Saturday, June 16, 2007

splattered green tea

a rivulet of blood seeks an iron
grate planted in an adjacent slab of
concrete
a dark red ribbon tying a sewer to
her wet, matted hair

a curtain of rain reflects
the lights of the city’s night
and neon creates black contrast
to the temporary life that shines
through a glass door

a tinkling bell sounds
entrance,
surprised patrons warily
notice
a tattered gray overcoat that
separates a prostrate life
from the rain
a fallen and shattered life
like a red and gold porcelain
dragon and its splattered green tea,
fallen
from small hands

strong, smoky smells of
ginger
and peanut oil
contend with
the odor of urine and
alcohol
and the
vomited remains
of
manna

rapid sing song
voices and busy
chatter
fill this false refuge with
deception and for a short time
the condemned laugh at the
black night

photographs of a brown color
resembling sepia,
plates of food
line a wall and
playing in the background,
our god is an awesome god
outside an old woman
gone cold
gives over to the night
the color of her portrait
long ago faded

somewhere in the streets
the wail of a siren grows louder
inside
lies are served up
hot
and steaming.

normal

the call came in as
we were sitting down
to dinner
between sobs
she said I should come now
he's actively dying
she said

my friend of so many years
not yet forty
loves his wife and little girl
and a brand new baby
a boy
the guys down at the warehouse
think the world of him
my friend
who will soon no longer exist

he told me it
feels like an execution
went in for an annual check-up
walked out a condemned man
sentenced to death and
only god knows his crime

the only people I’ve lost
are still alive
but to lose this man
we’re best friends
it goes unsaid
but we love each other
he’s someone I laugh with
cry with
count on
and he can tell me anything
even how much dying scares him

he’s gone by the time I get there
refused entry by some family member
I’ve never met
I sit in my car
in the dark
alone with my disbelief
while those inside
no doubt stumble about
in some horrific grief
that must surely come
in the presence of
one so young and dearly loved
now so newly dead

I look over at the light on the porch
as it shines out on a landscaped yard
a tree lined street
try to make some sense of this
a couple walking their dog
moves past on the sidewalk
from here
it looks just like a
normal house

narrative

I’ve cracked the window
to let the dark in
rest my heart
in the stillness that enters with it
rain comes
comes like the footsteps of
an unexpected friend
bringing welcomed news

my new life has arrived
even if it has turned up empty handed
still
that panicked terror
of so many years is absent
I fear nothing
neither living man
nor he who steals life
not even myself
at last
I have become who I am

so let the harlot gods of
my misfortune
titter amongst themselves
I measure tomorrow
for refuge
from today
and will sit quietly should loss
decide to quit me
though I suspect it stays because
it likes my company

but I have learned too of happiness
and its nature
it is a snare
a truss of perverse hunger
that keeps loneliness alive
even when freed of it
it will mock me with its apparitions
of tomorrow
yet I know with nothing to lose
there will be nothing to fear
just how long is dead anyway

thus am I reconciled to my fate
life will run its course
and I will let it run free
though it comes to me that this freedom
from affection may be captivity in disguise
no matter
this narrative of loss tethers me
to my doom
I will be alone
I will not trust
I will not love . . .

. . . and then I kissed her
the lies I invented drowned out by the sound
of my pounding heart
and suddenly I’ve wanted this for so long
she says she’s coming home with me
I ask her if that means what I think it does
she reaches over
gently lays her hand on mine
neither of us says a word
all the way back to my place
for the first time
in a very long time
I am afraid

I keep running out of metaphor

here, I’ll put my mind on display so that
you can peer through the
window of my words like
some peeping tom

open my life to walk-by business as though
I am some sidewalk hawker
soul for sale
soul for sale

let me provide you a view through the
transparent tissue of my heart,
its fluid passions pumping through
pipe and valve.

if you like, you can feel exhilaration
as fear and anger
race the raging current of
my blood

you can sit poolside
your slapdash toes splashing
in the love and hate submerged
in raw crimson lochs

perhaps
I will strip
the aging skin from
my body
reveal its factories of
knotted muscle and bone
pulleys and levers to make it all
work and move

or . . .

or rather come share
my days
my white hot
flame

listen to me laugh and cry
be afraid
be brave
weak
strong
watch me
feel me love you

If I Were King

Memory’s a funny thing.

