Tuesday, February 26, 2019

Broken Windows


The first bomb hit at 3am.

On the move, it's sometimes a surprise to be brought back. Almost as surprising is what brings you there... a bright wrapper in debris, clear and orderly print newly revealed by a rustling of fragments, scraping of dirt, weather, entropy, the process which holds us all as we fall apart. A bit of structured order alien and impotent against the chaos surrounding it. Sometimes a color. Sometimes a sound. Sometimes the way that light bounces off of the setting horizon, reaching you sideways like a glancing blow across the surface of the Earth through broken glass, in broken windows, in broken buildings, through dust clouds on the broken world that used to be a whole home. Looking back, I am nonplussed to recall how deeply I felt of that old apartment of ours as a place. It was to me, a familiar and welcoming thing, and that seemed so normal. It seemed so certain. It seemed so ours, and then... after well, at least for a time so mine.
I never thought so much about what it was, what it contained, as an avatar or shrine to what was no more. How much power it held, that things held. I never thought too deeply about it, I only felt it, and that knowledge probably contained all the thinking I could have done. Only now... when I'm looking for any reason why, do I think about it.

The first bomb hit at 3am and shook us from our beds. A noisy distance of electronic alarms, mechanical noises, and then, slowly, human cries. Before there was time to make sense of any of it, the second bomb hit. It came from the sky. It destroyed the top third of the building across our street from the inside in an expanding fractured shrapnel bubble of brownstone, fire, and telephone pole. The Russos were gone, as was Walt Jackowitz and his daughter Ginny, and all of the apartments around them. Radios told us later that, “the targets could not be confirmed as neutralized,” and that was why five more bombs hit over the next twenty minutes. We were told that the government somewhere that had released them was targeting “international terrorists” hiding in midtown. America, no longer the world police on a day of suicide drones, responded. That was how the world ended.
If anyone ever asks... if we both survive to wonder, I will tell them the thing that surprised me most was missing an apartment like.... I don't know how to describe grieving a place. The people were gone, but, so were the only places I could go to feel their memory. It made even the soil alien.

A food wrapper is pinned, bleached pale yellow and orange, gently flapping beneath a twisted bicycle rack. In that moment I remembered the aisles and the people and the sound of Alphonse and the trailing chuckle of his voice in a shared joke and I had never even eaten the brand. In that instant I saw the world die again, and a dead stranger had given the news.

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Hey Starshine

I was going to write you a letter.

I voted you most likely to set something on fire
and throw it out a window.

I try not to worry about things I used to.
Try not to worry about the me of years gone by looking at the me of now
and saying, "Shit man, I could have done that."
Maybe he'd have even been better at it. I don't know.
Seems like he had all the time in the world,
but I don't think he did me any favors...

On the walk home I fixed a guy's camera,
I gave a Spanish lady directions
told someone their new clothes looked great,
Said thank you in a language I don't even speak.
I did nothing for me.
I took a train to the edge of my own city,
so I could walk around someplace that wasn't home,
I sent some postcards.
The people liked me better there.
Isn't that fucked up?

I watched the lunar eclipse, thought about all those sunsets and sunrises all at once, a ring of fire around the globe. I thought about the birth, the death, the rage, the nights and morning afters, the war and the peace, the horror and beauty all at once.
Thought about how it's always there.
Has always been there... How we'd find scraps of it under the sand
in four thousand year old trash heaps.

Felt like I was floating in space and time.
Which, I guess we all are.

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Phonebook

Your every scar is beauty to me,
Every fear a hand to hold.

I say to you that if the world is a cold rain -
You are a house in the distance
with a warm light, a hot shower, and a soft bed.

Monday, November 01, 2010

Sociologica Obscura

I heard you were
Driving in the trees
Walking on the moon

I heard you had some pictures
When the Police showed up.

They took your stuff away
What use they got for it anyway?
That blonde wig never did fit
I tried it out on Labor Day
You remember when she gave you it?
Yeah…
Hair is just like hers, some say.
Yeah.

They took them two bullet casings
From when you shot your dog
They took all six gloves you had
Said you whispered, “Kali’s got delicate hands…”

Heard they took your sonograms.

Well they weren’t yours anyhow
I mean
They weren’t your baby, I don’t know
Not the one in her belly, I mean, but then
Is that one yours? I don’t know.
Shit sorry man.

I ain’t never seen a sound like that.

Hell, they took your photograph
They took your teeth, all eighteen
Took the can you kept them in
What’d you say? Found ‘em in a trash bin?
Probably’d never know…
They came from that one guy tugged that boat across that river.
Which one was that?

Who the fucks got something like that these days?
Well them I guess.
Said it came from some animals
You know I don’t believe that.

