Jun 26, 2012

Nobody's Heart

The darklashed eyes half opened,
the port-red lips half shut,
the seal of the letter broken,
the long-held secret out,


she turns with a sad pirouette,
and for a last second fancies
a clutch of fine-chinned silhouettes
of tophatted old-moneyed dandies.


So somebody thinks she's something,
Who's thinking of her as he slinks
in the shadows across the road, mumbling
and stumbling along as he thinks


that if Helen's face set off a thousand
trim-sailed fire-fighting ships,
then she'd wake the dead to carouse &
raise hell with the swell of her hips.


But her cold heart is hard and her sights
are set on the gold,
and a word's worth to her is a half-penny
sadly neglected;


and a scribbler's art is a trifle,
a rhyme is a tale twice-told,
and the name that she saw was the one
that was least expected.


 Nobody's heart gets broken
over and over again;
over and over again.


So now she knows it, he mentions
off-handedly in his own ear;
but it was with the best of intentions
that he'd made his affections clear.


Of course she was disappointed,
That Cupid's anointed dart
was once again errantly pointed
at some low-born nobody's heart.



Jun 22, 2012

War Party


While far behind our hearths and halls
are fire-warm and woman-rich,
the icy rain shakes down in squalls
that holler like a banshee bitch.

No giving up, no turning in,
no time to worry or wonder;
just grit your teeth and take it straight,
and shake your fist at the thunder.


With miles to go through muck and mire, 
the sickle moon rides high in the night;
a silver splinter of Heaven's fire,
a wink of God's eye, burning bright.

No time to sleep, no time to dream,
no peace for the man that wallows;
no doubt for him it will be grim
when he meets with the One that follows.


Raise your shields against the storm, boys,
Drive on,
be hale and hearty;
the eyes of your women keep you warm, boys,
Ride on,
as one, war party.

The hills are hard and the weather evil
but soon we'll see that dawn of gold 
that stirs our hearts and drives the Devil
back to his dark, deep-harrowed hole.

The sun will rise and bless your eyes
just when your hopes had dwindled;
and those who were slain will rise again
in the stars, their brave hearts kindled.

 

Ballad of Jack Kettle

Longshanks sat in the corner
his back against the wall,
he'd come from beyond the border
where evil had laid its pall.
You could feel the darkness on him
Like ice it burned you cold;
but the devil had never won him,
in his eye that truth was told.


A mug of ale and a tall tale
we'll have if the teller's awake and able;
but if he's gone we'll laugh till dawn
and leave some coin on the oaken table.


Betimes beer tricks a fellow
and makes his reason wink;
the man's far better off yellow
whose heart-fire comes from drink;
so up says young Jack Kettle,
armed with his bunched-up fists,
bristled with ale-born mettle,
and all of his senses dismissed:


"Stranger, I see you're bigger than me
but I reckon not half those tales are true,
that say you've spat in the devil's hat
and that he had nary a lick for you."


Remember the night Jack Kettle was pissed
and took a swing at a man and missed;
remember the tale and tell your young
what havoc comes of a wagging tongue.


Longshanks donned his kid gloves
when it came time to settle
a score that rose in a beer mug
and in the hot head of Jack Kettle;
one mop in the hand of a barmaid
sopped up the blood that was spilled
from that sawed-off wanna-be David
who was lucky he wasn't killed.


Aster

TIME

It rose up like a black ship from the sea,
that top hinge of a giant serpent-mouth,
and broke the dipping sunlight on its teeth.
The poets lobbed out ordnance from the quay:
tick-tocking iambs beat an ancient pulse
as tongue and breath were yoked in ritual;
spruce measures pattered on its hide like knells,
or, lighting in that maw, were swallowed whole.

The bottomless gullet sucked up dribbled edges
of dazzling tropes and metaphors, duets
of perfect rimes flew in a desperate volley;
but when the sunset’s dazzling pinks and oranges
gave way, and far white stars winked like shallots,
then silence blossomed in the monster’s belly.