There’s this old movie
in which a handsome rogue
played by an actor, Errol Flynn,
utters a romantic phrase to this woman he loves.
If I Were King, If I Were King, I Would Take You Far, Far Away.

I’ve never forgotten that scene or those words.
He became my hero after that.
Only it turns out it was Ronald Coleman
who was in that movie
and it was he who spoke the lines.

Memory’s a funny thing.
I remember you loving me.

Hope

Once more the ever-threatening darkness
comes as with a will,
bringing before it a desolate and
unrelenting landscape.

The gray, roiling skies,
the wind like a knife,
and the cold unforgiving ground give evidence
that life has disappointed
and deceived.

Before me lies a wasteland upon
which no living thing moves.
The way before me is littered
with the stench and decay
that once was life. I wander
this path of torment and loss,
no longer search for the home
where my journey began. I seek only
shelter from the killing environment.

Soon my weary spirit
weakens and my step falters.
As I surrender to despair,
as much in supplication
as defeat,
the thorns and sharp stones
of the frozen earth impale my hands.
It is there, on my knees,
that I discover the small nub,
a kernel of eternity and renewal.

No gardener am I but
I know this seed
for what it is: the rough husk
concealing long forgotten
visions of a life filled with promise and
expectation.

My broken and bleeding
fingers beseech the barren soil
for purchase and lay the seed
amongst the stone and nettle.
And then its cover falls
away revealing the miracle of
a small green bud already
unfolding.

The dead season
dissolves as if by magic,
washed from me by a warm
spring shower, and in the pool
that forms, the reflection overhead
is of azure and gold.

And as I lift my face
to the rising light,
God comes laughing and dancing
across a liquid green meadow.

seven stars

my grandpa said he used to
grab hold the moon
when it was sleeping on its back
and pull himself up
reach out and grab the handle
tip that ladle and
drink from those seven stars

being a kid
I saw them differently
they were a mama bear
walking the night skies
with her cub
I’d watch them move
from the north into the northwest sky
and back again
while a motionless earth
secretly spun

and just as grandpa
I would leap from star to star
my child’s heart traveling
the unknown
into the endless night
of space and its tiny lights

somehow
somewhere I lost that child
and I lost my way
I could no longer
look out on that black sky
mistook awe for fear
couldn’t figure out where
I fit in with that dark eternity

I stopped looking
sought those temporary distractions
that pull at us all
behind which we hide
when the dark comes looking
but sometimes life gives back
some of what it takes
and on this clear night
without fear I look again in wonder
as that bear and her cub still walk the night
and know that they always will

as my gaze briefly drifts
a sleek metal cylinder
makes its hurried way across the moon
my eyes follow its path for a moment
and just as quickly it’s gone

for a moment . . . I wonder if you’re working that flight

but nothing holds me now
one day soon that sleeping moon
will set and no dawn will follow
life and love but short moments in time
those seven stars
about as close as I can get to forever

Sunday, May 6, 2007

nothing serious

it’s gotten so I like being alone
I can sit with a book
in a crowded square and
become its fictional character
disappear into its story
looking up a long while later
only to discover it is the crowd
that has disappeared

what begins as imposition of
a will greater than yours
mine
becomes yours
mine
and you come to like it
not loneliness
but only-ness
living the private life
I realize now I’ve always had
trouble separating me from you

but there are times when
it all creeps into need
a subtle desire for someone
to share one or two of
my moments
nothing serious
just someone to
talk to

someone
whose hair
dances amber with her every step
someone
to hold my hand
and my eyes
to enjoy an alfresco moment
at some sidewalk café
nothing serious
just someone
to pass the time with

I’d cook her dinner
one of these summer nights
later we could sit out back
listen to the creek play with
the frogs and the crickets
and on that hot summer night
she could lie with me under a thin sheet
nothing serious
just someone to share my
troubled sleep

