battle cry
as I blame the Manufacturer
for my failure, or rather
for my creating what I could
from what I had;

it doesn’t look right.
And I swear someone gave me
those fucking Duplo blocks
instead of what I deserved
to work with.

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Fixed

We watched him
break
then saw him
fixed. 

“Fixed”
is a perfect word, lays claim
to past wounds that are now invisible
or only reminders if the scars show.

“Repaired” is also perfect, suggests
meeting of unnaturally separated parts,
so the sight of him once shattered
and now repaired is heartening.

We shuffle along
swept up in our own cracks,
puzzling through the memory
of not being in pieces,
if we can recall that at all…

so when he speaks
from his entirety,
not concealing past injury
but showing how he has healed,

we see it.  We feel it.
We are moved to action,
and perhaps
a little ashamed.

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Horoscope To Holocaust

Enslaved to a horoscope,
some won’t drive far when Mercury is retrograde.

Engaged by humor,
they let offense slide off their numb tongues.

Enthralled by heritage,
they won’t give credit to others.

Eviscerated by holy writ,
they scourge the unbelievers in their prayers.

Enlisted by history,
they reap the bodies of the designated scapegoats.

Every time it happens,
we call it instinct

or natural order or divine will or the stars aligning,
when in fact it comes down to

what we allow
to rule us without forethought,

and from horoscope to Holocaust
is not all that far to travel.

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Bridges Are Burning

Bridges are burning and
I’m a little glad to see it.

Crossing them
seemed sometimes
a blasphemy.

In broad daylight
or even at night
when I’ve been alone,

there have been moments
of silence and separation
when I’ve felt that those distances
from rail to wave
and across the stream
were just meant to be.

Still, despite
my fear of heights,
there will be times
when I will think
of those bridges
on fire
and long for the courage
to run out along
the cracking spans
and see how close I could come
to the other side

before I fell.

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House To House

Not one of the fifteen cops on this street
suggests I go inside
when they walk by me
with their shotguns and dogs.

I’m not the man they’re looking for
but they are in my backyard
with shotguns and dogs
looking for a man with a gun.

I’m incidental to the search.
They ask me if I’ve seen anyone
and how long I’ve been out here
in the rain under the hood of my car.

Have I seen anyone? They are in
my backyard with shotguns and dogs
and a news crew’s interviewing one of them
down at the corner while I watch.

They haven’t seen anyone either,
not catching any of us on tape
as they watch the cops look for
the man they’re looking for

under porches and in our backyards.
We’re incidental to the search
for a man who shot a woman through the neck
in her car one block from here.

We’re just cannon fodder.  We’re not the people
anyone is looking for or speaking to
except to ask if we’ve seen anyone,
anyone at all, in connection to the incident

that none of them will confirm or deny has happened
no matter how often we ask them to tell us
what happened.  What happened?  On the Web they say
a woman was shot, police are seeking the assailant,

her identity is not being released,
she’s in critical condition, the suspect’s description
just says he’s a black male of unknown age
with a gun in his waistband,

but no one in our backyards
will tell us that as they rush past us
talking only to themselves
with their shotguns and dogs and cameras and radios,

as I work on my car in the rain,
as if nothing that could possibly interest me
or anyone living here
has happened today.

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At The Bank

how guilty do I seem —

limping in long jeans
and ratty sneakers
to the bank and the liquor store
to pay overdue bills

pants soaked halfway up my shins
in light rain with no umbrella
or hat or coat
or smile

the teller takes a long time
cashing the check — she seems suspicious

“don’t you have a bank account
like everyone else?”

oh
my dear lady

let me wipe my glasses free of rain
let me stop panting
let me shake the cramp out of my foot
before I answer
that
though I am now
complexly broke and broken
I am innocent of the dumb you think you see on me
and whatever I may be guilty of
it is not what you think:

I belong here
am rooted here
no matter how rootless my finances
make me look to you
and while I have a bank account
I’m not explaining this to you
out of sheer pain
at your assumption

poverty I think should be no hyphen
in this town

just gimme my due
and you can click your tongue
in your own car
on your way home
through this delicious rain
you will not feel

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Writing Wet

From atop this rock
I can see seven others
in this stream. 
Some are slick
and moss-black
and breach the surface
almost not at all;
others hump fully up
gray and knobbed
into dry air.
Depending on how
willing I am
to leap across
or soak myself
stepping in,
there are so many ways
to get from here
to the far side
that I am perplexed
at least, frightened
at most, with thoughts
of what may happen
if I fail to choose
correctly.
Stupid,
says a branch rubbing
another branch by chance
above me;
stupid,
says
a broken acorn falling
then floating by;
stupid,

echoed by the click of stones
against stones in the stream bed
pushed into speech by the flood;
stupid.  Get across
by crossing.
So I spring from the rock I’m on
with eyes closed, knees bent,
waiting to see how I land
before deciding
how to proceed from there.

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Making Do

A remedy is offered in an alley.
Money moves
from sufferer to healer.
quickly.  What has been purchased
proves to be weaker than was desired,
but will do.  The sufferer mutters,
but settles for it.

A farmer settles on a smaller price
for a larger crop, smoldering
with thoughts of winter ahead.

Linchpins
are carved from hard wood
in places where there are no forges.

Where there is only soft copper
and little wood,
those who need linchpins
traditionally long for iron,
will scrounge and scheme
for something to trade for it,

and plan for war.