RUSE

The poets agreed in their subterrenean nave
to write more poems in praise of monsters, though
that would not waylay Time whose tongues of snow
inexorably licked each architrave,
blew gales of slow frost on each martyred figure
frozen in glass, snuffed out their sputtering tapers,
curled up and browned the edges of their papers,
contained one acolyte in ten with rigor

mortis. And so they sank leviathans
into the mundane deeps, set basilisks
on bridges, sang out Gaudete as griffins
stormed ramparts with their wings like m‘s, or chevrons.
Mastodons rode men upon their tusks
and Jacks with bright knives divvied up the women.


SOLO

Their one goal was to keep the people guessing,
and so they delved an apsis underground,
beneath the sound of heel and radial passing,
hidden away from even their maker’s hand
that scooped out blindly with a lifer’s spoon
the earth in rinds as hard as baker’s chocolate:
a buried enclave or ulterior Camelot
where in reverberating baritone

they summoned every lusus naturae
that answered their demonic invocations:
chimera, hydra, gargoyle, cockatrice;
and yet those apples of the devil’s eye
would still, despite a thousand permutations,
confess their sire, a chafing onanist.


ASTER

He scratched his head and thought of naval ships
at war upon some master’s oily water:
the canvas flying in flames, the shredded banners,
cannons firing billowy mushroom shapes.
He realized he’d given up his secrets:
he couldn’t see it straight, the ding an sich,
but twice removed he rifled through the pockets
of those to whom his beggaring lines were schtick,

the junk and jetsam of a live half-lived,
the stale bilgewater of a secondhander.
And so he rallied all those bogeymen
with which his suicidal brain was gravid
and watched his tiny reputation founder:
one title less for his memorial stone.


ABADDON

Despite it all he winds down fractured stairs
turning wide-eyed in cloudy dream spirals
that might be akin to those legendary gyres
he heard tell of. The yattering tongues of bells
still flood the echoing dark with o‘s like obols,
where mouths that never kiss still omm in ovals.

But he knew that before the poem started,
that it was never the brighter thresh of sleighbells
or happier clicks and clacks of jacks or marbles
that drew him inexorably to his inverted
Pleasure Dome, his topsy-turvy Eldorado,
mock-gothic and profane basilica,
darkling Atlantis, gloomy Shangri-la:
another dupe to his dear Amontillado.


CHTHONIC

There he scanned the breadth of his brain’s horizon
like one plunged headlong in the ultimate pit:
some vengeful Lucifer or madcap Urizen
droning his self-obsessed magnificat -

while in a derelict garden statuary
stood tiptoe in the rain and minor angels
wrestled in windfall when an ordinary
sunset flared the stark walls of Tintagel
stuck on its evergreen and desolate hill
hard by an unbroken sea no man could ride,
its waters churned white by the serpent’s tail -

and heard the dead men cross the Bridge of Sighs
heading for holes in the ground that were the size
of graves, where they were buried until they died.


SIGHTINGS

On Presidents’ and Independence day
the colors in the evening sky flashed
in the Hudson River whose slow waters washed
against his feet. Better recall July
than bleak and gaunt-boughed, icy February
when wind swept off the sleepy river and smashed
the glass of his gollum-eyes to a fire-splashed
blur. In summer time he watched ships ferry
up and down the river, past Bannerman’s Island.

He only saw it from the shore: a brushwork
rook-shape in the air was all he gleaned
of a castle, once fortress and stockpiled armory.
The Indians said the place was haunted. Naturally
The locals saw strange lights there in the dark.


HAUNTED

He never saw those lights, though often he gazed
out toward that island from the mountain road
above West Point or from the riverside
where it was said a failed cadet composed
his Ulalume. Now maybe there’s your ghost,
he thought, that gloomy subterranean bard
remembered for his bells and his black bird?

And yet he knows there really is no ghost,
knows that the dead are happy in their tombs;
that though the eye is easily tricked the mind
is the softer touch; that even if men were blind
the dark would resonate with spirit voices
crying out angrily from forsaken places
or whispering to themselves in empty rooms.

The Reynolds Poems

WAMBLE

Reynolds and me we roamed like vaqueros,
spat on the range, ate gooseberry pie
on checkered table cloth. A buxom blonde
with bouncing locks brought in a bisquit basket.