Nothing permanent
though I wouldn’t mind
having someone around
some of the time
most of the time
someone who will be true
wants to be loved
adored even
and someone who will be
there when I close my eyes
one last time

nothing serious

Thursday, May 3, 2007

that last light bulb

I no longer believe in time
this physics article I read
convinced me of what I had
long suspected
that in spite of the clock in my head
life is really just one event
after another

though I’m not quite ready
to give up on space yet
I’ve begun looking to the future
and some potentially linked experiences
that will likely serve
as milestones
along my timeless road

take the light bulbs I just bought
the package tells me they
last seven you-know-what’s
given even a generous count
five are all I need to buy
I’ll be dead before I can screw in
that last light bulb

then there’s my favorite cereal
looks like I’m going to need
something around eight hundred boxes
and four hundred jugs of milk
before that final event
gets here

but I’m getting morbid
death’s not the only important
thing in life
of course the closer you get
the more consecutive events
the more
it seems like it

so looking on the bright side
of things
if I pass on the next
eight hundred and seventy-five
slices of bread
I will eventually be lighter
by about twenty-five pounds

certainly I don’t want to forget those
short-runs of occurrences that
line up like so many dominoes
if I drive my car two hundred and
sixty-one round trips
accounting for overtime and holidays
I can pay the rent
buy my meals
keep each of those light bulbs burning

don’t want to forget the people
in my life
my dentist says if I will brush
and floss twice daily
let him clean my teeth
on sixty more
equally spaced visits
I can keep them
my teeth

of course there’s our son
he’s a good kid
already has all this time and space
stuff figured out
what I haven’t figured out
is on how many more occasions
he will need to borrow money
it’s almost enough to make me
believe in time again

and then there’s dance lessons
at the rate I’m going
I will need four thousand
six hundred
eighty lessons
before I get half way decent
but if you saw my dance teacher
well
I’d do twice that many

so far
only one anticipated event
has defied my
calculations
I wonder
how many more years
it will take before
I stop loving
you

Tuesday, May 1, 2007

should you fly

if you would sing
sing loud
or sing soft
but sing
for a voice in song
brings a new season

were you to dance
fast or slow
matters not
just dance
for this is how the gods
pass
their time

but should you fly
fly far
fly away old man
loose this earth from your
feet
go find your sky

yet dare you sing
only to have your voice lose its timbre
and while dancing stumble
if you fall to earth broken
as so many before you

deny it
accept no proof
turn from all you believe real
then raise your voice
climb to your feet
unfold your wings
once more

and
sing out
dance the night

take flight!

Cemetery

(tribute to Raymond Carver)

A walk among the dead
Late
Cold
Black
Studying my options for eternity
When your clean warm hand breaks ground
takes mine until the living sun chases the night.

fire

Life
a raging fire
burns
a path to
passion
love yet

a spark explodes
above the forest’s
canopy
leaps
races leaf and
limb
outstretched arms

ignites a flame
and unquenchable
fire
reaches for the sky
dares even
heaven

in the end
clouds rupture
release their black
torrent
the
firestorm contained
night falls upon
its devastation

Twenty
green pills
douse the embers that remain.

Garage Sale

I’m selling off much of my life today and hers
by rights. It’s the day before mother’s day
and mine is seven hundred miles away.
Our son’s is twice that far.
With some other guy’s mother.

There isn’t much of a turnout. Which is fine
with me. I just sit there and listen to the music
I brought down from the house.
Write poetry. And think back on all the other days
before mother’s day.

That pretty cotton skirt I bought her in Seattle?
Some woman in sweat pants took it first thing
this morning. About three sizes too large.
Her, not the dress.

The sled went next. The guy gave five bucks for it;
wanted to know if it worked.
Yeah I told him, but you need snow.
Oh.

Here comes my neighbor from next door. This guy’s
had cancer and lived through it. Real bad cancer.
We had some trouble a while back but I went
to the hospital and made peace with him.
Just in case he died.

Makes his way through dog-eared paperbacks,
old car parts and a table of worn-out jeans and sweaters.
Wants to know if I’m having a garage sale.
For chrissakes!
Look in the dictionary next to the
word bore, you’ll see his picture.

There’s something fascinating about people who will
rummage through anyone’s life as long as it’s
a Saturday or Sunday. And it doesn’t cost
more than a buck. Do they know that’s the dress she
was wearing the night I asked her to marry me? The down
jacket my other neighbor just carried off? That
was from our first Christmas here.
That bedspread?
We must have made love
under it a thousand times.

