Archive for June, 2009

New Poem Fell Into My Mind Last Night

Annealing

 

If I were a lump of virgin Keweenaw copper

A shining orange nugget embedded in hard quartz

Extruded with molten rock thrust through fissures

From the depths of this grim and obdurate Earth

 

You could hammer me to conform to a pattern

Of your pleasing, or heat me in your immaculate forge

And plunge me in your cooling fount one time

And again, that I would be tempered, not brittle

 

Under the reworking and shaping to your purpose

But I am not malleable, my spirit is a living thing:

Wood. In the waters, I am wave-jounced and spun

By eddies. In the fires, I am consumed.

 

June 30, 2009

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I’m working on it, no luck yet

poem seeds

pants pockets

clothes pile

dirty laundry

white scraps

spun dry

nothing you

could call

well written

not enough

for kindling

no harvest

plow under

sow again

paper mulch

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As Green as the Earth

 

 As green as the earth

the 18-gallon plastic container

you bought at WalMart

for 6 bucks and change plus 50 cents

for fine black fiberglass screening

to cover the 10 round 1-inch drain holes

evenly spaced

2 on each short side

and 3 on the long ones

that you and I drilled

as if we could impose order

on a pack of wild worms

close to the fridge

out of the traffic flow

the most beautiful object in the kitchen

except for the no-stick frying pan

that gleams like jet

for rectangles never top circles

and green plastic can’t outshine Teflon

and anyway the best part is inside

where 500 red worms

are eating what we do not want

like broccoli stems and last week’s beans

and apple cores turning to compost

inside that green plastic container

that is a lot like the earth

but it’s a box and isn’t the earth

blue and round

but it’s the air that looks blue from space

and I guess it does from here too

but you can’t see much alive

from up there except

the Great Wall of China which isn’t even

and the twinkles of cities

that could almost be stars except

then you’d be looking the wrong way

and you could never be sure

but I can open the bin

and pull out some dirt

and see our 500 worms

and they don’t even bite

and they eat all the leftovers

without ever sneaking

just one more piece of chocolate

just to even it up

cuz you never notice 1 one bite

but many ones you do

and after all you’re 4 months

pregnant and the bank manager

tells me the employee on the phone

is 4 months too and now I feel real bad

that I mentioned Nuremburg reflexively

when she explained that she was

just following orders

but that was Friday

and now it’s Saturday night

and we built today

the new worm composter

the second most beautiful thing in the kitchen

except when you are there

because you hold in your belly

the promise that grows with every meal

while the worms eat what we do not

and your belly is rounder and more perfect

than a no-stick Teflon frying pan

and your eyes are greener than the earth

and my love for you is older than worms

as old as dirt and like compost

because it remakes the world every day

more fertile

with the possibility of new life

and another spring.

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Partial Draft, Yellow Moon 1

I just need to write this down fast as a beginning — much work ahead, not much here but a rough idea, a feeling that I can’t capture yet

 

Yellow Moon

 

November born, we were still 17

            but college IDs were good enough

            for Urbana bars in those days

            and nights, like when we straddled

            the double yellow line that marked

            the border with Champaign, serenading

            that ripe old prairie moon

            with Neil Young and Bob Dylan,

            call and response like a prayer

            ricocheting from town to town

            and back, finding our rhythm,

            blending slow and sweet, then

            fast and wild my hands

            your hips a drunken reverie:

 

(Blue, blue windows behind the stars,

                        Sundown, yellow moon,

Yellow moon on the rise,

                        I replay the past,

Big birds flying across the sky,

                        I know every scene by heart,

Throwing shadows on our lives,

                        They all went by so fast.)

 

We shared pitchers of warm beer

            my flannel shirts

            drags on your cigarettes

            a twin bed beneath a window

            and Jack Kerouac:

 

       (The air was soft, the stars so fine,

The promise of every cobbled alley so great,

       That I thought I was in a dream.)

 

Two far out hipsters in frayed jeans

            holding hands across the monumental Quad

            skipping to the boom boom beat

            of our young and joyous hearts

            listening for the far off rumble

            of the raw American Midwest

            holy night barreling west

            across the big river

            to the Great Plains

            and the mountains and deserts

            and sea beyond, end of the world

 

Which is where I went.

