-Shapiro's probability-
Manfredi and Johnson are dropped to the mud's exhibition
with no such creative resolution as had the potato soup.
http://williamdelia.blogspot.com
-Shapiro's probability-
in recognition of an old classmate
downtown and a cold drizzle
was amusing itself on the sidewalk.
a good afternoon for a haircut.
maybe a pair of new shoes.
I could use some boxers and sox, too.
my credit card’s paid up to date.
my credit is good for a thousand bucks.
I could buy mink boxers with that kind of loot.
then from across the street I spotted
Richard Carrier.
Miss Sikes blamed me for something
Carrier did to the toilet walls;
a masterful drawing of an erect penis
and hanging there a scrotum with little
black hairs attached.
the caption read: “eat me raw”.
that’s poetry for Richard Carrier.
but it’s banishment to the cloakroom for me.
it’s dark in there.
I could smell the cloth of the coats.
some smelled like backyard dirt.
some smelled like the dampness of a wet dog.
I recognized Norene Sousa’s coat.
I lifted a sleeve and got a whiff of her world.
a world I could never get to.
fuckin’ Carrier.
Popular Mechanics
there’s “Whitey”
at the Esso station
and then
there’s “Theo”
at the Gulf station.
for a time my old man drove
a 1950 pea-green flat-head
Ford two-door coupe which
Chuck Berry himself immortalized
in his song: "you can't catch me"
("here come a flat top he come movin' up with me..")
but when it broke down permanently
it was stationed in the backyard
at 1017 Bedford.
In the winter I’d sit behind the wheel
shifting through the gears.
there were three forward
gears and one reverse gear.
the only gears I’d run through
from the back of my throat
were 1st, 2nd and 3rd
activated from the column.
the clutch was drying out
of its necessary lubricant
and shifting became hard to do.
winter made matters worse.
the vapor from my mouth seemed to be
a prelude to smoking cigarettes.
the engine couldn’t start
but the little button
protruding from the dashboard
allowed the mechanism to turn
the engine's crankshaft, agonizing
its impossible mission–– and then,
well, soon enough, that failed, too.
to those who arrive at the door
they knock
as though they mean it
as though they want "in"
as though they have
the one true gizmo to make
your busy life a lot easier
something for the mantlepiece
a knick-knack present
sometimes to pay their belated condolences, or
to return a scarf long forgotten by time
some come carrying volumes of knowledge
inside their cases which grow out of date
from the moment of purchase
to present themselves at the door
polished and clean
knotted at the adam's apple
draped in dresses seen before
at anniversary celebrations
at the funeral parlors
maybe a bloodline's there
a relation believing you'll like
that the've come to the door
as if the door from the dread of the inside
is the door to paradise on the outside
and when it’s opened they smile.
from the folder to be determined / 1962 to 2026
I dreamed of Elaine last night
sent to me from Hillside Manor
the brick and mortar
housing project
down by the river
delivered there from
Sao Miguel
surrounded by water.
vignette
from the balcony, there in the distance,
city houses are set upon the hillside
through winter tree-heads after snowfall
sometime after sunrise above the rooftops
without a hint of what lives beneath them.
in the silence, this could be a world.
when Pablo Neruda asked:
"what is water like in the stars?"
I thought: "maybe the great poet's on tilt this morning."
a question so uniquely strange that I didn’t bother to be curious.
I just went on my way living life between
someone's microscope and someone's telescope,
between diners and priests, between girls and women,
sometimes learning on the march.
there are forms of water in and circling the stars.
this is water not nearly as rare as the liquid running
from our kitchen faucets.
this is water in its cosmological enterprise.
but Neruda asked the question during the time
when few, if any in the know thought it reasonable.
water in the stars?
the question is found in Neruda’s: “Through a closed mouth the flies enter"
pages 249 to 251 in the volume: “Extravagaria”.
Google the title and save money.
also of interest is the question: “When did the lemons learn
the same laws as the sun?"
there are rare confections between the pages of 249 and 251.
or one could say, a world.