But most of life is met and lived in the ordinary and it
is there the extraordinary finds me. This woman,
pretty, a redhead, acts like she’s looking
for something; she is. Keeps sneaking glances at me. I need
the practice so I start talking to her. Turns out
we have some things in common. I like women,
redheads, she likes old drunks and
shy men.

Then she’s sitting down reading some of the things
I’ve written. It reaches her; the work. The parts I won’t sell,
on paper, that’s what I have to tell her.

She’s crying.

One
thing leads to another and we have our arms around
each other. Just holding on.

Dear God, don’t let it end!
For that thousand-year moment. For the first time in months I feel
safe and loved. And for that long moment
I am at peace.

People are just standing there, watching us.
I want to tell them all to leave; take her upstairs,
get to know her better.

I’m married . . .

. . . she whispers.

Everyone has gone. I’m boxing up the last of my life,
the stuff my new friends didn’t carry away. As I count the
money they’ve left, I find one has paid with hope; in exchange
for a small item of sadness I no longer needed. It’s starting
to rain but all I feel is sunshine inside; it takes me
all the way through to tomorrow.

You see, those people left parts of their lives with me.

pillow

I still have your pillow
you know
it’s not in the best of shape
given my restless sleep
and it could use a good cleaning

I’ve kept it because it reminds
me of our time of love
and its passing
each night before sleep takes me
I imagine I can smell your soft hair

I often think of you
and yes
still dream of you but it isn’t like then
when all my dreams included both of us
day and night

the story behind that pillow
stays with me even today
how you had a seamstress take two
and make one
sort of like what god does
with lovers

there were nights when
you fell asleep first
sinking into that thick down purse
just after making love
and I would lie propped upon one elbow
and listen to you softly breathe
the breath of love satisfied

I listen to music now
alone
while I drift away
just like when I was a kid
you probably wouldn’t approve
it always distracted you

I suspect you know I stopped praying
and it still feels odd
like sleeping without a net
but then
waking up the next morning
no longer seems all that important

I think god tired of hearing
only your name on my lips
with that onslaught of broken prayers
those very few years ago
as much in the name of love
as hate

there’s always a difficult dream
at first
a nightmare I guess
often I yell or moan as
I come out of it with a start
and of course I still snore
but I only wake me now

there are many things
lovers do when love is
taken from them
deserted them
things that help them remember
help them forget
or sometimes both

I’m no different I realize
for of all the truths I question
this one needs no prove
I loved you
there’s just no better way to say it

it looks like I need to add more
feathers to that pillow
but I draw the line
there
your nightgown has gone
to some deserving person
who needed it

reap this

he follows me everywhere I go
it’s not like it’s some secret
after all why hide
when everyone pretends
not to see you

I duck through a door
take a seat
a little off the top Ray
clean up the sides
he watches through the window
from a bus stop across the street

at the market I buy a couple of
frozen dinners
a gallon of milk
moving down the meat aisle
he runs a hand
across the prime and cheap cuts alike

guy at the end of the line
goes gray
as my shadow
gently pushes in front of him
doesn’t buy a thing

it used to bother me
a few years back
thinking he was looking for me
just the same I’d act like he wasn’t
pretend like the rest of you

so now he’s back
walking along behind me
but this time I’m not afraid
although I have to admit
he’s starting to get on my nerves

but I like his style
black’s my favorite color too
goes with my hair
don’t know the color of his
but the hood’s a good touch anyway

I wait on him
he catches up at the light
we look both ways
before crossing
puts his cold hand on my shoulder
like we’re old friends

come on I say
I’ll buy you a cup of coffee
he isn’t much for talk
and that’s okay
he’s a good listener
I like that because
I’ve got questions
and I want answers

you been doing this a long time
ever get tired of the whiners
praying
trying to cut a deal
asking for more time

and what about my soul
I thought you guys were
going to go at it
decide who gets it
I was betting on him
but it seems you got nothing to worry about
he hasn’t put up much of a fight


he just sits there
sipping cold black coffee
pretends I’m not even alive
I’m fed up with this shit
get a life I tell him
take your best shot
reap this
gesturing in his empty face

you’re in over your head pal
there’s easier pickings outside
screw with me and
I’ll have your job
and start following you

all he can do is shake his head
so I get up
walk out the door
head back up the street
hell with him
he can leave the tip