Old father Hubbard wouldn’t let us feed
until we lowered our pates and panted amens
so Penny the meatfed farmer’s daughter
calmly her words loured over us like clouds

while long the lank bookseller leaned
his phiz slant on the board and nodded
ably along I raised my stubble chin
and so took in the breach between her breasts:

like Christmas loaves, like partridges,
like banks of snow or gabardine.
Reynolds was later on to claim
he sniffed invective in the snapping

knuckles of the farmhands, sure,
but all was well and over the trilling hills
the churchbells clinked like ice-chunks
in that big-ticket manse of a hash house

by shitfouled water near the sapless tracks
on which Old George was flattened,
leastways his rendered smiler embossed
on strangely expendable two-bit pieces,

for how could those scabkneed ragamuffins’
pockets tinkle with mugs and buffaloes?
which isn’t to say they weren’t toughened
by threadbare denim or queer duck aunts

who fixed their shoes with cardboard snipped
from cereal boxes where black cooks beamed
and proffered bowls of steaming meal,
but none for me nuncle no for me neither.

Now see how one in a kerchief slimmed
and gained in cultural cool and hip aplomb
what she had lost in the crupper (which
is also good for something), still,

our corporate suits are taking baby steps
toward civility, which reminds me,
Reynolds, I said, we never do what we say,
we always talk too much and never get on with it:

we said we’d jump a train to Baltimore,
stow-away on a cargo ship to San Juan.
We’ll see those palms and temples of the south
before we croak. But as it happens

we slouched along and found Camp Crook,
a couple of rattlebrained galoots,
and no one nowhere, no, not anyone,
will ever tell our sorry story.



AMERICANS (MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND)

They come with shades propped like tiaras,
like royalty, says Reynolds, pushing up his shirtsleeves,
they keep falling down, he says, turning up another roll
sodden with sweat and fouled bleachwater.

What a way to make a living. A pidgeon beats
out of the dumpster like some greasy phoenix,
clank of bottles, fetor of beer, milkfat rice krispies.
Scared the piss out of me too, the bugger.

That’s what this town has done, he says,
lighting a smoke, made cadgers of the birds,
made their lives too easy, like under the Bridge
those ducks paddling fatly along like pontoons.

But isn’t that the nature of living things,
to take the easiest way? I says, and he flips
the cigarette to the other side of his mouth
like he was Clint Eastwood and the sun glaring

like a nimbus over his hat, sure, but it doesn’t
mean I have to like it. Look at that one, proud
as a peacock, lord of that pile of residuum.
You’re no poet, I say, a pidgeon like a peacock.

Meanwhile some genius in his courtly muscle shirt
left us a dead battery on the tarmac,
smack in the middle of a parking lot, like he figures
there’s no lawnorder here in Mayberry,

and that’s really what he thinks, he says,
look, there’s an El Camino with some screaming
retards in the back stopped dead in conversation
with some other screaming retards in an Escalade

fuckdab in the middle of the avenue.
Seven bullets for seven screaming retards.
But I know he doesn’t mean it, that’s Reynolds
for you, he’s just can’t stand the fact

that he’s good for nothing but this kind of grind,
he knows it and I know it, but thanks
to good oldfashioned human ingenuity
we can bury the facts in a slagheap of becauses

and even dodge our faces in the mirror,
except when we shave, when we do, at which times
we’re bashful like suicide girls with no beads
and boy’s hair dyed pitch and impeccant breasts.



UPSTATE NEW YORK BY AUTOMOBILE

Take those coal-gathering Chinamen, he says, dangling
like Christmas lights, and slides his finger straight
to skim the foam, or those Lakota Sioux
they rounded up like a bunch of knock-off Hummels:

We’re planted when they’ve tapped us of our resources,
when we can’t make the mercury budge its scant degree,
or curios, uncle-eyed in sepia prints,
praised for our wisdom and dancing, then scattered like dung.

In North Plank Tavern, under the highest ceiling
I ever saw in a fuddlehole, we got stiff.
The barman took our money and poured our lagers
in schooners where the sediment swam like sea-monkeys.

Monks brewed this stuff. It’s punchy like wine. So easy.
Well, I was way beyond easy, so Reynolds, he hied me
home in that tight little saffron Karmann Ghia.
There’s not much else to this story, says Reynolds,

hands on the clock, taking tree-skirted turns
as savvy as a gigilo under the hood
or behind her wheel, letting her do the driving.
The snow doesn’t care, or cud in the hinged cow-mouth,

rocks in the fences wet since Washington,
silos’ cracks, dodgy salamanders’ spots.
I showed him my poems, but Reynolds, he just shied,
blonde unbeliever with long-soured Mayflower blood.



