Excerpt for Sweet by Dave Morrison, available in its entirety at Smashwords



sweet




new and selected poems by

Dave Morrison
















2006 JukeBooks

copyright© 2006 by Dave Morrison


All rights reserved under International and Pan American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by JukeBooks and lulu Press.



Grateful acknowledgements are due to the editors of the following publications where some of these poems first appeared:


Psychopoetica Sweet

Main Channel Voices October 1

Mad Hatter Review the Poet

Laura Hird Ready, Explaining Poetry, Truce, Whiskey, Good Day, Patricia

Cars and Food QuickieMart

Culture Star Reader My 2 minutes, My Dream, Award

remark Pep Talk

Thieves Jargon taking stock

many of these works were road-tested at www.spoiledink.com


Library of
Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data


Morrison, Dave


Sweet: new and collected poems / Dave Morrison





For more information about Dave Morrison please visit www.dave--morrison.com




Book Design by Luther MacNeal






For Susan.


And Pop.















And a special thank you to

Elizabeth Garber.














You say my poems are poetry?

They are not.

Yet if you understand they are not -

Then you see the poetry of them.


Ryokan




























Contents



Advice 9


Another Serious Poem Shot to Hell 10

Award 11


Beautiful vision 13


Cain 14


Camaro 18


Danger 20


Do me a favor 21


easy 22


Failed Poem 23


Filling out the Poets and Writers form 24


gang 25


gone 27


Good Day 29


good one… 33


gratitude 35


Harlem Nocturne makes me want to cry 36


I have decided 37



I like that riff 38


I lose 39


jealous 40


Lake George 42


learning to grieve 44


Liar 45


Little bit mad 46


Long black hair 47


looking out to sea 49


Lucinda's back 51


Midlife 52


My Aneurysm 53


My Dream 54


my new Microsoft document 56


my 2 minutes are up 57


Night Out 59


No Problem 61


Oct. 1 62


Patricia alone after 14 years 63


Pep Talk 64


a poem is a song you write when

the band's gone home 65

the Poet 66


QuickieMart 67


Ready 69


Seed 71


Snow 72


stop me if you've heard this one 73


Sweet 74


Taking Stock 76


then one day 77


Today 78


trouble 79


Truce 80


When I go 81


Work 83


Whiskey 84




















































Advice


The fighter listens,

in his corner, back to

the ring, shuffling his feet and

trying to loosen his shoulders

and neck.

The fighter listens to

the trainer and

nods and thinks

"you do not know

what it's like

to get hit

like this

tonight."



























Another Serious Poem Shot to Hell


Death said

"Mind if I

smoke?"

I told him it was fine with me.

"These days…" the smoke

curled in his rib cage like

looping grey gauze,

"…everyone gets so nervous."

A bit nervous myself, I

chuckled;

"Sorry – it's just that I figured you must be

used to that."

"True enough," he said, the

smoke wafting from his

eye sockets.

"So -" I uncapped my

pen," what else…?"

He flicked his ashes delicately.

"I jog with Taxes, sometimes I have

dinner with Glory, and I

manage the Seven Deadly Sins

bowling team."

Seeing my confusion, he said,

"Shit yeah – you should see our

shirts. Killer."

Then his pager went off.

"Whoop – that's me," he said,

stubbing out his cigarette.

"But," I complained, "I don't really

have anything!"

He shrugged, the sound like

bamboo wind chimes.

"So write a poem about

something else."


Another serious poem

shot to hell.




Award


It would be awesome if I

won that award. It would be great to see the

mailman carried to my front door on a sedan chair,

I'd know something was up, especially when he had to

use a small amount of

plastique to blow open the small

vault that held the letter

telling me that I had won the award.


How cool would that be? Him waiting for

me to sign for it with a

quill dipped in the blood

of a baby lamb that

bleated with terror as they

bandaged its neck, the letter passed to a man in a

hot air balloon wearing a

turban and an

eye-patch.


