Thursday, August 25, 2011

-Dashboard Mocha-


Could be
The dashboard Mocha
Should glow in the dark
Like cream-colored Jesus.
Maybe
Jesus should shimmy and shake
Like the Mocha shakes.
Could be
The empty-headed road is paved
With the blood of the Lamb
As well as the blood
Of the Possum;

The Highway’s communion.

Maybe
The hands that grip the wheel
Are damp with sweat.
Could be
The Mocha will vibrate its icy,
Seductive dance to spill its guts.

Maybe
Puzzle wants the Mocha.
Maybe
Jesus wants the Mocha.
Maybe
Josh knows more
Than his face implies;

Face
Like the pavement's face,
Lips
Like the crooked nose of Puzzle.

Maybe
Shawn’s asleep at the wheel,—
String of mocha-spit rocking
Like the Pendulum from his open mouth.


                                   for Synthetic Division
                                   August, 2011








-Bedford bagatelle-
1.
one moment a straining
Autocar diesel lumbers by
smoking from its stack
down-shifting
approaching from the east
in the down-hill struggle
of the great rigs inhaling against
the laws of dynamics,
westward towards the river
and the connection to Interstate 95,
with the park, the church,
a couple of italian bakeries and the fierce
community of the Portuguese passing along the way.

the big-rig's driver
lives someplace else, someplace down south,
probably North Carolina.

at the same instant a young woman
passing by the observational window,
walking against the grain of the neighborhood,
seems to know her way because most-likely
she lives around here.
(maybe someplace hidden deeply behind the church,
I'd guess North Quarry near the cemetery)
she's wearing a summer dress with brightly colored patterns of..
well, I can't really say.
I don't recognize her.

the big-rig struggles westward
with a powerful back-thrust
probably heading northward to the Border City Mills
where shipments of textiles, strapped on pallets
will be unloaded on the docks.
maybe a few relatives will manage the unloading
of the pallets, working for their tenements
and their cars, and stockpiling a few bucks
for the rainy days.

meanwhile the singular summer dress flutters
(rayon, I'm assuming) in its wake and I'm struck
in the instance of the dichotomy between power and grace
within the same frame of reference.
2.
employing the upgraded
Bedford Street Applause Meter
we notice the needle drifting to 85 for the powerful
Autocar diesel,
but sweeping to 98
for the lovely young woman
walking by in her summer dress, and

it was predicted that somewhere
within the body of this afternoon's bagatelle,
both will come to find their way to me.

                                        






           

Wednesday, August 24, 2011



-William's Saga-




I was born at 1017
Then moved westward to 1015.
1017 to 1015.
New planet. Same furniture.
Everything I wanted from life
Was laid at my feet
Between theses numbers.

Water from heavy rainfall would
Sweep downhill from the east,
Down the slope of the street
From the edge of the Narrows
Flooding into a concave arc of pavement
Directly beneath the feet
Of the tenement houses we lived in.
There, the water stopped moving down
And instead moved up
In the art of the downpour, the eighth
Wonder of the World.

I was told by Louie Rossi
That Donald Peterson threw
A kitten down the sewer.
I was told that Pinky
Drowned at the Quarry’s
Ledge,— a still, forbidden water.
The old-timer calling for rags
Pulling his team behind him
Was dubbed “Skeleton Ghoul-Tender”—
Hid a carving knife inside
His tattered coat.

Under the porches
Dank with tuberculosis
I'd hide the Nudies
And discover the ancient smut of others.
Swift swig of beer
From behind the Billboards.
Glance of manhood.
I couldn’t hit for distance but I could run.
So I bunted my way to first,—
Then got to second base with Angela Fazzina
Behind the stage in the basement of our Church.

Albie Bernard got beaned and died in a day.
But my sister’s teenage friends were angelic.
Some whiter than the sheets of the clothesline.
Some dark as the island's olives.
Fifties girls.
I remembered them fondly each night
As I'd close my eyes beneath the sheets.
I can’t strike up better imagery
Than that.
             
