Showing posts with label 2008. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2008. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Coke Man


Coke-Bot?  Ah, college.

This is not a blog of nostalgia.  Simply proof I existed and that there's something worth continuing.  Hard to do at times with the current opinions of the people I once called friends.  But, as Kilgore Trout once said, "So it goes."  Their eyes will always see what they want.  The only thing I can do is avoid becoming what they say I am.  Hopefully this sickness goes into remission.  Here's something I hope speaks more of hope than of darkness.



Old Clock Radio

I was once told
By a friend
That music is a healing force,
So on a cold night
In emerald flowing mountains
I set my cancer
Down by an old clock radio.

I dialed in
A static-tinged gospel station
With vibrations strung
Through the depths
Of Old American Man—
Chapped worn hands singing
Through a golden throat
And joyful claps
Flying out like
Scared-off crows,
Black over
Blistering wheat field.

Pale morning sky
Cracked through silver mists
Rolling off those green hills
Steaming up to greet the newly
Crested Sun as that old clock radio
Still played.

Monday, January 10, 2011

Countdown (2008)

I'm glad I ditched aping the beats long ago, but it was fun while it lasted.  Countdown, from 2008, and a laundry list of meaningless plagues: 




I.

I sit in my room
And begin to think those
Big Thoughts, but tinged
With the caution words
That guys my age
Will let these bounce around
In swirling heads until
It’s time to put on ties
And polished shoes,
Possibly even the nice dress
Blazer when promotion
Chance rolls her shoulders
And smiles on the bloody finger
Workers.


II.

The thought comes about
Because always behind me,
In my shadow when I
Face the winter sun,
Are the sounds of American Dream—
At once slobbering wolf snarl,
Comfort woman’s voice through cherry lips,
And the happy clicking of Human Machine.
Oh why, oh why
Has the sound of my future
Life taken on the shape
Of Kerberos in my constant path?
And who am I to think
That as some Heracles
I can take the Dream from Death?


III.

Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani?
Has it come to the point
Where our Muses place
Hands over our mouths,
Take pens from our hands,
Sink drills into our brains?
Or maybe now that whispering
Ghost perched near our hearts
Has picked up the dress
Of a Pharmaceutical Age,
Sending our bards
Into violent pantomime
On the dirty streets
Near cardboard windows.


IV.

Forsaken has the Ghost his Brother,
Crossed deserts
With gleaming pearl citadel.
Crossed swords
In golden waving fields dyed red.
Crossed time
On feet lightly singing sweet blasphemies.

V.

Polished toes!
Polished toes!
The Father speaks,
The Mother knows!
A Dream they bore
And passed along,
Shaded eyes in shame,
Tongues cut off Truth,
Until the Son stares
Down red bed sheets
At brown
Polished toes!
Polished toes!
Eli!


VI. Eulogy

Dust on a silken lace tablecloth,
Undisturbed grey layer,
And a miracle unwed,
Unseen,
Unborn,
My sister’s heart that beat
So few, and never in the light
Of a summer’s glowing day.

Am I then to feel sad
For not knowing her true smile?
Or can I imagine her face
And her short-cut hair,
Let the never-seen embrace
Of a never-had sibling
Lay heavily upon my head?
An unjust mourning,
Creature for the sake
Of filling in an empty plot—
Brown straight hair
And Livia’s strong nose,
Marble dream bust
For the sake of competing
With Kerouac’s living dead saint.


VII.

I cannot force the tongue to wend a path of lies,
Or the fingers to commit to paper a folly,
To look you in the eyes and say quite clearly
That I have no fear—
With my history of small self-injury, pointlessly
Post-act labeled with meaning,
But lacking in any substantial weight
Save of scar tissue and regret,
Of sitting in a room alone
When the melancholy piano tones
Of a simple palate marches lethargically
Through my speakers,
That dirge-draped parlor waltz.