I've never really won anything, so

it would be so cool to

win that award. I've never even

seen a Secret Service man, let alone have

three in my house. Why they would need to

dig a tunnel under the house for me to

come and go in is beyond me,

but then again, I've never won an award like

this.


It's not so much the

public part of it, but it would be awesome,

waiting to go up on a stage to accept the

award, beautiful veiled women in black, and all those

bagpipes making a horrible, beautiful

tidal wave of sound, the smell of

burning roses, the tolling of every bell in

the city, the maddening tension, and then the

elevator platform would lift me onto the stage, and

the giant pipe organ would play and the doves would

be released and go wild

in the rafters, and my chest would split open and

people would faint when they saw my huge beating heart with

the fiery eye in the center, and a burning white light would

scorch the whole auditorium and blind those who

had doubted me.


It would be so cool to win that award.

I hope I do.





































Beautiful Vision


I ate the turkey sandwich,

sitting on the concrete

wall in the sun. Across the

avenue the hospital rose like a mythic flea-market

city, brick on brick on brick,

crowned with cupolas and smokestacks

and parapets, and I had a

beautiful vision:

it swam before my eyes, liquid and invisible

like a stone had been thrown in

a lake that wasn't there.

It swelled my heart, and reminded me

of something I didn't yet

know, some space to be

filled, some event not yet

in view, some heartache that will

come, and be healed, some

joy that will threaten to devastate me, some

sweet sad music in another room,

some quiet whirlwind of

love that I didn't have to resist.

And, unlike every other time I have

seen this beautiful vision, it did not

break my heart.

Tin foil balled in my

pocket, I

lay back in thanks and

let the sun blind me through

closed lids.












Cain


I

a great stone can be

cracked in half by the

slightest tap if

you know where the fault lies.

a tree can be split down the middle by a

storm, or by

one snowflake too many.

the stone becomes two stones

the tree changes shape

only in the human mind do

two halves of the same whole

become adversaries, struggling for

advantage, survival, when

all they have to

do is

coexist.



II

you can tell who

gets to write history, or

at least you can tell

who got to interpret certain

stories.

Cain was probably

smarter, stronger, and

needed less approval.

Abel probably did what he was told, didn't

make any

trouble, was unencumbered by

originality.

Cain won.

He was supposed to win, but

books full of rules are usually

edited by

people like

Abel.



III

It reads like this:

Cain was a farmer, and Abel had

sheep. Cain busts his

ass tilling, planting, hauling water.

Abel sits under a

tree and watches the sheep graze.

They both bring gifts –

Cain brings things he has

planted, cultivated, and grown, Abel

brings a lamb, born while he sat under a

tree.

God says,

"Abel? That is just terrific, that lamb.

Cain? Not impressed."

Cain is pissed and insulted. God says,

"Hey? What's with the attitude? Do your

job and you won't have any

problems, but watch your step."


IV

"Get over it, Cain."

"Fuck you."

Abel sat under a tree, eating a

pear. Cain paced.

"This is bullshit. I worked so hard. Why

do I get blown off?"

"Boy, he loved that lamb. I picked a beaut."

"I turned that soil myself. I irrigated the land. No one's ever done that, I

had to learn."

Abel shrugged.

"Whatever. Not good enough."

"Excuse me?"

"I don't know, but it wasn't enough. He loves me. He

chose me."

Cain hauled Abel up by his shirt.

"Hey! Leggo!"

"Take it back. You're no better than me."

"But I am, face it. He says so."

"I ought to knock that fuckin' smirk off your face…"

"Yeah, right. You don't have the guts. Go back to your fields."

And Cain hit Abel so hard that he rolled three times before laying very still.

And Cain kneeled over him, and cursed, and wept, because his brother was dead.




V

"Hey. Cain. Where's Abel?"

"I don't know."

"I asked you a question -"

"What am I, my brother's keeper? You know where every sparrow is, why are you asking me this?"

