Wednesday, November 30, 2011

3337. AS WE KNOW IT NOW AGAIN

AS WE KNOW 
IT NOW AGAIN
I haven't ever understood the nodding relationship
between this end and that place : the small girl
in the black robe holds her arm out, with a camera
at the hand, the light flashes as she snaps away.
Gentlemen, in their old skin, walk stiffly off, one of
them archly smoking a pipe. The razorhat brigade,
all over 70, it seems, comes snappily by, being
driven in carts. Old pros, professionals anyway,
limping along though too limp to limp. The blue
sky above festers in its own moment; a new
presence in a very old and tired drama. Life!
Life as old as sin, as we know it now again.

3336. NANCY MCGUIRE ALONG RIDGE ROAD

 NANCY MCGUIRE 
ALONG RIDGE ROAD
McNamara Meetinghouse along the iron edge
of old Ridge Road. I took Nancy McGuire to a
dance there once, a very long time ago. She was
simple and sweet, and we kissed for an hour,
it seemed. The deadlights were flashing at the
end of the lane, where lovers, I think, kept
traipsing in and traipsing out. None of that
mattered to Nancy; she wouldn't budge an
inch. All that I learned, I learned in that
cinch - just wishing I knew more.

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

3335. SAME SHADY MATTER

SAME SHADY MATTER
My life is a saddle for a horse never ridden;
the straight line runs to the horizon, east or
west, up or down, it never mattered, I've 
always forgotten, and there's no difference
anyway there. Same light. Same slant.
Same shady matter. I've put down
my stirrups, and long ago
left the barn.

Monday, November 28, 2011

3334. DO NOTHING 'TIL YOU HEAR FROM ME'

DO NOTHING 'TIL 
YOU HEAR FROM ME
('her voice lutes brokenly like a heart lost')
Whilemena!  Inanities!   Gershwin!
Ruling Dead Triumverate Magnificent!
(and here comes Billie Holiday!).
-
Now to look around: over there, over there,
that's Eugenides scratching away - yellow pad
and papers and flipper over scarf. (Yet it's
not enough to find that tantalizing touch!).
-
And here's the scoop: the white line moves
and tingles. There seems to be soup in
every window, as American as ladeling
pies from the old farmer-lady's porch.
(Oh the backyard is brackish).
-
'I thought I could do something to ease
the contradiction between immanent and
universal ethics which I thought was my
problem and was what I hoped to gain
thru therapy like any evolution presupposes
an involution and all tha kind of thinking.'
-
(Whilemena! Why am I reading Kerouac again)!

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

3333. I HUNG MY HAT

I HUNG MY HAT
(Part One)
Penny-whistle anteater ceramic form:
'Call it what you want', the strange sculptor
said. Hi-hat with a tribe, a nail-gun throbbing
loudly - 'Why do you operate this way?', said
I, 'almost annoying, don't you know? So much
force and noise.' He was throwing things down 
now, from a scaffold. Everything stayed still.
-
'Watch, watch, the new light on the hedges out
there' - we were looking at morning coming over
the hill  -  'then try duplicating that in your mind;
perfectly defined light, living its own place, shading
green hedges doubtlessly.' I looked and saw  -  a
nice light, with well-defined angles dripping down
over the white-metal lamp-post and hitting the hedge.
He was right; it was beautifully bright.
-
He'd written me once before  -  'No barfy teen-age'd
snot writing snarky lyrics to his mother. Why then did
Rimbaud stop writing? He damn-well better have,
that useless piece of crap, teen-age angst and all
of that.' I'd guessed he didn't like Rimbaud, though
I never asked and he never told. A few lines later,
he wrote 'youth is wasted on the callow, fucking
young.' I wrote him back, 'So, you only seek
maturity? And now you work in wood and stone?'
'Yes', he'd replied, 'it changes less.'
-
 Now I was drinking coffee at his table, while he was
downing scotch and probably drunk as well. He slammed
his glass down hard  -  'To tell, to tell, I'm tired of all this
shit now. I just want to get along. I'm too fucking old and
nasty to care. Hell, if I could make thunder now instead, 
I would.' I had to stay strong, trying to tell this backwards
nicely  -  a tale as rugged as rock but spacey as stars. I can't
really define the moments, but in these ways this is pretty
much how they occurred. He was wearing a hat he called
'Pomona Ray'. He was throwing things down, where they stayed.

