Thursday, August 2, 2012

Circus Smirkus


Early morning the grass was matted and gauzy
with spiders' silk barely seen in the low-
angled sunlight: ten minutes only
did all that fantastic industry show

in the field where we still pitch circus
tents in July. Delight camps out,
sells us snacks, souvenirs and three tries
for four dollars on our way to the tent

and popcorn and noise and this is the show we came for.
Look at  them pretend to fall! So
many clowns in such a little car!
Tonight for an hour and a half we watch and ahh.

The vastly ordered outside world is ignored.
More stars than we know for farther
than we can ever fit into our head
above us while we follow the ringmaster's patter.

After, we jabber back to the cars we parked
over the ruined acre of spiderweb. Still
under stars we cannot see for the head-
lights' glare. The world's own marvels

ignore us, too. Now in the dark
stars and spiders spin. We drive
home in our machines amid their work,
chatting on phones. We attend to ourselves,

and why not? Who cares if we laugh
at our own jokes? Applaud some kid
in tights and bells who just juggled five
balls in each hand (or nearly did)?

We are the only ones laughing anyway,
or trying to be funny, and sometimes we're pretty good.
We want a smaller, warmer joy.
The night sky is huge and very cold.

Tonight, a joy like us: little
monkeys laughing, foolish, the world's fools,
the ones in big shoes and baggy pants,
the stars of the show, grinning, with pie on our face.

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Manual Dexterity


They wheel him in asleep and she begins
to cut his throat a little. Finds the vein
to open, to thread in the line. She spills her
balms into his heart's first chamber.

I've dropped my drink and kneel down in the kitchen
to mop a puddle of glass shards and bourbon.
That quick my hand is opened and my fingers
run with blood and burn with wasted liquor.

Or she is painlessly flaying his face,
carefully freeing the seventh nerve's lace-
work of feeling. She bends over the man on the bed
and mends him. Her brilliant hands are wet and red.

Or your hands run down my back and hips
while fine things are being done with kisses.
Afterward we lie damp and flushed,
spilled like opened gifts across our bed.






Bacchanalia


After some hesitation I lay myself down
drunk upon the rainsoaked grass.
I'll be damned
if the liquor doesn't ease the pain.
Naked, I am told, before God.
Naked. Rhyming.

Another evening it was a thunderstorm,
strobelight thunderstrokes bang bang bang without commas
tremendous cold rain gusted and me
out of bed in the houselee: watching, in love,
sublimnity,inhuman greatness, sweet relief
from my own poor estimations.

Grinning, worshipful naked ape in underwear
wetfaced.

All the bullshit will, in the end, win
over me but I'll not be won over
Please Please
I'll crossdress before the dry
with the thunderborn, bullhorn shouting
about everything, drunk
upon the wet grass, tears maybe



Saturday, June 2, 2012

Pine



Grey bark
wanting and would
make lightening
split open
a gorgeous kindling
the heartwood made
a shower of gold
sparks that get
the Western wood
with flame, with flame
that only can open
the seeds of the others

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Shop Class



Do you know what this motor is?
Slick pistons bored for in the casting
wet with essence distilled
of ancient tars.
Fine set valve works, intimate
timing. The whole thing assembled,
refined, corrected. How many minds
cleverness, in steel, reciprocating?

Friday, April 13, 2012

As on silken nooses, winking

Turn on the radio and sing along
As they croon and sell you their heartbreak.
True love's true story: stake
All, all lost. Heartbreak love's meaning,

Joy its flavor. This is the hot swing
And our lives hang on these sweet mistakes
As on silken nooses, winking. It's our trick
That all hurts and failings turn to song.

We are for beginnings anyway, the best
Of us, and the heart's beatings need no rest.

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Co-worker sonnet #16


Dave, the former soldier: a tacky queen
wearing his muscles, musk and torn jeans.
Larry was mellow, vain, friendly, simple.
He'd shot a man. Two years in jail.
Katrina: fine and small and smart and absent,
she nibbled clay the month she was pregnant.
Mean Tom with his midnight skin and swagger,
“Don't Ask Me For Shit” t-shirt, scar.
We found Pete on the floor tight and twitching.
Off his meds. He eventually went missing.
At twenty-five they made me the boss.
In two weeks I showed them I was clueless
and incompetent. Empty shelves and the shop a mess.
It was not the first job I had lost.

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Aphasia on Injustice

Justice is blond, a coquette, a tease.
I was led on by the nose,
up a creek with only prattle
to clothe and make a man out of me.

And my father (none the wiser),
"Told you so!" he told me.
Are my accounts in her ears?

A burdened hand being worse, moreover,
than twins in a birchbark canoe...
I game a flaw: a flinch she
made in rhyme to save mine.

But that sidelong glance is the Devil's
hotspot. And like I'm hatched out
of a bell for her ready hearing, ever.

Saturday, February 18, 2012

I am often in the February garden
Considering this empty worked mud square

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Adam speaks to Jared



I thought to start here. On this hillside
we first wept. It was another awful
novelty. Throat clenched. My eyes. Wetcheeked.
She had fallen and was hurt and bled.
My own feet also, and the cold.
All new, and of all tears the first.