"You better watch how you talk to me, sonny. Wait a minute…you son of a bitch, you killed him, didn't you? His blood is crying out to me from the ground! You really did it this time, Cain. You know what? You are cursed. You're banned. You are screwed through all eternity, you bully- you killed Abel! You are going to wander, your crops will fail, you will never find a home, or comfort, you will be welcome nowhere."

"I'm out, I'm banned? Why? Because I'm stronger than my brother? Because

I don't like you playing favorites, because I wouldn't accept the bullshit?"

"Go."

"I'm sorry about Abel, I didn't mean it, don't you think I'm suffering already? Give me a break, it was an accident!"

"Go."

"Sure. Go. So I can be set up again. You know as well as I do that I might as well have a bull's-eye on my back, I'll get ambushed and brought back as a trophy. I'm a fucking dead man, is that it? What else should I expect, right?"

"No, you're wrong. In fact I'll mark you. No one will mess with you."

And God put a mark on his forehead.

And Cain went away to the land of

Nod, East of Eden.



VI

Cain's wife tended the fire.

"No one ever asked you your side, about

what happened?"

Cain shook his head.

"I still don't understand why God favored him."

Cain shrugged.

"I hear all sorts of things – people don't think I can hear them, or

they don't care but…"

"It doesn't matter. There's no point living in the past."

"I suppose you're right."

"You know what's funny? Not funny ha ha, but…I loved him. Still do. More than anyone did."

"I know…" she whispered.




VII

The descendants of Cain became wanderers, and musicians, and artisans, and though it was not visible to the eye, they still bore the mark. In an ironic turn, God later decided that the only man worth a damn was Noah, one of Cain's descendants, so he wiped out everyone else. We are all descended from Cain. That's the story.


VIII

It takes so little to split a stone, or a tree.

We struggle so much with our

separateness.














Camaro


At seventeen he got a job,

convenient store, across North Main

from Marshall's, Mobil, PowerTest.

Behind the counter, skinny, bored,

the graveyard shift, cash register,

gum, cat food, milk, and cigarettes,

he dreams about a '69 Camaro.


The night wraps black around the store,

reflections in the window show

the aisles of Pampers, soup, and chips,

a rack of discount paperbacks,

and pantyhose, cheap sunglasses,

the freezer and the dairy case,

young clerk who dreams a '69 Camaro.


Lonely, with no customers,

lonelier even when they come,

'cause no one sees him, no one stays,

all in motion, destinations,

stopping just to buy some smokes

or Lotto, milk, or motor oil

(to lubricate a '69 Camaro?)


The morning cashier's Beverly,

she's someone's sweet Italian mom,

she wears a shag, false eyelashes,

blue eye shadow, she smokes too much,

it keeps her thin! she always laughs,

her son's autistic, no complaints

she tells the teenage boy who dreams Camaro.


At 2:15 Christine Perrine

a quiet, budding, brooding girl

his triumph is, he makes her laugh

the glasses make her eyes so big,

her cash-out's always on the nose,

one day she'll take men's breath away

and won't recall the boy who dreamed Camaro.


The owner shoots the sidelong glance

suspicious of each customer

he counts and recounts every coin

no trust for those who work for him,

the weed has made him paranoid

his wife betrays him with the smile

she gives the new kid, dreaming of Camaro.


From seven on he rings them up

the stream of people, thinning out

until by ten the only ones

are tired, red-rimmed, dinner-cold

or on their way to graveyard shifts

their money spent on diapers, beer

and day care, not on '69 Camaros.


The world inside his head in fact

is realer than the empty store

is realer than North Main at night

is realer than Christine Perrine

his hope, desire and lunacy,

his ignorance, his buoyancy,

his blood the gasoline that fuels Camaro.


somewhere a small-block Chevy sits

somewhere his father hacks and spits

somewhere the suit that doesn't fit

somewhere the options, counterfeit

someday he slams the factory Hurst

from lifelong neutral into first

he vaguely plans

a ragged stand -


Camaro.