I get about a block away
and look back
he steps onto the sidewalk
looks my way
starts following again
but I can tell he’s holding back
not sure he wants my kind
where he comes from.

driving with my eyes closed

I admit it wasn’t my first option
hadn’t even become a choice
until I had nearly given up the idea entirely

but there I was
somewhere between the
moon and the sun
driving with my eyes closed
life and death hovering
inches above the asphalt

it wasn’t so bad
the car was a good one
handled well and was comfortable
though I wish I’d bought
something other than brown

and inexplicably
unimaginable peace overtook me
in the midst of chaos I sat back
let my skull sink into the headrest
eyes closed
and surrendered to the unknowable

there were
no attendant gods
no heaven in which to rest hope
no more questions to ask
none to answer
where once conscious thought traveled
now came the rhythm of the road
its music moving up through wheel and axle
steel frame
up through shoes and bones
finding at last its way to my core
Heidegger and Einstein waited
as I was sucked across their bridge

spirit
now freed from its soul
slipped through
that fabric that divides
one universe from the next
it was then
just before death
that I truly came alive
and rather than dying
I was being born

all are new to me
and I marvel
living amongst your shadowlike host
for here I have learned to love redheads
experience rooms spinning with dance
and found I enjoy telling stories

but times still aren’t all that good for me
had to let the brown car go
the payments were just too steep
I’ve got a little black job now
my favorite color
of course
though it doesn’t handle like
that old sedan

and I am alone

understand
I’m not complaining
just don’t want you to worry
should you see me
with eyes closed
bobbing and weaving
down some long
long stretch of highway

I just want to stay in practice.

Friday, March 9, 2007

You Can Bring Me Chocolate

I just wanted to dance
even if I had to learn how first. I don’t
know why. I guess because he was
such a good dancer. Maybe that’s why she left
but what was she doing dancing anyway.

There I am, still in shock that I’m going to
grow old alone, without dreams. Without love.
And I’m standing there talking about you.
We hadn’t even met yet. Not here.

I just wanted to dance.
You were some immortal memory
recalled from some other dream. Walked
through a door from your heaven, into this hell.
You roamed the halls of my destruction
while my life burned in the fire of
some mad god’s imagination.

I should have run as fast as life could go.
Someone, something else would have
been waiting. I wasn’t looking for you.
I was waiting, hoping for her.

I just wanted to dance.
Yet magic and wonder live, two sisters, feign sleep.
Concealed from eyes that cannot see. Will not
believe. Awakened, immutable powers heal,
resurrect, and blaze through the darkness.

They loosened despair’s hold,
exposed Death’s little black lie. They filled
the abyss with light, built a bridge across.
And then they allowed me to be . . .

Caught. Surprised by joy.
A wisp of red hair nearly touches the page.
Soft. Seductive.
Lowered my head to hear,
into that sweet noose.
You can bring me chocolate.
I just wanted to dance.

(for Noreen)

gifts

I thought it was you who saved my life
you who opened your door to me
if only to stop my frenzied rapping
but you let me in
all the same

so broken
broken for love
broken for betrayal
broken for desire
broken for my friend

I was different
you liked that
you found me real even as
I began to invent myself
lie to myself so that
I might find the truth

it might have happened then
if I hadn’t been learning how to hate
even so
there was a stirring
a longing
something very much akin to hope

I know the night
the exact moment
your exact words
when I began to love you
I didn’t know
it was the night I began to heal

each day I brought that cup to you
and you sipped of it
the pleasure of it
spreading across your face
I was loving you then and there
bringing me to you

your mind
filled with light
your heart
streaming hope
while mine drank from
dark pools of loss
and sadness
you became my teacher
my hero
still I thought you my savior

the times we talked
about science
books
music
warm moments over coffee
your past
my illusions
our birthdays but a day apart
yet a gulf a years between us
dinners on those days
celebrating your life
my death

and you gave me a story
at first no different than those
already passed between us
but like tiny priceless gifts
each page turned hammered
at the gates I’d built
the pain and love imprisoned behind
night’s black tears escaping into
a sky of daylight blue

asleep in the dark
I held you
danced with you
lived a life with you
I almost missed it
so busy creating myself
but look what happens when you dream

I thought it was you who saved my life
but it was love
my love
gently pulling back a drape
of shadows
while light flooded
the dark chambers of my heart
it was love
it was me loving you more than anyone
has ever loved you
that saved my life.