She saw you at the Post Office
By that big board full of faces.
These days you seem the same…
Beaten. Like a head in a box.
Except your photo aint the same
Cause don’t nobody want you.
That’s what she said. Ha.
Shit sorry man.

Why people always strange around you?
Don’t seem right, don’t seem fair.
Shit.

Sorry man.

Sisyphus Wrecks

Rusted shut and smelling of old iron,

And grease
And dust, dust, dust
Beneath tires as black and chalky white
As my hands
Fingernails framed in dirt
Beyond a carnage of knuckles
Creating stories written small upon fingertips
A convergence of nature and history
Grout black among the ridges of genetic certainty
Of hair and sweat and beating sun
Hot on burnt flesh
Shirt wet, sticking to my skin

No bullets, no blood.
Just age, just age.
Their engines seized and futile.

And we all pull off parts to hang upon our wall.
So shall I
So shall you
So shall they when we are through

Paranaguá

For Father de Carli


P

I am lost at sea, father please
remember me
in 1648 we drove our stakes into her soil
we built her from the untilled earth
shaping her with hands and mud and human toil
we toasted our coffea
we built her walls in pine
we rested to drink our chá mate as the slow tug of time drew us each out
as her paper, timber and hide is siphoned off by the sea
I became the father; a shepard to my brothers, shepards and sons
But now -
I have been called to heaven before my body is done

Do you see me my father?
untethered from my mother home
an Icarus on rainbow wing of latex tree
watch the bright petals wash against her shore
like flowers upon my funeral bones
I can see my country, her beauty laid before me as clear as my regret
I ask of you - do I appear this perfect yet?

I say now
all of it I would trade
for the feel of her soil in my hands,
for the coldest winter of my youth
Recalled under jequitiba shade
For Jose, as we laughed at him in the mornings - at his quaint cabaça,
the bomba poking at his sleepy eyes.
Does he watch the shores I wonder?
Or does he watch the skies?
They say that you know what is best.
I believe this,
For when you called me
you never told me the work you needed done was death.

Nemeleoan



Gnashing tooth in terrible fury upon knuckle and jaw
The wives watched, drinks in hand...

and I wondered everything one wonders when one watches;

Why Hercules?
Why not the Lion of Neme, mane wild and prideful?
Shoulders rude and wide, breath a hushed, whiskered noise,
coarse and rumbling low.

But no.
That golden mane, trampled under trash and mired in the blood of martyrdom
rests under the footsteps of small men,
the sputtering of their thoughts a mockery
to the memory of his rich pulse, a thundering pride of coarsing blood that shall move no more
except to drain, bubble and pop
as that grand beast’s body is strewn upon the flames like so much refuse
to swaddle their tiny hearts in the comforts of complacency,
breasts and minds never to overflow with the swelling of what was lost -
too ignorant to comprehend that they should cry.
Glasses tink and eyes wink and shoulders are clapped beneath cupped hands.
From the glare of flashbulb and colored paper ribbons twirling like snakes through the air...
not one amongst them has the decency to shy.
Not one amongst them cares.

And he -
That rippling errand boy wearing his skin as a badge,
ignorant to the stench of blood which marks him as murderer.
That craftsmen of orphans,
that pathmaker of progress,
where all the knives they did muster proved dull
where arrows bent and broke -
he showed it takes no more skill to wring out life from a throat
than to twist water from a rag.
Shall he think of what has passed or why?
How shall he recall the cause for which was fought, or what for which has died?
In drink, and gamble and oblivion -
with blind excess...
welcoming the noise of oncoming steam and falling tree
in this, the early spring of his career.
I, if only could, would witness the moment when his eyes clear;
to watch him realize that his bones too shall be ground as grist -
that one day his shall be the love scoured clean from the surface of things
by ambition’s pathetic, lamentable fist.

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Poor Magdalena



Magdalena kept her quarters in a Crown Royal bag.

Oh how the pretty lamp lights shone like hard candies on a stick
Full of promises and twinkle
Like the look of so many men
That swallowed down only left her feeling sick.

Christ if you want to know the truth of it,” as they say
She don’t got no boyfriends… just some guys that smile at her.

She don’t remember what the park is like in the daytime.

The lone star blinks and she don’t care that it’s just a satellite.

Sometimes she feels like she could flip a switch
Like finding the light at 2 a.m.
A sizzle, a flash as the world burns bright
Like sitting at God’s knee
She always thinks,
Oh Lord. If this ain’t the rapture!
Full of hope that it is and fear of the same
And wonder - boundless wonder
At where she would fall between heaven and earth
When the next second comes she’s sitting in the dark
Cause the bulb’s just gone bad.