Danger


Of all the dangerous jobs I

could choose:

drunken steeplejack,

Pompeii fireman,

tired farmer fixing a thresher in the dark,

narcoleptic pilot, roofer

with vertigo, cobra

wrangler, palsied bomb squadder,

blind knife sharpener, missile silo

custodian –


Of all the dangerous jobs I

have chosen this:

to succeed where

I have been promised I would

fail,

to try again, and

again,

to look

in the mirror and

figure out what I see and

love it.



















Do me a favor


If I lose it –

and you know what I mean –

if I become a

stranger to myself, and

to you,

do me a favor –

don't talk to me about my

history, even if you believe

it might strike some tiny match of

memory: don't tell me that I once did

this and that, wrote poems and stories,

played in a rock & roll band, any

of it. Don't make it worse.


Tell me that I was born in that

room, and that as

rooms go, it is perfectly

fine.

Introduce yourself as a

friendly stranger, and

make sure that I have

one good book

I can read

over

and

over.














easy...


steady...

there, a metal nipple barely

visible above the dirt of the path

find a spot with

no irregularities, nothing remotely

unnatural or threatening and

ease your foot down, shift your weight...

There. Another step, safely. Now...

easy, slow...watch for trip wires, or

any tiny triggering device -

whoever laid these traps was a bored

genius, using a daisy as a

detonator, a stone, a twig,

seemingly innocuous, seemingly innocent,

little everyday things waiting to

damage you,

there...a flat space...lower your foot

steady now, softly, now shift your weight

There. That makes two. Steps taken safely.

Keep it up, don’t lose your nerve, and

you can get through the

whole morning.



















Failed Poem


The streetlight, shining on

a sway of telephone wire looks

like a golden saber hung in the

air.

The stars are candles in the trees –

but it is not a saber and they are not candles and my

heart is not made of worn leather and I am not

standing on a cold moon looking at a

distant earth –

I'm in a chair, in a room.

No rhymes, no rules, no rhythm –

nothing more than tiny sparks on

wet wires.

All I can say with any

honesty is that it is

Saturday night and I am

hungry.

My thoughts are not a swirl of

dried leaves, or mice gnawing wires in the walls, or

hornets –

My mind is not a rudderless boat or an empty steel

drum or Grand
Central during a bomb scare –

it is nine pounds of

wet meat. My heart is a muscular pump, my

eyes are moist lens, just like

everyone else.

I don't want to play the

game tonight, take the

Artistic SATs; A is to B as

shrapnel is to corn flakes.

I just want to be empty, exorcised, scorched

clean.

Tonight I just want a cigarette and a

goodnight kiss, that's

where I'll find poetry.


not here.




Filling Out the Poets and Writers Directory Form



They will accept that I am a

writer, a poet even, but next they

would like to know if I consider myself (check one)

African American? Appalachian? Baltic American?

Christian? Filipino American? Feminist? Hungarian?
South Asian? Romanian?

Next they ask if my work is oriented towards

a particular group; At Risk Youth? Mentally Ill?

Gay/Lesbian/Bisexual/Transgender? Environmentalists?

Prisoners? Seniors?


Out in the world of politics and business, there is resentment

and envy towards the White American Male, but in the

world of poetry that makes you about as interesting as

a 2X4. Your peers are more likely to watch

NASCAR or Antiques Road Show than read

poetry. But, if one is to market oneself one must have an

identity, a niche, an audience.


So I dedicate this to you, my faithful readers;

all you law-abiding Scots-American weak-chinned learning-disabled sober cigarette-smoking six foot O+ Caucasian forty-seven year old heterosexual rock & roll men. Thanks for buying both copies of

this book.













gang


We were, all of us, strong as horses
impatient and ready to stand
our dreams were so big that they sheltered us
and so small they could fit in your hand.


We never talked about failure,
now and then we would talk of the grave
we fought about things that we couldn't express
and we always, always forgave.


When spoken-for we were loyal
when single we were stallions and sharks
the life that we lived in the daylight wasn't
the life that we lived after dark.


We drank too much and didn't suffer
we drank too much and we died
we didn't drink enough when the winter came
and everything froze up inside.