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

3332. SALVATION HAS REACHED SERBIA ONCE MORE (Demon Devil)

SALVATION HAS REACHED 
SERBIA ONCE MORE
(Demon Devil)
Traumatic times make for an ace in the hole:
bring out the flagellants, the fires, and all those
guns. Look at the flames along the roadway, and
think who made them. (We've never managed
motivation well). And was that you, out there
singing at the drain? (I was at the hospital just
yesterday morn. Yes, they were all dying in droves).
-
The youngest of the five, the small artist, he wants
to come home but there is no place left. We haven't
yet told him, and no one really wants to : his sister
was raped and mangled, and his father is dead.
Salvation has reached Serbia once more.
-
I remember (I think it was) Mostar or Srebenica Bridge,
one of those  -  all the killings, and the bricks came down.
Now the water runs placid, along the shore and the grime.
The old men are sitting in chairs and having their time.
Salvation has reached Serbia once more.

3331. WHILE THE GILDED PROFESSORS RULE

WHILE THE GILDED 
PROFESSORS RULE
Actually, I'd prefer the million broad provisions of
another grounded life to the wan material I'm now
presented  -  I read the Contingent Gospels, I read
the Fall of Rome, I've read Tristram Shandy, Moll
Flanders, Harvest Home. I'd much prefer instead,
these days, to come around the winding road, to espy
old Beacon Mountain, or think of Wind Gap; passages
through Nature in the gloam. These are, to me, newer
things  -  small places I've been, things I've seen. The
wind upon the buttercup, the hummingbird stuck flapping
in the air; all honey, all nectar, all blood and all good.
-
(Why do you go on so, parrying your words with this
soulful lament)? I do not have to answer! Gilded professors
and General Pomp, each have made me (just as well)
somehow sick with a certain, pointed hatred. Your
soldiers, like your ideas, have died already. Your
horrid, arms-bearing ideologues merely make me laugh.
I hope you die, in fact, each and every soldier you produce,
each motor-tronic moron you enact. Live by the sword,
die by the sword  -  yet for all of you, I hope it happens
twice; I hope you die anew, and you never come
home to enter my land again.
-
I've made the adjustments, corrected my ways  -
now all I need do is live out my days.

Monday, November 21, 2011

3330. REVIEW

REVIEW
Mail the picnic card on time, and
slurp your broth with shuttered lips.
Never do two things at once and  -  
just as well  -  don't talk while you're
doing the one. Most things will simply
recur, and the girls will each come home.

3329. I HAVE A BRIGHT BLUE DRAGON, RIDING HERE IN MY LIBELOUS EYES

I HAVE A BRIGHT BLUE 
DRAGON, RIDING HERE
 IN MY LIBELOUS EYES
From Newark they took the medallion.
The ruinous locals would steal everything
here, where Dutch Schultz and Lewie Lesko's
final soliloquies were written on blood on
the chophouse walls. Miranda died, and the
ghost tavern still has the drunks on the side;
they wait every morning for nothing, at a
tavern that is no more. The lastly God-damned
hookers stand outside and hawk with pride.
The tiny Italian, I heard him say - 'I'm ok now.
I've had my fix for the day.' Plucking olives
from the rosebush bed, reading secrets at
the gorge  -  Newark to Clifton to Paterson
and back. Such makes a day, and that is that.
(And oh, this all works beautifully. I have a
bright blue dragon riding here in my libelous eyes).