Sometimes she feels like that too.
Like she’s a beautiful marquee full of lights that have all gone bad.
Like the one she’s looking at ‘cause it’s 2:04 a.m. and she’s tired
Of watching the laundromat toss her underwear around.

Sometimes she feels like the security man
Pacing the gas station next door
Arms swinging,
Waiting for no one…
Which is ok ‘cause ain’t no one ever going to come.

She listens to the clouds complain.

She thinks about how Teddy used to sound
Teddy the Gun they called him cause of that time
He tried to rob the old lady with the cane
Who couldn’t understand him on account of his speech problems
About how he kept waving his little ankle piece in her face
Until he figured out she was blind and he got so embarrassed
That he just ran away.
Except he still puffed up when they called him that.

She thinks about how she’d call him
Theobore
when she got tired of him talking
And about Mikey Hot Pants, about Sid
- The ones she’s known that don’t make no sense
And how they’d be great in her memoirs when she’s old

And the lights sizzle and flash and she thinks to herself
Oh My God. If another bulb ain’t gone bad…
And quick as you like she realizes she ain’t inside nowhere.
At 2:12 her britches stop spinning, but she ain’t there to get them
And she wonders, she just hopes the security man will check on her
Even if she ain’t there to know.

Fatherland


You hate the jews, you hate the jews
And the gays, and blacks too
You shot and snorted and smoked your life
For forty-two years, poor and white,
Until you said it all with a tattoo.

Übermensch, they have had to fire you.
You were excised before I had time—-
Mind-boggling, your treatise of bile,
Wrapped in, “pleases” and, “thank you’s”
Sweet as apfelkuchen pie

With your head shaved clean and helmet smooth
Where it houses logic black and blue
Twisted and bent as a triskelion’s shoe.
How I struggled to comprehend you.
Ach, du.

In the German tongue, in this rainbow town
Made Fabulouuus by the beat
Of Oonsht, Oonsht, Oonsht!
Though the sounds of the clubs are common
My Gay friends

Say there are a dozen or two.
So I could never tell where you
Lost your mind, met your kind,
I could never talk to you.
The rage stuck in my jaw.

It stuck in your insect stare.
Ich, ich, ich, ich,
I could hardly speak.
I thought every Bigot was you.
And your ideology obscene.

Bitter lumpenproletariat, 14/88 fool
Take your vile beliefs and go - you’re through.


(apologies to Sylvia Plath)

Wichita (a song for Edward Leedskalnin)

My father still hears you sing
He still needs that vacation
He still needs you more than wants you
I know that he does
I have sensed something of you in the tension of his shoulders
In the smell of the day’s sweat
When the world sleeps
And he is alone at last in his kitchen
A bulb for his company
And a drink for his meal

I have wondered
As he drives under that baking sun,
Tracing the cables with his eyes
Dark lines darting between the rays of the light

And in this city night of perpetual gloam
In the crash of storms brewing
Moisture kissing the skin of his arms
Working beneath his heavy gloves
Born upon cool air lashing out into the night
Like waves from an unseen sea
In which he is forever lost
…I have wondered

Did you ever exist?

At three-thirty-two a.m.
He says he heard you singing
A girl and a boy and a mother of three
Were pulled from a fire
By axe and frenzy
By men in heavy coats
He says they heard you too.
That he was there to keep the line clear.

I have never seen a photograph
I have never heard your name
Yet I think I know you
From the hollow, haunted emptiness in his eyes.
You live out there somewhere
Somewhere that can’t be touched by fingertip.

I have told him stories,
News of the world
Tales of satellites and radio towers
Tales of cold science fiction
And phones that talk to the sky
He dismisses me and my world of the now

I know
He will never come back.
He hears only you
In the soft whispered words
Of one tin can tied to the next.

Saturday, November 05, 1977

Billy Beer & Devil Dogs

Dry and broken,
bones rattle like a baby's toy
thoughts skip like a warped record...
Laughter tumbles over my lip and plummets,
screaming, to the waiting floor.
I've beaten the clock, so it's broken,
and time's turned slow on me.

Big Voodoo K-mart man,
Laughing at me through the gaps in my logic -
Every where's the same!
Can't get change for money no more -
Can't get the eye of day or time contact.

Thirty-two tin cans buys me a beers.
Mayhaps a sweetie for my troubled soul,
a cookie for my angry poet's aborted vision...

I want to meet God someday.

I's going down to the Majic-Market,
seein' if I can catch him there.
Yous welcome to come with...

Best keep your distance though.
I don't think too straight much more...
Oh but I don't hurt nobody!
And my momma, she loves me.
She lives there in the park, right underneath the grass.

I like you - I bet she will too.


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