While we’re all making do,
civilization develops,
rises, and falls in upon itself.

Without each other to shore up
our resentments, to bear
our brunt,

we’re nothing.

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2010

That there is a matter of fact,
of any fact,
is not obvious.

That there is worth
is ruthlessly questioned. 

That chaos is our manacle
is not permitted
to be discussed among polite company.

That we once had hopes, good ratios,
explanations, heroes,
is not worth mentioning.

Are you sick yet from stories
of sickening eggs?

It is no wonder we admire vampires.

Are you romancing cameras?  Are you
booking trips, taking trips,
tripping on music? Are you
blue-fingered
from holding on?

We hide our marrow in our parent’s bones.

Are you yelling loud enough?

Our pockets are rusty.

Are you saying please and thank you?
Are you paying for what you always got for free?

Sucking on dry bones,
we must fall in love with whatever
seems as warm as blood.

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A Monster

Monster
is multiplicity of me — awkward me,
smooth me too,
ripped up me in claw costume,
clay head, raw meat eyes.

Monster Me drinks a little, expand
each bogeyman, and then all
see it, see me.

Each Monster is not
response.  I don’t answer
with me: Monster Me
doesn’t talk,
just stands scary —
animal leather-hand,
vegetation jaws, mineral
lungs. 

You gave Monster Me to me,
enabled me
with reasons
not to be shown off.
Made me these jungle desert
alpine scimitar teeth.  Made me
folklore legend leftover spooks.
Made me a book
read and tossed into a garden
on fire.  Monster Me, a pair of
clamps on a veined muscle.

A monster is not
mothered or fathered;
to be rather stark
it rises in a stand of
pointed sticks, sore,
and sleep
never a bed.

Monster Me, I am that —
all of that, all of them,
no me in there
I do not want to flee.

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Going Ape

On Monday
I acted like an ape —
frenetic, colloquially
“bananas” I guess,
though that’s too
pun-stark obvious;
Tuesday was sick sorrow
that bled into Wednesday’s anxious,
death-certain march into
Thursday’s despair
that became Friday’s joy
at the approach of safe Saturday,
and while the coming Monday
holds its own fears
it’s still Friday
so I’m going to dance
to something loud
and hellacious
from now until Sunday
when I’ll likely fall down
with my frozen head
stuck on Monday
and start the whole
ape cycle again
with the same flaming arms
and the same stuporous sense
that every week will be
forever the same.

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Bullets

Your choice
is simple: the bullets
will always fly, so you can choose
to be behind the bullet,
or in front of it.

Of course you could choose
to be the bullet
that is neither behind nor before,
that does the wet work
and cares not for choices
while faithfully doing its job,
but the whorl of your eyes
tells me that’s not for you,
so choose:
where will you stand
when they fly? Will you stand behind,
admit your love
of the firm trigger in your hand,
the sense of control, answers
delivered so swiftly?  Or will you stand in front
and admit your love for the bullets
and the guns, the sense of surrender
to answers received so simply?

You protest
and say you can always stand aside,
but tell me you truly believe
you’ll always be able to stand aside.
Tell me you don’t know now
where you’ll prefer to stand
when the whistle comes
to tell you the bullet is flying.

Tell me you think there’s a chance
you won’t have to choose
and I will show you
how the dirt below your feet laughs
through its long and heavy
load of blood at the thought of such a thing,
choking on elegies, recalling funerals,
mad men staring past the heaps of dead
before them, the bodies piled
and lined up for interment,
the old who will not speak
of how they chose to live
by standing behind the bullets,
knowing they could have chosen
to stand before but for their precious lives
yet unlived.

Tell me you can stand aside
from that giving and taking
and I will show you how it feels
to have the choice taken from you
and find that wherever you end up,
behind the gun or in front of the bullet,
you’ll feel like the bullet
has found you.

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Burning Books

Our pastor told us
that the books of the Devil
must be burned,
so we burned them,

and their released words
grew into elongated sparks
that soared from the fire,
small birds of prey
with flesh in their claws,
disappearing almost at once
once they cleared the sphere
of firelight.

We rejoiced then,

but some of us awakened later
from sweat-damp beds
with those birds digging at our ears,
trenching into us as they sought
the sour meat they knew
must be there.

We met next day
and told each other
of this in whispers
over breakfast,

leaving out the part
about how, just before we’d been
torn from sleep,
we each had had
a thrill ride dream

of marching feet
and whirlwind crosses
and satisfaction
at what we’d made together;

satisfaction
as thick as smoke
curling above
a chimney,
a fallen tower,
a pyre.

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Familiar

The animal you chose
to keep in that ring
with the secret compartment
is wobbly with hunger.
You haven’t fed her for years.
You forgot her.  You let her starve,
and now she’s bone and hide.
It’s time to open the vein
in your palm and let her drink
while you cradle her and tell her
of your forgotten love of her fur
and her wide yellow eyes, but she perishes
before you have finished,
and you are left agog with the shame
of having chosen and then
abandoned her.

Listing and bouncing from wall to wall
as you carry her out to the yard
you walk directly to a tree
and, laying her carefully beside you,
you begin to dig the hole
for her body.  You dig deeply
and the pile of earth rises beside you
until it blocks the stars,
which do not reappear
even after you’ve stepped away
from the mound.

She was so small
when she died.  Why this grave
needs to be so deep
is something you’ll think about
for a long time.

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