(for Noreen)

Thursday, March 8, 2007

figures

I prayed tonight

prayed for the first time in
a very long time
well not actually prayed
that would mean I believe in
him
her
or it
and that
he
she
or it
could in fact do something
about my life
but I did feel it only proper
to thank all three of them
just in case
they had anything to do with
me meeting her

I prayed tonight

and then slept
and dreamt
dreamt I was living
a different life
when I woke
I found I was living
a different life
and that I was
still dreaming
something about god
dropping by
me telling him
I’m not a member
could he come back later
and we could talk

I’m on my way to meet
a beautiful redhead
I told him
and he said
she worked for him

figures

figures I’d meet someone
already taken
by god no less
and I thought it was
she who wanted me
I told him
I thought it
was time he left
he said he
would camp on
my doorstep until
I was willing
to let him in again
I said I live in
an apartment
I don’t
have a doorstep

he got up

got up
and went to the window
stood there looking out
while the light he’d given off
got
dimmer

and dimmer.

my personal channel to god

I’m not a believer
at least not the way
most of you would understand
don’t want to be saved
not even blessed
just left alone
like I’ve always been

that’s not to say
I never tried to believe
I spent considerable time
on my knees
the walls of my life stained
with screams and pleading
a few years ago

but there’s this woman
I guess you would call her
my best friend
the only one I’ve met
other than me
that knows what it means
to live in your head

like me she’s climbed all
escher’s staircases
picked her way through the clutter
of dali’s mind
and like me she was burned
beyond recognition
in a hell she did not choose

she’s a convert
and I like the way she
lives it
there are no shoulds
in her religion
just belief
and a god

she found me
not long after
I came crashing through
the coordinates
of your space and time
she cared for me
listened to my sorrow
cried with me
and prayed for this emigrant
chased from another world

she prayed for me
when I needed work
and I found work

she prayed for me
when the landlord
told me how much
he would miss me
the next day bringing
money
unlooked for

she prayed for me
when I needed a future
and dark clouds obscured
my view
the clouds gone
as the day broke

sometimes I think she’s foolish
to spend so much time
on her knees
to believe in
someone
and a heaven
I know isn’t there

but then I get to thinking
how I can’t explain
these
miracles

Black and White

It’s the first snow of the year. I’m sitting
here by the window writing about the dog he
hit yesterday. A black lab. The kid in the old
Dodge truck, a fifty something, I think; he’s only
twenty something. Comes flying out of the drive
like his life depended on it. Looks like the dog’s
did. That dog, he must have been a hundred
years old. I never did know where he came from.

I keep turning to look out the window. Those first
ten thousand flakes? That’s the best part. That
feeling something wonderful’s about to happen. I
go downstairs, open the door and just stand there;
watching it. In person. Jesus, it’s quiet. It’s like
a church; not one of those Baptist churches but
a real one; a cathedral like the Catholics have;
something about those churches. Cathedrals.
Thought about converting once but hell, I didn’t
believe in anything where I was, so what difference
was it going to make? Still, I liked those cathedrals.

A couple of kids. When my wife was here we used
to go out and play in it. We’d put on those down
jackets we got up in B.C.?, heavy boots and we’d be out
the door. I remember the way the snow used to stick to her
hair; God she was beautiful. We’d walk around looking
at it. Like it was the first time. All over again.
Like making love to her.

Snow. Yeah, this is the real thing. It’s sticking. That’s
how you know it’s real. It’s got to stick right away; not just
to the grass but the road as well. But you never know. The
temp goes up one or two degrees and it’s gone. Like her.

Got to be at least a couple of inches. I never have figured out what makes it snow. Never have figured out why she left. There’s no snow where she lives now. What I like about the snow is it covers up all the trash on the ground, settles on the roofs. The trees. Hides a lot of things I’d rather not look at. Makes everything look clean. New. I can see God’s hand in this like so many things. Wonder why I can’t ever see the rest of him?

It’s really coming down. Must be, over three inches. That dog? You can hardly see him now.