3228. CEMETERY

CEMETERY
We found ourselves somehow walking
beneath the monstrous oaks and elms
still standing. At my feet was the grave
of a grandmother I never knew. The
crazy one, the one put away, the one
who died in the the asylum far off. What
little I remembered right then beckoned:
The expansive hillside lawn, the bright, 
white sun, and all those ghost people
just walking about. (Leave the
mystery, don't take it out).

Thursday, November 17, 2011

3327. BOTHERED BEN BARRY

BOTHERED BEN BARRY
I may have bothered Ben Barry, but I
wouldn't know. The morning, the day, was
close as a vest, and I was thinking of Ukraine -
some crazy Russian war a year or so ago.
Nothing added up. Nothing mattered. And
then Ben Barry came waltzing by. All his smiles
wanted to sing the same way a child's eyes want
to mesmerize. He sat on a bench on some guy's
boat, and just began singing  -  'won't you
let me take you on  a sea cruise...'
-
Mist was thick like fog, and it hung on
everything. Crickets too tried singing,
but they got stuck; stuck in a trill, stuck
in a drone, stuck in a lull. Visibility, as if
they said it, was cut to five feet. Bothered
Ben Barry was still on that seat.
-
 Never mind all that : I speak to you direct
instead; no things, no objects in the way.
Open up your heart and spirit, and take
it all in. It is the only way. And such
Love is the only growth. Even if
bothered Ben Barry be.

3326. SPADE TO SHOVEL

SPADE TO SHOVEL
'Dear child, you are awake and given each
possible thing to savor : the shovel on the
land, the spade on that small patch of ground.
Now understand nothing more than this  - 
you must go on.'
-
When people tell their tales and stories,
I must listen. Need not genuflect, of course,
but listen. Yet now, yet now it seems this
heart will burst. I will miss you evermore.
The needle-jet circumference upon open
waters circles out; spreading its waves,
its open form, upon the sea. Coffee
from Wales? No such thing.
-
Do you understand this waking mystery
I present you? The gum wrapper on the
pavement, the little cracks in the pane of
glass  -  each of these in their ways too
bring me forth to tell to you. Pain. Fusion.
Want. Longing. Pain. Fusion. Want. Longing.
-
(The Sun has really no value now. It
oozes a useless light on varied things).

3325. THE PERIODIC TABLE OF THE ELEMENTS

THE PERIODIC TABLE
OF THE ELEMENTS
('we drove 9 hours up to Planet Vermont')
Somehow ideas that work seem never
problematical. Mendelev himself arrayed a
certain world with a standing, scheming logic
we live with yet today. How smug are the
assumptions still in use to make this world's
array. Words scatter like gas from the conclusions.
There  -  in a stream where never maple water
stops flowing, this deep in old Vermont. Sitting there,
a man as well who talks with a voice like honey (I
can only call it that). And such a one is talking still.
His small wife listens, as the people pause. Blood
brothers, to the bone grafted, exchanging spittle
and harm and grime. In the hotel room, I heard
Helen on the radio and  -  with a Gideon's Bible
in his ancient hands, the man from the Bennington
Hotel  -  a huge, cranial skull depression where his
forehead should have been  -  stood standing,
quietly, on the third floor landing.

3324. REFLECTIONS ON

REFLECTIONS ON
Time was Man could see : light of
the Moon shining down through
the trees, strange shadows along a
wolfpath at night. The forest was
folded and ribbed, saddled to ride
with dimension and flourish. By the
light of the silvery Moon. Today's
standards, so much dimmer, we
lick two stamps, not even, and send
things on their way. Oh marvelous
Earth, I have married you for your
change and dimension. Or then
again have I not?

3323. 'NOT LONG ENOUGH', THE MINER SAID

'NOT LONG ENOUGH', 
THE MINER SAID
'Air grows short in a pocket; we do not know,
by the new flow, if the water will reach you, nor
if you'll stay dry. Twelve feet of solid rock
we've got to drill  -  harsh  -  and that's once
we get down there. We can't wire you for light.
We can't wire you for air. Whatever you do,
be careful down there and - I guess - just
wait. No sacrificial landing this is, and there
are a hundred faces up here crying.'
-
Then the loud dogs barked the tripwire
while those men with lanterns held their
lights. Insipid, invalued humans; there
was nothing left to do.