OF DEATH IN THE HOUSE OF THE HALF-DEAD

The question is never should I or can I or when
but how, and it has to be quick, no chance to back out,
no chance of failure, he says, and stares through drapes
that have become nostalgic, so memorably ugly,

at farm equipment scattered like artworks: tires
long still, weed-bellied; tractors; worn-out backhoes,
combines, furrow ploughs; coiled chickenwire.
Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, you only skewer them,

compass-straight through fields, random clumps
of trees no bumpkin scribbler oded, patches of snow.
He stares in the rancid cloud of hangover, eyes
chasing the clamoring rigs that blacken the banks

on either side of the highway, oily gutturals
loud and punctual; and here they equal ritual,
ground the wanderer like the tink of churchbells,
taillights at sunset melancholy, like candles.

Here I am wondering if he really means it,
and sip warm water from the clotted taphole,
bully through channels where a tenor drawl
is absurdly normal, like rips in a shower curtain,

a bald spot in the carpet, blanched and crepe-flat,
the bolted-down remote, the absence of spirits,
and decide right then and there, Reynolds, I say,
this is the place, right here. Let’s haunt it: shriek

by the ice machine, nocturnal god whose voice
is a glassy harrumph, by the front desk, out in the gravel
where radials come crunching and reluctantly stop,
blow out gray windows and the tacky drapes

with death-breath, boozy from some vague beyond,
make neatly wrapped soap wafers levitate,
make plastic cups buoy up and break the mirrors.
He smiles, turning from the window, from the song

of semis, and he says, there should be a law, he says,
no mirrors in these havens of the half-dead
who have passed from vanity into nonchalance,
from bloodwet life to strawy limbo. Hollowmen.

So he takes his belt for its heavy buckle and whacks
with a quick whine of lashwind and gladly cracks
his leaping reflection, the shockhole and its deltas
of tiny fissures scream once and once only,

an impotent exlamation, coward’s signature,
material fullstop for a weakling’s sentence.
It won’t be seen, but new bedding will be smoothed
by hands not watched by dead eyes buried in the sky.



THE DEATH OF ROMANCE

We walked over the hill behind the house
where Reynolds was whelped, heads stoned with lead
cloud, gray mist, smoke. My strange hands curled
like marionettes.

I swept my arm to refer to the square fields,
and fancied a battlescene. He just snickered,
but that was his power, the ever-present elbow
in the kidney.

I thought of Napoleon’s armies or some king’s:
a country quilt’s innocuous slide across linen,
the bloodless advance of logic and order
over stone fences

across the field’s furrows, wintered hard.
Imagine a skinny horn pressed to a mouth
still barely dry from its mother’s nipple, breath
from a virgin’s piehole

threading the brass throat, aspirates hallooed
in gold fear-pitch. And bullets punching zeroes
in birch trees where they stood like girls behind
the marching tyros,

white, switch-waisted. By that quick dismissal
he gave me the wrench for my silly machine
that chugged and coughed: faces that stared skyward,
eyes turned off.



SACCHARINE

Reynolds said Parker Dam looked a sight better steeped
in sugar, lime and salt. All those daiquiris,
pina coladas, margaritas: they sat in the belly
heavily like the drawl in drinking songs.

No spittoons, but you could smell the flannel,
the chaw-grueled sawdust, hear the specious twang
of leatherskinned and bottleblonde-mopped
California girls under ridiculous hats.

I was saying I took a girl here once, changing
the subject. Which was? She drank cape cods
and poked odd numbers into clattering cups.
Eyes applauded, fastened on copper-rivets.

Did you ever think you could have everything?
Yes, when I kissed her later. But that fancy was dead
in the chute, killed by a slow sunrise, back-strain
and headache, lemon-sharp light, lemon-bitter.

The heart is a mayfly, but a fool’s delusion
won’t cost him. See, the pendulum swings narrow,
closer to the pulling core, each interval
between soft clicks drawing toward silence.