Starting to feel a lot like me

I’ve begun rearranging my life.
Big chair by the bed, near the window.
A brave little plant on the table.
I tossed those flowery pillows, just not my style.
There’s a new coat of varnish on that old dresser,
and that hideous print has come down.
Feels a little more like me now.

Mornings, I write a line or two,
raise up a couple of thoughts for insurance,
while the sun comes up.
I’ve left the crystal spinning in the window.
Still like to watch the little angels dance the walls.
I believe in anything now.
It’s starting to feel a lot like me.

Hour or two, you’ll find me on the bank.
Sitting with the ducks. Always in pairs.
I’m told they mate for life.
Sleepy fog on the lake, should burn off soon.
Men in their boats. Still. Patient.
Trout strike, and a mirror becomes water
as ripples roll lazily for shore.
Hank Chinaski reads to me from the grave.
Starting to enjoy my time alone.

I’m listening to breakfast.
Eggs pop in the skillet,
bacon frantically sizzles in a pan.
Yellow butter scrapes just brown toast.
Red and blue berries bathe and splash
in water gushing from the spigot.
And my old green tea kettle
patiently whistles.
The morning paper lies quietly,
waiting to share yesterday with me.
These moments are precious.

Errands and chores,
a little honest work.
Writing.
Always writing.
It seems to me time runs fastest
between noon and dusk.
I look up, too late, see its shadow,
the only proof it’s passed at all.
Still, it does feel a lot like me.

Wind’s come up and the day is failing.
Light moving on
to a different part of the world.
Outside, mercury lamps flicker to life.
Inside, the only evidence of life,
that old antique lamp shining on a page.
Now it’s Ray Carver reading to me from the grave.
I want to be just like him.
Wonder who I’ll read to?
This big chair was a good idea.
So comfortable,
there are many nights I sleep here.
The bed is just to big. For one.
No hand to anchor me
as I descend into darkness.
Yeah, it’s sure starting to feel a lot like me.

Who am I kidding?

It still feels like you.

laying out the dead

standing back
I look at your unnecessary body
the neighbor women have done their job well
now bathed
you lie dressed in white
we are too poor for a shroud

in the dining room
you repose center attraction
resting upon the only table long enough
on which you can stretch your legs
in the only room large enough to
hold the many who gaily dance where you
once walked

you are the only sober soul
and me
amongst these celebrants
who regale you
honor you
assault your memory
rejoice in forfeited debt
whisper
or perhaps ask your name
some eye the daughters
you can no longer mind
a few
even mourn you

the pints are raised
sláinte mhah
sláinte mhah
but good health has failed you
or do they toast themselves
the old fairy’s keening now paid
her bean sídhe wail goes silent
yet the evil ones remain
no more do they fear her song

these maudlin drunks
hoist and carry you to the church
they sing and cry your praise
each one more somber
drunker than the last
your holy man prays over you
but here no beads are laid upon your breast
for you and they are Ulstermen
and together you have
your own heaven and hell

alone I have come home
enter the door
but it denies you entry
your long days of labor to go unfilled
no thought do you give our debt
your favorite meal lies cold
and always will
your unfinished work done

nevermore will you lie
with me
nor your strong hands hold me
I still see our lovemaking
and your laughter
yet never again will I hear its song

where do I take my grief
I who drank only of you
where is the god who will console me
and will I feel his arms
I would follow you
but fear I might lose you in the dark
your death cot stands there empty
as empty as my life

Saturday, March 3, 2007

Wheelchair

I have
become an observant
creature. Through the
window of this
coffee shop I see
this guy, about my
age. My size. Hair’s
going a little gray.
Like mine.

Comes flying by in a
wheelchair. Right out in
the middle of the
street like he doesn’t
give a good goddamn. My kind
of guy. I mean, Jesus, he’s moving
like it’s his last day. I know
what that feels
like.

Anyone can see he’s used
it for a long time. The
wheelchair.
It fits him like
he was born in it. For all
I know he was. Yeah, life
hasn’t been too
kind to him. Well, I’ve
sung that song for some
time now.

He comes
to a stop next
to an old Chevy truck,
like the one I had,
opens the door,
pulls himself in,
and the chair after
him. Drives off.
It occurs to me that he
and I are a lot
alike.

Only difference is I’m
crippled.