Monday, November 14, 2011

3322. DO YOU WISH? (the Gardener's Lament)

DO YOU WISH?
(the Gardener's Lament)
Do you wish to force the clover past the brick?
Place the newly painted planter by the portmanteau
or portecochere  -  whatever those sounds like
fussy words declare? Do you wish your hat, even
your gown, your very clothes, now to be withheld
within my gardener's hands (for I would strip you
like a stem)? And, oh yes, I can grow things, I can
press you 'til your heart upends. I can love you
easy or love you hard; your choice to sing, my 
oh-so-lovely thing. Let us mark these notes,
instead, to muse on  -  how the singular light
of daytime marks your lonesome face; how the
small bird, singing, watches wary, and - lastly - 
how this regal breeze the fir tree brushes. Now,
do you wish to force the clover past the brick?

3321. I DREAM OF THINGS

I DREAM OF THINGS
I am not that very good at running - 
hacking breath with blood, keeping
snide evasions to the side of me, watching
others pass me on the fly. And yes, yes,
correct, I dream of things  -  the day my
wings shall fly, the morn' my ship comes
in, the night my eyes shall cry and the
race that I shall win!

3320. THE PHILIP GUSTON BRIDGE

THE PHILIP GUSTON BRIDGE
nyc, (1967)
I called back once, and he was gone.
All that color and content, patiently 
waiting for him, or myself, to come.
The ceaselessly stupid old phone rang
crankily off its hook  -  no one ever
answered; just as no one ever sang or
warbled, or hummed. A hangman in a 
hood, that fat cigar, and the cracked 
and mottled shoe : loathsome intimations
of how rank this single humanity can be.
-
I shook his hand and tapped his back,
numerous times and long ago, on Eighth
Street and on Tenth. We hung together
like compadres  -  the crazy Rover 2000,
the car he drove to and fro, and his wry
smile  -  over and over  -  about something
quaint or another. Back and forth to talk.
-
Morty Feldman. The Woodstock studio,
Milton Resnick and David Hare. Jesus
Christ, I'd give an arm to have it all again.

3319. AS THOUGH THE WAITING

AS THOUGH 
THE WAITING
We take the weave, the warp, the very
natural injury of time and thread it over
substance : 'little lamb, who made thee?',
'shall I wear my trousers rolled?', 'I wander
through these charter'd streets', and all the rest
of that. Idleness bemoans itself, as a claptrap
of little minds. And, nonetheless, as though
the waiting meant something  -  as though the
very waiting in and of itself held value  -  we,
stutteringly, travel on. Unlocking morning doors,
writing that note, brewing coffee on a lacquered
ledge. Sitting back. Swerving a yellow car through
some black and muddy traffic of valueless virtue.
-
Every time to go means getting where one's going.
-
Instead, I wallow. I watch the frozen Autumn
flower droop and crack its timely Death. Yes, 
yes, the season has held its court and you are
guilty! Found to be culpable, now even you,
oh Beauty, oh Life, oh all this thrust of Goodness,
must  -  by this decree  -  go! Take leave! Die off!

3318. WHAT THEY TOO HAVE LIT

  WHAT THEY TOO HAVE LIT
To there; to fabricated men, to fractured women,
to lost moments, to meanings without thought.
I light the light and it illumines, while all my
thoughts, well-lit as well, reflect
what they too have lit.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