I sat down to reaffirm my belief
That in each human heart a flower
Waits to sprout up through
The throat and present the central
Beauty of mankind in front of each face.
But then I remembered my waking dream,
The fear that gripped me
As I saw the slow-churn multitude
And their death-sheet faces
White with the cheek bones
Of laughing skeletons.

American mystic—
Do not fear the prophetic vision.
American mystic—
The truth is not botanical.
American mystic—
Discard the false eyes.

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Quite the dish



New (old) dishes.  Finally more than four.  And tiny coffee mugs to boot.




Shooting Stars

Glazed eyes rolled
Under slightly parted lids,
And lips that gasped,
Half glossed—

No time
(A whisper)
To count all
The stars in the sky.

And a raised crooked
Finger traced the blades
Of the unmoving fan
On the white ceiling—

Just pull one down,
(Her finger pinched the air)
Examine it close,
Drink in spectre’s light.

On my back next to her,
I closed my eyes,
And felt the star she plucked,
The warm blue fission glow,
Enveloping boil of the expanding
Twist, the surface turmoil.

She rolled over and rose.
Lit a small candle,
Emptied the pulsing star into
A battered tin spoon—

 Reach in, pull out core,
(Her hand hovered spoon over flame)
Swallow to taste
The new warmth spread in stomach.

Then holding my arm
In practiced motions,
Swift poke and the running
Shatter of nerves crept—

Blood replaced
(Push)
By streaming interstellar light,
Fill your lungs with Heaven’s breath.

Bending there beyond concept
Through each uncountable mile of vein,
Blue-eyed destroying angel smiled
And faded with my grip on the belt,
Until her presence was only
Ingested heavenly body and the blotted-out cosmos.

Friday, January 7, 2011

hang out for eternity

[redacted]

No one wants to hear about it.  So keep quiet like they taught you.  Good, good.

 



nothing to say


leaning on cold iron railing
and remembering the time
sensei picked me up by the neck
and hung me for an instance off
the ground.
the feeling of head separating from
body and the dark hands like rope—
and then drifting off in memory time,
with each failed picture overexposed,
monotonous sepia tone photo
with pensive lookers trying to strike
poses and coming off as contrived
with fake looks of inflated meaning
and hair too-perfectly flung back
over bare foreheads and cast down looks
of playacting deep thought with
trim beards and hats and tired
cookie cutter stances mugging for
camera shot.
thrown away in piles of forgotten
memories left by the bed near
drawers full of unread novels.

standing at a party with
opposing lights, casting moods
on rooms and people crowding
and talking in flits of conversation
over beers drowned out by wailing
sax, chugging cherry wine
on
windowsills, precision camped out
on
brick carpet, picking
tiny bugs from the grass grown
long with unrealized duties of
maintenance and lack of sunless nights,
turning brown, each blade flaking
off in tumbles of dried plant,
dying quickly into the dirt over
the roots of the withering green.
eating Chinese too many nights
with paper forks and straw hats,
blowing tunes on an old recorder
and singing made-up camp songs
about Alexandria and her baby Antiochus,
singing in the stables on a hot
July night with mint julep and
submarine sandwiches, nightmares of the
horrid Holy Ghost waffle house,
baking brownies when the night watch
has given up the vigil and the crime
spree sprinters put on hiking pants
for a short walk to the station
with axes and brandishing hunting knives
with dried deer blood and grimaces
through a tulip flavored beanbag chair
and sickening thuds of the whacked flesh,
running through the street lamps
when tiny corsets stop holding back
and little people with big thoughts
and smaller fingers pick locks on
the horse troughs with deft wrist
movements and the flicker fire flare
of a movement too fast in the stillness
of the gutter eats through the glass window
and bursts in upon sex orgy to the
tune of Ayler and many sounds
bumping walls and leaving fingerprints
for the disturbance detectives to lift
and run at the central computer with
files of immigrants and little white
lies upon which the flag was hoisted
and with which dirt was moved from
the Grand Canyon to Peoria with toothpicks
and subway cars.

the subways cars stopped running the night
Memphis died sprawled on the iron
tracks with electric lines rounding her
neck in its gripping falsetto squeal.
she died from asphyxiation and mild
indigestion, the train was a coincidence
and a mischief to make matters worse
for the cleanup crew comprised of
uniformed jumpsuit workers with
blue face masks and grey eyes and
purple Mohawk wigs made out of
cat hair and spit from the mother
of the child that once could.