GAIA THE GREEN GODDESS

I spared a thought for Gaia the green goddess
under the bridge where the Colorado seethed
with shadowy sucker fish. Knees to the chain,
I cast out pellets bought from a gumball machine

for panhandling ducks and gulls. Reynolds ogled
wandering hennas and washing-instruction tags.
Notice, he says, the eyes are dark enigmas
furtive behind reflecting shades because

in everything, Americans have it backwards:
soul-windows shuttered and kept for lovers, asses
out like bedsheets drying down Maple Drives.
Take Gaia for instance, he says, the deified

collective guilt of the not-me generation,
a fresh spook for the Olympian compost heap.
It wasn’t enough they roasted Servetus
or buried the living in the Dungeons of Venice,

drove Nietzsche mad or made those leggy blondes
crusade down boulevards in Sin City
with pamphlets and a balsawood cross to claim
if you don’t know Him you’ll gnash your teeth forever.

They make her up sexy and sleek as a pop icon,
the first tight-bottomed queen of the universe
with breasts like adams apples, jewel-bellied,
sweatbanded wrists and a bitchy middle-finger

saluting Yahweh and every swaggering cock
that crows at His command; but still she’s spun
of the same old stuff: hominian dreams of dominion,
vanity trumped up, dressed in a beggar’s togs,

contempt for brains and a cowardly wish to snuff them
out like tapers. There’s one of them there,
that knapsacked wanderer with her arms stretched out
like Jesus, tie-dyed sleeves dotted with birdshit.





THE BEARD



He could be all of us turning up at once:
a quetching chorus in the skull machine,
the I of yesterday in a fresh skin-layer,
or, as Odysseus said to the one-eyed giant,
No-man. Let him rein this Rosinante and tilt
at will-o’-the-wisps, shoulder the tongue’s slips,
the accidents of misremembering.

He has his shoulder to the wheel, his nose
to the smell of his belly-hole. He can lie
and swear, his hand in the honey jar,
slide through the rabbit hole, a greasy thief.

Let him come up in a flash of sulphur,
Gehenna-dragon, Mephistopheles,
and drop his poison in my ear, possess
each neuron, make me over. He was tall
in the snow-fringed furrows, weed-savvy
seed-finder and bud collector, gaunt Fagin
who got me sotted in the farmer’s fields
from a flask in his old topcoat, iconoclast
who hated poems and prefered the aphotic
mysteries in motors. I see him masked

in the light of a welder’s arc, my father’s son
who never was. But he is Janus-faced,
not only this friend of oily metal but grunt
and greenhorn, fingers chafed with bleach and fouled
water who haunts with fat birds in the stink
of scrapheaps. He’s my good friend, Reynolds.

Viva Italia

Howard Moss was a prophet
is a prophet his book finally came to me
& his poem
Movies for the Home

Watch the silver screen Shalimar
God’s alive inside a movie
Procul Harum Keith Reid
also a prophet

Praise God and glorify Him always
Fellini Sophia Marcello
reality seamlessly drifts
into dreams

as in reality 8 1/2
he helps his father into the grave
Another film repulses
the sickening decadence of

a fallen Empire
flatulent flabby gluttonous grotesque
without the Law
O Italia

fountainhead of glory and decadence
Truth and death and
Beauty: the sickness of the unfounded ego
the beautiful ship set adrift

without a Pilot
in love with its reflection
Narcissus
in love with the creature instead of the Creator

in love with the pot instead of the Potter
Who will destroy
and unmake and set at nothing
piddling potters and creators

who glorify the crooked
twisted playthings
of men who have not
cast off the skin

of the old man
(he helps his father into the grave)
and put on the pure white robe of the new
washed clean in the blood of the Lamb

Hymn Prime

How will I do this, with a whisper, then?
And do it right? I know not. All I know
Is that Thou knowest aught, all, everything.
I thank Thee for the hours, the days and years
I wasted, Father, Who wert ever with me,
From the beginning; for all that I remember,
And all that I forget, now; for the seconds
Of every minute spilled pell-mell and willy-
Nilly; for every moment, every wink
Of sleeping and forgetting, every wee
And fleeting infinitesimal strand or string
That Thou hast set in motion, with a bang!
Or whimper, Father; and for every beginning
Of every song or story without end.


2.24.2012