3317. GOING TO TEXAS WITH SAM SHEPHERD

GOING TO TEXAS 
WITH SAM SHEPHERD
'Oh damn, we're already fucked up!' The little sun
was shining flat out, baking the ground and killing
all lesions. The noise behind us wasn't noise, just
sound. The cooking of beetles. The grilling of hides.
Along the horizon, only the ridiculous look of 
Mexico sheds, Alamo sides, Amarillo antics.
In a little, squat, suburban town, we pulled into
a grease-stained driveway, broken and slanted.
Somehow (and why?) a '68 Super Sport, some
ghost of an old Chevrolet, sank and rotted. We 
turned once to look, and you muttered - 'Jesus
and shit both; there she is'. Her name was Nanta
Maris Escovara, and for two hundred miles I'd
heard nothing but her story  -  a life-blood of
sex and devilment (hell, wanting even me to
jump in!), the brother who died on Yucatan 
Road, the three kids left behind. Did I
mention the sex? I really forget. We 
got out of our own limping car, and
she came over, just like that, like 
we'd just seen her yesterday and
had more to say.

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

3316. DICE (1099)

DICE (1099)
Shadow into seeming; dark night into Death.
The staggering leap of fire and heat, the jump
across the divide, the lime beneath the feet.
All, all, all for nothing at all. I watch the crusaders,
boot-blacks and lancers, wriggle their way past truth
and consequences. The pole that pierces someone's
heart holds not mine but another. I waltz across
the history zone, in silent, secret reverie, too tired,
as it is, to scream or flinch. Shadow into seeming;
dark night into this. The blackbird yelling, the jackdaw
dense, the Jesus of the image on the banner, now
afire, burns to dust and ashes on a brittle field of want.
(All, all, all for nothing at all).

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

3315. A SINGLENESS OF TIME

A SINGLENESS 
OF TIME
We are growing our bodies outside of ourselves,
relegating the present to a circumstance, and
moving on. And then - I hear a door slap shut
and realize nothing yet remember :  once too
when I was somehow a child, open and 
unshuttered, insisting on making loud noises.
Now, all things have changed. There are
voices parting ways, dissembling in a haste
of 'harvest fairs' and 'Thanksgiving plans'.
All things I never wish to see.  The chrome 
sun shines off the Buick's blue face, and
somewhere, near above, the terminal clock
chimes off another railroad hour.

Monday, November 7, 2011

3314. COMES TO THINKING

COMES TO THINKING
I have not blinked. I am still here.
Drinking wine from an ashtray, something
akin to reading Anne Sexton by the
double-dose - such it is that makes me
bleary. Dead-eyed Jack, all is black,
with two marvelous bandits on the corner.
No, I have not blinked and I am still here.

3313. OUR MEEK ADJUSTMENTS

OUR MEEK ADJUSTMENTS
By all my mutilated edges I have wholesome come to this :
my most magnificent crenelations, rudders in the brain,
ripples on the head, slow folds on the cranium of all my
time. All the wind, in turn, undulates these things like
willows blowing slow rhythms of the riverside's edging.
Squirrels and chipmunks, in the hills above, stop short
and take their notice, while filthy geese and placid ducks
don their usual pacings for whatever it is may come below.
(We make our meek adjustments to what the world may bring).

Friday, November 4, 2011

3312. HEAVEN AND HELL, JUMBLED

HEAVEN AND 
HELL, JUMBLED
I read the light coming through buildings and
doorways, coating streets and people. All the
light told me was gracious and gold. In each
entry, something huddled : once, a dun-gray
man, shivered from cold, and - in another -
a tired woman holding a cat in her arms.
Farther off, three fellows, close together,
seemed never to stop talking, in a near-rout,
jostling as they went. This was the open book,
 the street, the light-van, pooling and vibrant.
Twenty years ago, I'd never have looked
and never understood. Now, I knew the
reach of Heaven's presence, here, where
I stood. There is no greater place than
all this is; this Heaven and Hell jumbled.