In the clubs and the bars we were family
no enemies that I know
bartender's blood brothers, and waitresses' champions
we danced like young dogs in the snow.


We were never alone, and still lonely
We were broke but never poor
nothing was certain, but we were still certain
that we'd find some way to endure.


Sometimes thieves and liars and vandals
always brothers and lovers and sons
novilleros, novices, prisoners
God's ragged and chosen ones.

We were all of us, strong as horses
hungry and ready to stand
our dreams were so big that they sheltered us
and so small they could fit in your hand.


(for Chris, Jack, Matty, Rico & Sonny)
(a novillero is a sort of apprentice bullfighter)


































Gone



He opened the doors to

the small balcony. The

rain slanted in and

began to soak the wooden

floor, where the

stain and warp suggested that

this had happened before. He

didn't seem to care.



He stood, waiting for

something to happen as the rain

ran down his neck, waiting for

some necessary change, some

small sign other than the

rain. His sweater

would be ruined. He

didn't seem to care.



The radio played, sounding like

a party in another room, sounding like

thoughtless seduction, sounding like

electric loneliness. Below cars

went by, slow bullets of

warmth and dryness; people

built umbrella roofs

over their heads and

walked. Everyone else seemed

to be in motion. He

didn't seem to care.


He was hungry and

bored with his choices. He

drank a glass of water. He

took off his shoes. And then, like

a man mounting a horse he went

up and over the balcony wall and was

gone.

Gone as if he'd never been there

at all, as if he'd never gone to

school, or had sex or held a job.


To do that; to

erase oneself, to go against the instinct planted in

each cell, to break oneself beyond repair…


He must have cared very much.


































Good Day


It's a good day for

moving slowly. "No

false moves," as the bad guy with

the gun always

says.

It's a good day for

gazing, day-dreaming, time-travel.

It's a good day for

mind-drift, for

distraction.


I don't think it's a good

day for writing, but I

could be wrong.


It's a good day to go to

Beech Hill, walk the

long spiral, see the coast

laid out like a model of the

world, walk down with

wind-slapped cheeks and

forget it all an hour later.


It's a good day to drive to

Rockland, buy some strong

coffee, smoke a cigarette and

watch the ferry come in, or

go.


I don't think it's a good

day for writing, but I

could be wrong.


It's a good day to

cry. Or walk. Or

play the piano.

It's a good day for that

empty floating feeling, that

lonely noble feeling, that restless

unsettled feeling,

for waiting…


It's a good day to think the

wrong things, dream

the wrong dreams.

It's a good day for a

shadow-show, for

sleight-of-hand. It's

a good day for someone else's

daydreams, cobwebbed fears, long-gone

players on forgotten teams.


Sometimes you can push it,

steer it, shove it

back in the water.

I'm not sure this is

one of those days. I

don't feel like walking through the

burnt house saying

"This isn't so bad, we can

fix this…"

I just don't want to

fall through. I'm willing to

lower my sights and get through

the day without doing

anything heroic.


Some days you get

mail. Some days you do

not. In this case I'm not sure that

staring at the mailbox will

make a difference. I could be

wrong. Maybe I need to steer into the

skid.


It's a good day to

sleep. It's a

good day to

lie still. Draw the blinds. Curl

into a ball.



It's a good day to stare at the

pattern in the carpet and watch your

life like a

movie. It's a good day to

figure out what songs the

wind chimes are playing.


It's a good

day to weep; for

everything that was, for everything that

will be, and will never

be; to weep for the sorrow that

belongs to the World, and

the sorrow that belongs only to

you.


I don't think it's a good

day for writing, but I

could be wrong. It's a good day

for sadness, but

it doesn't have to be.


It's a good day to wish. It's a good

day to want, to long, to

yearn, to hunger. It's a good day to

not know. A good day to

give in.


It's a good day for tasks. Meaningless

chores. Unimportant details.


It's a good day for cigarettes.

Coffee? So-so.

Liquor? Absolutely not.


I don't think it's a good day for

expecting, or demanding, or judging.

