Thursday, June 16, 2011

-"the Island of women"-

There's an island inhabited by women.
The figure of man stands in a skiff
Paddling toward the island.
From the viewer’s line-of-sight,
Activity is seen on the island as the women 
Go about the chores of daily life.
Some are building a habitable structure.
Another pulls a great fish
From the water at its banks,
From the water, knee-deep,
A great fish with her bare hands!

From behind,
I asked the gentleman
How he'd approach the women
To communicate his intensions.

I was hungry for information.

When the instruments of their labors
Are laid to rest for the night,
Do they dance with one another?
Is A cappella singing involved?
How will the great fish be dressed?

Do they sleep beneath the stars?––
And the gentleman bid me stop;
His approach to the island 
Is endless and recurring, he said.
I inquired of him
The reasoning behind this futility,
The mythological endlessness to row
Toward the island of women.

"Anticipation" he said.
"Of the destination" he concluded.


                                             2011

                              
















-Drop of island-

Lying 3 nautical miles off the southwest coast of Martha's Vineyard 

No Man's Land
There’s a cold history told in the surface
rust of unexploded ordnance.

Sometime in the 1940s the U.S. Navy
lobbed its rehearsed volatility into the kettle-ponds
and outwashed plains of No Man's Land 
scattering to anxious flight, the Island’s nocturnal
Leach’s Storm-Petrel.
Now they won’t let me in— 
even with my hands tucked 
harmlessly into their pockets.
Picture the outer cliffs to the south 
as standing their ground against the sea, 
pushing its aggravated agenda 
into the face of the scaling clays 
who form the barrier heights 
protecting the inland habitat of mysterious 
No Man’s Land.
Now they have to stop the overland prints
of the aggressive Silver Poplar. 
And why not?
It doesn’t belong there
any more than they say I belong there.
Purple Loosestrife roam like nomads 
uninvited in a closed geography.
Too smitten a defendant against the allure of the Strife, 
the indigenous habitat yields.
I guess it's the same with me.
Human intrusion is coincident 
to the spread of the stubborn Phragmites, 
the invasive species pushing native plant-life around
like the bully it is.

But I just want to look, walk bare-footed on the sand,
whistling sea-shanties to weather along the tides of saltwater.
I’ve never embraced the squatter’s intent, 
nor dropped a metal round 
to oxidize upon the barren 
sweep of the cobble-spit, 
exposing a back-side as if presenting,
finned and ready.
Tell them I have no heart to stand defiantly 
in the midst of having no standing.

Tell them I'll promise not to take to root.
God-damn the bloodless 
shells of the bombs!
I just want to set my feet on 
No Man’s Land for chrisssake !







                 




















  

Sunday, June 12, 2011

-laszlo at the pieta-
1.
metal sounds a scent through polished stone
then dust is moved from the head of it,
and the forms’ purpose is altered.
glitter of steel reflects the plaintiffs’ eye, 
and through its accuracy prosecutes its case 
across a hushed-
blood dropping from the populace.
why is elevated stone so noisily challenged?
but see how the airborne dust of the stone 
retreats to gently cling to it.
2.
she remains calm-eyed at the burning entry,
and that’s where the mallet gets its nerve this time.
the nature turns here.
she cleaves to a mourning’s disposition.
the child continues its graceful notation. 
this stairway leads to its crooked roof.
3.
the kids in the balcony are going nuts! 
images fly like flattened 
popcorn boxes crossing a screen’s projection 
leaving behind authentic trailers of themselves.
   
snacks in the lobby escalate in price as wrapped-  
colored sleeves of silver and gold, seduce a strange  
sort of tithing.
4.
with its succulent shape at hand,
and into a lobby’s dimming light, 
the glance in the stone’s endeavor 
is moved to quick inversion——
   
from the passions of its chisel, 
to the passions of its mallet.
                                               5/21/72
                                               2009
                                                                   

Friday, June 3, 2011

-like eve sometimes- 
1.
I looked to Durer.  
The copper platform yields its cold disposition. Fruit, 
once ribbed to the stem, once ribbed from Adam,   
twice pissed away.
That’s what’s left of her heart.
That was no snake.
She could have passed it through a bowel.
She could have loved me, too.
But she let herself go 
the same way temptation turned
Eve’s ear to its tongue. 
(vegetation pales at her skin.
a sweet
juice clings to the ends of her mouth.)
2.
That's the woof of the warp.
It weaves like that crazy little lizard
sweeping the sandbank on its weather-side.
But that’s still straight.
This dust is sand-smoke,
the tide of its water.
She could have spun me to the symbolism of her calling.
She could have taken the time to love me.
I'm as pliable as hell at the face of such beauty.
3.
I looked to Balthus—
the management of such imagery.
Earth-toned, nearly primitive pearl 
as true to its plane as any contrition illuminated 
through a needle's point. 
Such is the perfect utility of space.
I can’t get away with anything.
She thought I said that she should love me.
Except for the poems,
I didn’t have a clue.




                         Fall River