3311. TREES

TREES
There wasn't a blanket for the forest,
nor a forest for the trees. Everything
was white, like a solid wall, bright. We
jangled the commingled action, screaming
all the while about things unseen. You
partied with your face off. I was the jester
to your mourning cloth. New Orleans and
then Mount Arlens  -  two such different
places and neither made a difference to
each. I called, but they all were calling back.
-
When the reivers hit the river, everything
went down. We were caught in the flood,
down in the flood, lost in the flood. We
were lost in the flood, down in the flood,
caught in the flood. My Arlington master
said I'd 'finally made the grade, in spite
of all else.' I really thanked him, and left.
-
With all of that, I was alone with...the trees.
A spangled whitewash, a jeddermaster fope
of mis-matched words, a harlequin of night's 
own fusion. I spoke to my dark shadow, and
it spoke right back, by the light of a now
gorgeous moon. I'd 'finally made the 
grade, in spite of all else.'

Thursday, November 3, 2011

3310. MICHELMAS (Candy Factory)

MICHELMAS
(Candy Factory)
This Michelmas has a factor in my being.
Heralding change, the mad doctor brings
his curtain down. The sledgehammer eyes
of the weaver are doing their little job to
assess and size up the totality of limits:
those lights set twinkling in the harbor,
the two men obscurely, and yet somehow
mysteriously too, lighting each other's
cigarettes in a darkened wharfside alley.
A heartfelt Hart Crane manuever
if ever one there was.

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

3309. SENATOR TOWN

SENATOR TOWN
The best thing he ever did was die;
like dining on poison fish, he swallowed
and gagged and fell over. Taking all
that filthy money with him? Well, no,
not really  -  the stinking cod left it
all behind. All those corrupt lines
of payoffs and deals. All those
hands out, to Senator Ellis Town,
and not a dollar clean left to spare.
He's dead, and gone from here.

3308. OLD CHALK

OLD CHALK
The wind left bloodlines on the beachfront sand,
places where people had been dragged and
pummeled. The Inn at Old Chalk  -  or the
ruins of what once was there seventy years ago  -
were still up on the cliff. About a mile off,
to the left of there, the once-village graveyard
slumbered. The dead had played their dice
and plied their strife, long before, and, now,
it was all over and finished. The wind had
left bloodlines on the beachfront sand.
-
The people in the village, the tired ones,
the near-dead-but-not, still exclaimed
to one another about the ways things
were : 'The Bowdy boy, I watched; 
he died, there, on the beach.' Extending
a wiry, crooked finger, they flail at
pointing to something afar. 'The
lugger-boat, as I recall, had
quite nearly cut him in two.'
-
The wind grew fiery and messy;
the yellowing storm lashed and
tore. Like fire-rockets coming
from dirge and destruction,
broken pieces of another
world  -  now mangled and
torn  -  left only shreds of
a place that once was
Old Chalk Inn.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

3307. TWIN-SPECIES

 TWIN-SPECIES
As if separated at birth, we are twins from a land
where no borders exist, where air is the essence
of everything and where  -  solids be damned  -
there is nothing to grasp or to handle. The
blue sky, we later realize, goes on within us.
-
If comedy could be termed a factor in what this
world is, I'd be laughing still. As it is, the only
blanket that keeps me warm is the sad blanket 
of sorrow; and we are twins, from a land
where no borders exist.

3306. EXPERIMENT

EXPERIMENT
I did all that your experiment asked of me :
I learned your art, I drank your wine, I textured
each of your long durations  -  night, day, and
whatever was in between. Each smile you sent
my way, I decorated just as you showed.
Like some eerie pumpkin's juicy mash, this
time-soaked derivative of living came my way.
I realize only now, we really should
have talked it over first.
-
That ghost from your gazebo, yes, it still
comes around seeking handouts and love;
throws its caution to the wind, prances
so like an idiot, shows itself off to
most anyone at all. My view now?
Hardly worth a bastard's effort.
-
In the last flood, all that mud washed
the evidences away  -  but I had
been there, hiding out, just to
see what a ghost does when
it's bored. Not much differently
than you and I do, it claims to
fall in love, seeks life, runs
crazy-rampant from edge
too edge. Then it tires,
and disappears.