I don't think it's a good day

for measuring or comparing. Planning

or deciding.


It's a better day for wishing than for

hoping. It's a better day for

poetry than

prose. Better for listening to music

than for making it.


I don't think it's a good

day for writing, but I

could be wrong.




































Good One



…and the stars said,

"shhhh…here he

comes…"

They crouched behind

houses and barns

and balanced on the

branches of trees,

holding their breath.

They held hands and

draped themselves from

pole to pole, just

behind the telephone wires,

they nestled under

crow's feathers, and

watched him come down

Mechanic street.

Blinded by headlights,

head full of confetti,

stubbing his toes in

sidewalk cracks,

thinking about this

and that and then

this again, not happy or

unhappy, but stuck in his

head like a man who wakes up in

a deserted movie theater

after closing.

Yellow hydrant means

left on Park, and then…

he hears a snicker from

above him and he

looks up –




nothing. Just the ancient

oak tree that had grown around the

rusted iron bracket, just a sky that is

blacker than gray,

grayer than black.

Collar up, head down –

What the hell? It

sounds like laughter, straight up, and

he looks and GODDAM IF

THE SKY ISN'T A RIOT OF LIGHT!

He stands in the middle of

the street like a

yokel seeing his first

airplane, mouth open, eyes

wide, mesmerized by

a billion billion

billion frozen flash bulbs.

Then

he smiles and says

"good one", knowing

full well how

hard it will be to

top this prank.
























gratitude


thank you for the fever

thank you for when it breaks

thank you for the lightning that

spider-walks in my skull

the muscular fist inside my chest

cage built with feathers

doll made of wet leather

thank you for the fever

thank you for when it breaks.


thank you for the heartache

like a hot pan set in the snow

thanks for the tear in my memory

that makes old things seem like new

thanks for the days like bright gold coins

the stillness, the violence

the fury, the silence

thank you for the heartache

like a hot pan set in the snow.


Thank you for the vibrations

that make me rattle and hum

thank you for the bright white dreams

that blind me like an eclipse

transmissions that pierce my tissue shell

the time that destroys me

the flame that enjoys me

thank you for the vibrations

that make me rattle and hum


thank you for the distance

between here, and a lasting peace

thank you for the nagging need

to define and describe and explain

the lens of memory, the lens of desire

a promise spoken

a charm, a token

thank you for the distance

between here, and a lasting peace.


Harlem Nocturne Makes Me Want to Cry


Harlem Nocturne

by Mink DeVille

makes me want to

cry.

As I listen to the sax

that is hoarse from shouting its

desires all night, and

getting no answer, I

feel my heart laboring with that

tired desperation, like

a runner at the end of a

too-long race.

The piano is haughty and

withdrawn, its real feelings stuffed

under that gleaming black lid.

The bass is drunk –

can you blame it? I

certainly wouldn’t bear up under the

weight of all that

lavender sadness.

There is a microphone, but

no singer.

Promise hangs in the air, then

drifts, fades, disappears.

You will not

find her tonight.

You have enough money for one more

drink, or

cab fare, but

not both.

It’s

cold out there.

Harlem Nocturne makes me

want to

cry, unless, or course,

Harlem Nocturne has

nothing

to do with it.



I Have Decided



I have decided that

I will be a

poet, at least for

the next hour or

so.

I will claim that, I

will sculpt with

my hatchet, I will

craft a crayon

miniature, I

will forgive myself for

trying to catch a

mosquito in a

fifty-five gallon

drum.


I will try not to

lie, I will try not to

elaborate or

simplify, I

will try not to

care.


I have fifty minutes

left.















I Like That Riff


One poet says to another

that's a good line –

like a guitar player might say to another

I like that riff -

How great it is when you

listen to a solo that is one

long liquid line,

a vine that wraps around your heart and

flowers,

beautiful quicksand that

embraces you like a Mother,

a ladder of branches that

takes you so high you can

see

everything.


