“finally,” the poet said wearing a smile
of utter exhaustion and the possibility
of being born again upon a day with
a brighter sun and more avenues for
the discussion of maybe not being alone,
“for once my job here is done,” and he walked
on knowing that he had not said anything
once again and would always
be the failed poet
who never would and
changed into the silence
machine that was the perfect description
and became synonymous with his
name and the children born in
white-lined hospitals would be
branded just as he when they
would refuse to talk about the restrictions
of a running narrative or could not
think clever, witty things when
pressed to be engaged.

they were marked and sent to the
antipoet’s camp where they could be
taught to wear smiles and enjoy
carpet rags of conversation
decked out in the haze of alcohol
covering the minuscule midnight
of the lighthouse perched on the
distant city shore—
this was their task, to become one
with the rolling pigsty and enjoy
that lot and park in it everyday
in shiny automobiles made out of blood
and swear words uttered by swollen
pig lips wrapped in oily bacon
on top of languid pigeon feathers
and the possibility of slipping off
into an oblivion made out of catapults
of slimy objective-based learning methods
developed by people who were
never children, but who roped cattle
out of the womb with lengths
of pubic hair.

the poet only wanted one moment to burst
out in colors improbable and finally
prove that he had the capacity for
being a normal boy and not a wooden
puppet with the personality of a rotting
cardboard box in a swamp—
precision standing on tile floors
and the impossibility of finding
her when the tables had been cleared
and walking was the mainstay for
the evening when the indoors were
turned out by angry waiters with
dishtowels and bills.

the subway stopped
with a piece of old Memphis
hanging from his hungry teeth
and bleeding down his chin
the bright light eyes looking at
the solid concrete walls and
old Memphis dripping more—
the awkward mess after
the meeting of iron rail.


and it’s always how it ends.
the most beautiful song in the world
will now only remind him that he need
but buy a yard and find a horizontal post
hitch his horse neck to it and hang out
for an eternity and in heaven most likely
will there be only parties with inside
jokes so old not even the saints pick
up on them.

Monday, December 6, 2010

Music

Old Clock Radio

I was once told
By a friend
That music is a healing force,
So on a cold night
In emerald flowing mountains
I set my cancer
Down by an old clock radio.

I dialed in
A static-tinged gospel station
With vibrations strung
Through the depths
Of Old American Man—
Chapped worn hands singing
Through a golden throat
And joyful claps
Flying out like
Scared-off crows,
Black over
Blistering wheat field.

Pale morning sky
Cracked through silver mists
Rolling off those green hills
Steaming up to greet the newly
Crested Sun as that old clock radio
Still played.

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

De-titled


This one used to have a horrible title.  I kept reading the title in my file and I kept avoiding it.  Giving it a shot (I thought the situation similar enough to now to fit), but I won't include the previous title.  I do remember this time, this hilariously drunk time.  Now I hardly think about it and I'm hoping it's a pattern I'll be able to repeat.  Also, I think I thought of Heaven as some sort of once-nice company, a mom-and-pop deal that got taken over by a bunch of power-hungry Reaganauts.