Pain, yes, and fear, regret alloyed
with it in that shaky heart tight sobbing
until we clutched each other in arms.
Her hot breath and tears and mine
until it passed and relented, exhausted,
and we were eased awhile together here.

Just there by the water, on the far side,
we dug and sowed the first of our gardens.
Where it rises just past: a hole
to hide in. Toolless labor ill-done
then but then we grew defter;
made our ways, fields, knives, a roof.

When she labored her first child
as promised, as sentenced, in sweat and ecstasy
we wept again as the small one nursed
and all that joy! Creation. Blood.
The sixth day again and lambing time
nestled in our den with our mate and our son.

If from the first these tears I had,
and joys, this love, these works, these tilled fields,
these crimes, these grieved losses, these children,
what else bear I in wrapped packages?
There are somewhere bundles of what
we are. They are not marked.

Not before the bright or dark occasions
when these ourselves are presented to us,
and we discover we can weep
and do at once. I considered these things
and held my first son and wondered.
It was not yet plain to me.

I remember now those little hands
wheeling softly about his infant
head always with his brother's throat
opened in the field. His sleeping face
at her breast beside his brother's,
fixed, a mouth of flies.

Raging and lost was I made then.
Each creation fouled after! Children
killing and killed and God the taproot of this damn
whose fruit we choke and choke and spit.
The meat and bones and offal of him
we dug into the dirt that had his blood.

But Oh, the hand of God on Cain was light
and when I quieted I had new wonders:
they themselves had invented the altar,
this bringing gifts He made to God.
And God's first favor so brief and deathfruited,
and on Cain the first of all mercies.

Time grief lightened or maybe worked?
I wonder still how what is past passes,
unlost, different, more transparent somehow.
And next things made over too.
All more bitter and more sweet,
bitter and sweet more often at once.

We would sit evenings up here.
Gentle. Scared. Tired and awake.
The last made things holding together.
I watched crows glean a field I thought
was clean, and heard them speaking
but knew nothing of their speech.

I was learning things, but slowly.
Of toil. When to gather. What to save.
Children she got again, and in my heart
I held these lessons, and thought
what I should learn: our fall, God's favor,
worship, murder and mercy, woman with child.

What this body does I do and am
and am of her, from rib and fruit
and have been. So made and so chose.
As we know each other the joy,
opened only together, of these limbs;
bruised, taut, alive, pressed, scented.

Now grace, our children, we only remembered.
She and I might think or speak
of past things as days broke and broke.
We thought now too of the coming
winters, Seth's aging, what might
pass. Always she and I together.

The weight of all to come is offset
along a long arm by came and done.
Today and I and she the pivot place.
Breath and effort, words of comfort and lovemaking
the fixing of it and of us.
It can seem to me to be this way.


Sunday, December 11, 2011

Epiphany

The three of us drove here through the night
When the world had one full circuit run
We watched our sister nurse her Son
It has never failed, our guttering light,
And now this tiny hope for heaven.
The three of us drove here through the night
When the world had one full circuit run
Our hearts in brief lives delight
Though we are false, He is smitten
His love has His law undone
The three of us drove here through the night
When the world had one full circuit run
We watched our sister nurse her Son

Quickened here now Son and Father
Into our carefulness are fallen
And everything we have always known
His mother will grieve when he leaves her
And for this grief He will find pardon
Quickened here now Son and Father
Into our carefulness are fallen
His harvest too will fail in winter
A tomb he'll have. It will be opened.
The end of things will make no end
Quickened here now Son and Father
Into our carefulness are fallen
And everything we have always known

The Son of God is hungry, small
Against the cold a fire is made
The fallen find they are beloved
Soon he will begin to crawl
A time will come and he'll be dead
The Son of God is hungry, small
Against the cold a fire is made
He is here to woo us all
Though we will make a willful bride
Look at him! He shares our bed
The Son of God is hungry, small
Against the cold a fire is made
The fallen find they are beloved

Monday, October 24, 2011

A Vision of the Great Procession in Which All are Mummers

Thus we parade the august avenue: apes
Bearing above our heads the beehive homes
Of each buzzing, bright, particular bit
Which swarm is equal just in number
To all we ever think or hope or say.
Attendant angels bright and fallen (suspiciously
Alike to bees costumed for a role,
Unless the plainer bugs are too seraphim
In civilian clothes) all bearing ribbons.
Other figures follow behind each of us
In postures, masks, and dress depicting scenes
All in certain correspondence with each act
Peculiar to our own life's history.
These serial mimes trail behind in lines
Whose lengths reflect, as they must, the accidents
That origin and end invariably are for all.

Apes and angels, demons, bees and mimes
Proceed with drum and horn, guns and keening.
No crowds are drawn to watch or clap or wave:
Everyone is in the parade. All are mummers.
In fact many, many eyes are closed
Or attend only to their own buzzing cloud.
Other eyes revert to glories past and shames.
Some call out, or marshal themselves
(All sans baton), while others mob along.
When at the bank the paraded ranks debouch
They are quickly quit of every entourage
And at this shore are softly stripped
And docile, shocked, at peace or war,
Beneath the waters disappear to slough
Away their flesh and hides till skulls are left
And piled high a long way off from here
Facing every way, abandoned houses
Lit by a shifting sun and full of wind.