I Lose


I’m trying to break a diamond

by hitting it with a rose

I’m trying to clean a baby’s ear

with steel wool, and a fire hose

I’m trying to build a hummingbird

with a hammer, and sheet-metal screws

I’m trying to do something beautiful,

and when I try, I lose.
































jealous



I am

jealous of people who

have less than me.

I am jealous

of the unhandsome man in

the mirror who seems less

burdened.

I am jealous of those who

get what they work for, jealous

of those who get something for nothing,

I have everything I need and

I am empty and

heartbroken.

I am

jealous of thieves who

didn't get caught. I
am jealous of those who do

stupid things and

feel no shame.

I am jealous of the dead for

their reduced workload, jealous of

newborn babies for their

clean records, I am

jealous of the outwardly

crippled for the sympathy, jealous of the noisy and bold, the silent.

I am jealous of those who

have tunneled deep

into love and jealous of

those who are tied to no-one, no-thing.

I am jealous of myself – I

want what I have.

Jealous of the

stars for burning so long

after they're dead.

I am jealous of

animals who

fight and fuck and

devour.

I am jealous of angels

for their lightness.


Librarians have all the answers.

Hardware stores have all the tools.

Telephone books know everyone, and how to reach them.

Ministers know God.

Doctors get to see everyone naked.

Hawks can float motionless above everything.

Poets daydream and try to cover expenses.

Jealous.


I'm jealous of

mediocre rock bands and

good boxers. I'm

jealous of those older than me for

what they know, and those

younger for what they

don't.

I'm jealous of the power of

beautiful women and

ugly men.

I'm jealous of carpenters and

charter boat captains and

house painters in nice climates and

writers who get

paid.

I am jealous of dogs who don't think

about living, or dying, they just

do.












Lake George


We sat with our drinks

and watched out the window

as the boats pulled up to

the restaurant dock


they thrummed through the mist

of a twilight Lake George

mahogany hot rods from

some bygone marina


dapper old couples

with fine silver hair

he with a captain's cap

she with a kerchief


the boy on the dock

in Izod and deck shoes

tied each boat to a cleat

valet parking, stevedore


the beautiful boats

waited like thoroughbreds

with V8 Ford engines

small flags on their bows


long heavy Chris-Crafts

from the 20's and 30's

impossibly elegant

shaming the fiberglass


drinks gone, the food came

and the shadows enveloped

the docks and the boy

and the boats at their hitching posts


the mountains were shadows

even darker, huge, lurking

porch lights across the lake

were small yellow stars


we watched the old couples

stroll back down the docks

men patting their bellies

women patting their hair


and the boy helped them step

into their long wooden speedboats

put the ten in his pocket

engines growling and burbling


I watched as they vanished

from the glow of the dock lights

and imagined their journey

across dark Lake George


How their hair became auburn

their skin smooth and firm

and the balance shifted

between plans and accomplishments


by the time they tie up

and climb the dark stairs

they're alert and hungry

for something other than dinner


there's so much to do

is that the clock ticking?

or the ice box dripping

into a zinc-lined pan?














learning to grieve



It goes against your

instincts, your

training, it is an act of

will, even though it should

be as natural as falling

asleep.


Empty your

breath in a trail of

bubbles. You

were born here, it is not a

hostile place.


Let go, if you

can, of your need to

thrash and defy, there's

no one watching.


There.

Welcome it, and wait for the

feel of the solid

bottom. Now you have

something to

push against.
















Liar


If I admit to you that

I am a liar, is there

any point in going on?

Even though I may have

distinguished myself as your

frankest of

friends, I will always be

suspect, no matter how

much of my beating heart I

cut through my

ribs to expose. And if I

deny it, I

prove it.

The difference between a

liar and a

truth-repeater is like the

difference between a

high-wire acrobat and a

man walking down the sidewalk holding a

child's hand;

the two acts require

different

skills.


















Little Bit Mad


Too much voltage

too much pressure in the pipes

the path that branches off in

the dense woods only to

rejoin the main trail further up ahead

the skipping record

a page torn from a book and


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