 

Christ addicts purified in one
translation into the floating heaven clouds
like a group of lost cattle
eating the pagan farmer’s grass.
they believe that lightning bolts
are some old man’s way of disapproval.

they never saw a lightning bolt come
down for the sins they committed
in back alleys with women loose
and old with oil rag faces and lumpy
clay thighs and worn false smiles
and no hope of ever seeing their kids
maybe someday write a masterpiece,
because children born in the middle of
hot sex sweat and discarded semen
will never be able to live the right way
to breathe life into a hollow form
and make it dance with the beauty
of intelligent design.

the old boys club in heaven has a sign
above the door written in a dead language.
the saint with the keys reads it and hopes
that maybe the lost who found the
doorway will take to heart the message,
let it sift into their grainy sepia thoughts
so they will finally realize that they were
wrong, but lucky.

but Kensey, linguistics lady, it is a dead
language, right?
I was wrong and lucky, stumbling nervous
next to you as we talked colors and books
and I loaned you one from my shelf.
flash forward to final day
when I answered the door soaked
in an evening of light brown beer.
you handed over the book—
Maybe I will see you again, but you said
definitely after the stumble of words.
I got your message, but the sad sack
sect of bald-head business men
(they deal with the commodity of soul)
did not hear the immortal dead saint
for his words and instead enjoyed
the dense white fog scenery and admired
the gate for its finery and not for what
it represented.

Christ, they said, and patted each other
on their business suit backs.
I apologized for scaring you off, but I think
it was Hemingway and not the beer.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

last report

2008 was a good year of freedom. it should have been the last dedicated to such pursuits, though.

here's a notebook (the notebook?) entry in a polished form.

Last Report

Presented here, the last report filed by our top agent before going to ground in Singapore. Turned up fifteen months later in a whorehouse in Tokyo wearing a kimono and a necktie, drinking sake out of the polished skull of a shogun—

There is no sunlight louder,
It burst big muscles through blinds.
She click-clack
At fury typewriter,
I, written, rewritten history,
Dosed five gallons white-out—
See it, smell the urine
Stain in green corner carpet,
The dog got tossed out.

She still make new truth,
The ribbon go wild now,
Afraid it will rip,
Sever each artery in
Thousand mile radius.
Anything for me turn out villain.
“It's important,” she say.
Lips wrapped tight round
Brown burning cigarette tip.
I believe her,
She knows score.

Hey! Gunshot!
Maybe water pop over stove.
We're losing face being so
Jumpy,
No reason to fear
anything it's important she
still typing I wrap
finger around bed post.
We should get
Going.
Me and her meander
Through dirty street.
Shadow like big stalker
Over shoulder, Physical
Build of paranoia.
I duck in alley.
She walk straight.
Maybe see her again.

Send post posthaste,
Forward to big top hat
Chief—
Much love.
Watch out for build up
Of red dust in the
Shining grey attic.


a strange one, but i think the fact i wrote it shortly after watching cronenberg's take on naked lunch may explain that. it's a bit faux-noir hokey.

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Lawn Chair before the Hills of Megiddo

Red-faced running, eating, burning
heat melted windows and turned
grass to dust, rolling dust,
mounding dust—crisp baked husk,
parched picketed suburbia—glacier,
snow cap, lake swallowed whole
by that rippling tide, the expanding
hush, the nothing-more.

Fist crush and burst, the end of dawn,
a thousand times promised
and soon and soon and soon,
A speck in the fade-light,
Lawn chair and sleeping,
when morning dreams made flutter,
swell, well and gush, flow—
because sometimes that last
finger, that slip-to-waking
grasp at dream-sewn fabric
tastes so real that to
wake and come up empty
seems like God's big joke.
No trumpets, seals, bowls—
Wormwood and Death's Rider
left the business, just end of it
and no new city, no red
to turn the faces pure,
no pulling back of eternal veil.

Awake Eye to Eight
minute lull—the clouds—spread,
skinned, white—are Lambs—
the blue sky orange, the heat
burst and pupils swell
and melting into plastic seat.
Good Morning, Sunshine Apocalypse
and nothing, a push,
rush into an infinite creaking silence.