            What could I share with you now,

            Ghost lover from beyond the horizon?

            My oldest child is just like we were then.

            My daughter’s a reader, like you.

            My youngest is named for Sal Paradise.

            I lived in Mexico and learned to read

            Neruda and Lorca in Spanish.

 

And what could you tell me?

            Is the Tasty Freeze still by the lake

            in the town you left behind?

            Does the harvest moon still shine

            sunflower yellow on the upturned

            faces of young lovers?

            Would you believe it if I

            read you this poem

And would you kiss me one more time?

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I’m working…

on a new poem. coming soon

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my first song a few years ago

Oh Alanis

 

A                               D                A

I am the particle and you are the wave

A                                  E           

You are the article that I always crave

D                                   A                D     

You are my master and I am your slave

     A            E                     A

Or is it the other way around?

A                                  D                  A

I am the fast food and you are the mouth

A                                           E               A

You’re northern latitude and I am the south

D                              A              D

I am all sooner and you are all later

      A                                            A                 A

I’d sail my slow schooner round your fine equator.

D                               A 

Waffles or pancakes red wine or beer

        D                        A                 E

Whatever it takes to win you my dear

A                          D                 A

I am the kilo and you are the pound

     A           E                    A

Or is it the other way around?

D        A

Oh Alanis

D       A E

Oh Alanis

D       A D

Oh Alanis

   A             E            A

I feel like I just ran aground

    A                E                  A

In love or the other way around

 

I am the cheese dip and you are the bread

Your oversized lip has gone to my head

I enter the room and you turn to the sound

Or is it the other way around?

I’m Anacin and you’re anisette

I’m moribund and you’re more not yet

You are more fun and I’m more regret

Cuz I’m Morrison and you’re Morrisette

Waffles or fried eggs whiskey or beers

Bare arms and long legs pierced navels and ears

2 dollars a kilo a dollar a pound

Or is it the other way around?

Oh Alanis

Oh Alanis

Oh Alanis

I was lost but now I am found

Or is it the other way around?

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In 2002

Nobel Savaged: The Jimmy Carter Travesty

by Ray Sharp

My first thought was, “Surely, you jest!”  I still can’t believe they gave the Nobel Prize – you heard me, the flippin’ Nobel Prize – to that maudlin hack of a poet Jimmy Carter, better known as “the Bard of Plains, Georgia.”

jimmy-carter-nobelI know, the award has been politicized in recent years, especially with the selection of novelist V.S. Naipul last year, but at least the man is a respected and noteworthy writer.  His early stories, set on the streets of Trinidad, were a real hoot, full of memorable characters, great colloquialisms and lots of pathos.

Mr. Carter, on the other hand, couldn’t write his way out of a bag of salted peanuts with a sharpened quill.  I mean, the man wouldn’t be able to hit the broad side of a Georgia barn at twenty paces with one of his cornpone metaphors.

Listen to this poem, from Carter’s 1995 clunker titled Always a Reckoning and Other Poems:

         On Using Words

            I first heard jumbled sounds

            before they framed my infant thoughts

            and didn’t know beliefs and dreams

            would ride on random consonants

            and vowels in the air.

 

            Now when I seek efficient words

            to say what I believe is true

            or have a dream I want to share

            the vagueness is still there. 

I’ll say the vagueness is still there.  That poem gives me a vague feeling of nausea, right in the pit of my aesthetic sensibilities.  It seems that Mr. Carter is “always a reckoning” he’s a poet.

Must I persist?  In “Rosalynn,” Carter drones “She’d smile, and birds would feel they no longer/ had to sing, or it may be I failed/ to hear their song.”  Puhleeze.  Karen Carpenter said it better thirty years ago: “Why do birds suddenly appear/ Every time you are near/ Just like me/ They long to be/ Close to you.”  Of course, it should have read “just as I.”

It’s not like there aren’t any deserving writers out there.  Heck, no less an authority than Oprah Winfrey picked one book a month for several years.  And Ms. Winfrey and the Swedish Academy both liked Toni Morrison.  Maybe they could have picked someone else from her list.

Or, in the spirit of democracy, they could have chosen a poet with high sales figures.  I mean, I know they’re a bunch of socialists over there in Europe, but they must practice some kind of democracy, except for the kings and queens part.

