Thursday, December 23, 2010

poem a sometimes, i guess

I HAVE CONFLICTING FEELINGS ON THE SUBJ.
Sleep, after all, is a kleptomaniac
who steals moments and hours,
hoarding them until the time is right--
when it can appear from behind the couch
shouting SURPRISE, and saying that after all
this time, it has learned the lesson:
a life is for all cycles of the sun and moon. But
every time the room is empty, the last light
turned on with a timer to make-believe
someone is home to ward off the burglars, the
ne'er-do-wells, and you
who will never return
have gone. Or else, less often,
you and sleep sit across from each other,
the bags under your eyes darkening
as you look at the opened present on your lap
realizing that you had asked too rashly,
that you never really wanted this. Wondering
how long it has been since you both ran out
of things to say and
when you get
to open that other, really big present.

Sunday, December 19, 2010

poem a man i should be sleeping

THERE IS NO WORD IN ENGLISH

And at the end I have only one
word that my life has com-
pressed between its slight layers so
it shines now pearlescent now
muffled like the last word
in a phrase bit back (i
t would have shed some fresh light
in the dark corners, where the
lamplighter of our conversation never tread) but
I have never been to Portugal and
time tips ever onward so I can say only
saudade, softly, saudade--

feeling nothing so sharp but longing and
let it be my last word, that I love you,
that you are lost.

Saturday, December 18, 2010

poem a harglefagofh

PACKING A BOOK BOUND FOR POCATELLO

Packing a book bound for Pocatello;
it's been years since I was there. When,
after eighteen hours on the road, I
found the cheapest motel in its winding
avenues, passing a group of kids playing
baseball in the park at 10 pm, all their parents
watching from the stands while a block over
the pink neon outline of a woman flashes
flashes. And I slept on top of the covers,
waiting to fall alseep, half-watching a show
where a cougar dances among a throng of
younger men, her legs flash like headlights
coming through the narrow crack of the blinds,
and their faces animal-hungry for the chance
to return, to be back next week.
I was on my back,
wondering if my car was safe.

Sunday, December 12, 2010

poem a day or so

THE WORLD'S SMALLEST MAN

The world’s smallest man has a face like Don Knotts--

all big teeth and bulging eyes, a weak chin and

the kind of cheeks children draw on animals –

his neck looks impossibly long beneath such a face,

his arms too seem long, but they must be to do what his height cannot.

His skin everywhere looks tight, knuckles showing their joints

like each one is a ring he wears and cannot remove; yes, I am

small now, it says, but I remember what it was to be smaller,

smaller than I am now,

smaller than I may ever be again.

Saturday, December 04, 2010

poem an almost twice today

GOD! GOOD!

Each of us carrying off the other
like a thief in the belly of the night
and in the morning we find the thing
we stole and had stolen was the same
so like mirrors reflecting themselves
we grow darker as each reflection compounds
and by stealing we have made the thing
more solid still.

Perhaps alone we may have called it
into being but only together could
such a thing survive.

Friday, December 03, 2010

poem a today

MOOREEFFOC

Dickens called it mooreeffoc,
when the mask of the world slips
and its true face is glimpsed between
those frantic, fluttering fingers, and
we have all struggled in reflections;
so what is the word for calling true
that which cannot be? for seeing mooreeffoc
and saying coffee room?

Saturday, November 20, 2010

poem a whenever #something

TWO POEMS

I have two poems
And neither is wholly mine
Because I carried away lines
And phrases whole from you.
God, god, they were good—
Which is why I had to have them.
The annals of things
Which I have forgotten are already
Too full to add these few more; so
I have two poems

Sunday, August 15, 2010

poem?

Does each choice branch away
from the bough of the one I made
so that by squinting into the distance
can I see, just over there and
faintly, the shadowy, bright, brilliance
of the life my life could be?

Thursday, June 03, 2010

poem a sometimes

ON WATCHING A VIDEO OF A RUSSIAN WOMAN SMASHING BOTTLES IN A STORE

Oh, ceaseless fury,
slipping along your lake of spirits
and wine, your feet are pocked
by broken glass your hands rain down.
What systems created you?
Whose high pressure pressed up
your low? And upon which shore
will you land, vapor-drunk,
buffeting against
the mountains until
you disperse, are dispersed,
and wail no more?

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

poem an occasionally

and, god, how
she dances. once she
said it was the spirit,
and now, in the wind,
you can almost see hands
saying dance in the way she moves her wrists,
how her knee knows to bend.

and you hate the world for conspiring against her;
that, once at rest,
the spirit leaves.

Saturday, March 13, 2010

poem an occasionally

THE ISLE OF THE DEAD

In China, Shanghai, they call it the isle of the dead.
Not that it ever was surrounded by the gentle rubbing of water, but
it is an island now, an isle, and the lights
from the city around work
hard all day and the not-quite-dark
at eroding it until
finally

there is only one building
on a graveyard of thousands: easier
to topple just one.

And no one here ever speaks of ghosts--
They have all left to the city's bright heaven.

Monday, March 08, 2010

sadaspojf

EACH PASSING MOMENT

now now you locks shining
in the sun framing each shining
star and the pearls of your laugh shining
in the cold new day all the air shining
each time before along the necklace shining
in almost the same way but now shining
darker or lighter but still
and now now you
in
and
always

Tuesday, March 02, 2010

poem a blahdyblah

_____________
the word tumbling syllables down
to bounce across your ear drum
you turning and there has only ever been
one word between us
how quoting you spoke phrases
which were like but not
what you were looking for like
oh but they were close and
into a more violent sea and
in remembering your face is so beautiful
and if i could have a word for it
i would speak that word forever

Sunday, February 14, 2010

poem a sometimes #something something

ON SEEING A PICTURE OF A MUSHROOM CLOUD, AFTER THE INITIAL BLAST

How the head of it just
floats away, only tendrils
of radiation, smoke, connect
it to the base unfurling like my
neighbor's flag on Memorial Day
snapping in the wind.

These are the things we cannot escape.
The blast, just another
choice made in an unspooling,
knotted sting. The space between
before and after is so thin

the men in the bunker just outside the blast
barely have time
to hold their breath
but already their chests are tight--

already they have forgotten how to breathe.

Thursday, January 14, 2010

poem a day #something something

and from the way she
holds her foot when
her legs are crossed (how
the line from her leg to her toe is one
long, straight stroke) you
wonder if she is a
dancer,
if she has danced.