So I looked up the sales figures for poetry collections and stumbled across this new young poet by the name of Jewel Kilcher.  It seems she sold bazillions of copies of a book called A Night Without Armor.  Get it?

Anyway, when I failed to find Ms. Kilcher’s book at my neighborhood library, I went on the Internet to search for some excerpts.  Right away I found a photo of the young authoress presenting what appeared to be some kind of literary award or other, and the funny thing is, she was wearing a diaphanous dress.  I’m here to tell you Ms. Kilcher is no Emily Dickinson look-alike.  The woman has a very impressive body of work, if you know what I mean.  (By contrast, the boys down at the Americus, Georgia racquet club say Mr. Carter’s getting a little saggy in the old pectorals.)

jewel-kilcherNeedless to say, I was more than intrigued.  At another web site, I found one of Ms. Kilcher’s poems, titled “Wild Horse.”  In the second stanza, Kilcher writes: 

            I’d like to paint my poems

            with desert tongued clay

            across

            your back

            and ride you savagely

            as the sweet and southern wind

            through a green and wild Kentucky.

Ay caramba!  How do you like them similes?  But wait, there’s more.  The poem concludes: “I’d be your hungry valley/ and sow your golden fields of wheat/ in my womb.”

Anyone who’s read Whitman, Lorca or Neruda knows what Ms. Kilcher is talking about here.  Heck, I think she’s probably poet enough to take on the three of them at one time.

Clearly, in an age when authors like Jewel Kilcher are alive and breathing the heady vapors of Pure Art into their amply poetic lungs, it is an unspeakable outrage to bestow literature’s highest honor on a sour-faced, doddering fool.  Why, it’s enough to make a man swear off Swedish meatballs.

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“Number 13″ new poem very rough draft

Hard to sleep last night after long bike ride, jotted this down:

 

Number 13

 

The bright morning light

shone through the thin mountain air

flooded the downstairs bedroom

with the warm glow

of pure young love.

Tracing the inside of your arm

slowly at the pace of morning

from wrist to elbow

bicep to armpit

the curve of your breast

ribs and soft belly and hip

across the tops of your thighs

a pleasure you could not resist.

After

ravenous for the Number 13

breakfast at the Soda Springs Café

eggs on potatoes

with cheese and green onions

and a splash of salsa

and hot coffee for me.

We don’t make love any more.

I rarely eat breakfast.

Midwest mornings are dull and damp.

The torch you carried for me

has gone cold but now I see

it wasn’t a light in the dark

because we glowed

in perpetual sun.

Now I am the dark.

I need your torch to lead me back

but I have sucked all the air

out of our world

and choked the flame.

I am black like an oil slick

spreading over the sparkling sea

coating your feathers with tar.

Now I depend on coffee

but the taste is bitter

the effect muted

dulled by

a chronic fatigue of the soul.

I miss holding your warm body

I miss lingering over breakfast together

but more like nostalgia for a favorite book

not like body hunger.

And of course

the light

I miss the light.

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temptation

TEMPTATION 

A noun, in English meaning enticement to do wrong by promise of pleasure or gain.  When did seduction, persuasion, incitement and allurement become Sin?  The Spanish spelling, tentacion, speaks of the Latin root ten, as in tendere: to stretch; tentare: to feel, touch; tenere: to hold.  Like ten fingertips, te(n)mptation is the place where the extremities of Self, the calluses of Experience, stretch to touch, to feel, to hold.  Hands are made to reach, to touch tenderly, to grasp; mouths are formed to eat and drink and kiss; lovers are born to live and love.  Plato said temptation is the desire to fulfill Design, the need to become whole, the lover’s search for his other half – the soulmate – from whom he was cleaved at the beginning of time.  On the other hand, the soul of Judeo-Christian temptation with an “m” should be sated like a double-humped camel after a week at the water holes and under the date palms of Eden: to want more would be the sin of Gluttony.  The pre-Christian tentation, with an “n,” is just a lonely consonant looking for a good hump.

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short poem

what the hell

am i doin

here watchin

 

the cat

reach for

the fly

 

in the lamp

shade buz

zing laze

 

ily like

we live

forever

 

or something?

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