                                         Quequechan
                    









  
                 

Saturday, August 20, 2011

-drive by day-
Rattlesnake hunting
In the desert of New Mexico
On the line out of Jemez Pueblo
Traveling fast in a pickup
On a two lane blacktop
Cracked by Sun,
With Chez Valquez
And two of his kids who were out
For the frozen blood of rattlesnakes.

The snipped and dried rattles of their tails
Made snazzy trinkets on decorated sticks
Which clicked like the living snake.
There was a market someplace.
Some sort of need.

Lots of snakes were killed under the
Wheels of the pickups, and the beaten
Station wagons of the Pueblo,—
Rusty hulks of machines, nearly romanic
If you lived someplace else.
There’s a lot of snakes out there
And they cross the road to get to the other side.
But in the desert, that’s the same dry side
As the side they came from.

Strange and funny watching a seven
Year old girl in a dusty sundress
And little hand-me-down sandals
Chase-down a squirming rattler
Rolled from under the wheels
Of her father's working pickup.
She ran to the snake, throwing her skinny
Arms out from her sides when she stopped
Bending forward, looking curiously
From a ten foot distance.
She was told never to touch

And when’s the last time
Your mother or your father warned you
Not to touch
The rattlesnake squirming
In the middle of the road in the desert?
                                 New Mexico / 1969











Tuesday, August 16, 2011

-There's a deep hole at Short-
       
When his son singled on a grounder
Through the hole between third and short
In the Pee-Wee League of Columbus Park
In the Summer of 1975,
Albert would have smiled broadly,
Clapping his hands with exuberant pride.
Had he lived. Had the child been born.
Had he lived,
His son would have looked his way,
Standing on the bag at first,
Uniform a full-
Size too big, helmet half-way down his face,
Eyes wide as baseballs.
Had he lived.
Had his Son been born.
Had he ducked.
Had the ball dropped an inch
To break his jaw.
Had his girl pressed closer
For another moment
Behind the Billboards
Causing him to be late for the game
Causing him to run to the Park
Spikes flung over his shoulder
Causing the Coach
To bench him for his tardiness;
For his irresponsibility
To his teammates.
In the Summer of 1958,
Albie Bernard got beaned at Ruggles Park.
But he shook it off.
He walked it off and we patted him on the ass
For being a ballplayer, for staying in the game,
Unaware of how briefly
We were spared his death by baseball.
But he died the next day in an early
Morning ambulance
Whining loud and fast down Bedford Street
Toward Union Hospital in a quest
To keep him with us, keep him with his friends,
His teammates and with his Mother.
Now his Grandmother
Wails in grief at the grave,
Standing limply, held by attendants;— 
"Albert, don't leave your Mother!"
“Albert, don’t leave your Mother!”
Now his Teammates grieve at the grave,
Silently inside themselves.
With Father Vincent Diafario assisting,
Monsignor Joseph Pannoni measured his cadence
Through the written passage of the antiphon.
Casket is sprinkled with water.
Casket is perfumed in smoke.
The silence creaks like a clearing in the woods.
More poignant are the muffled sobs and clearing
Throats at the somber grave.
There are whispers to his Mother's ear.
They shelter her palms in their hands.
We linger not knowing what to do.
Then we went to breakfast.
It’s where the ballplayers belonged,
Crowded into the Diner’s booth,
Pressed together as one body
Replaying the moment in our heads,—
The moment the ball struck Albie’s.
The baseball is pushed from the knuckler's
Fingertips and it floats to the batter hypnotically.
In the quiet booth of the Diner, Paul Pieroni’s eyes
Looked like the baseballs he pitched, floating
Like slow almond-clouds in a wind.
The stitches roll nearly without movement
When the Knuckleball floats.
It wouldn't have hit him.
It comes in too slow.
Albie's too quick.
I quietly wished a Knuckler had thrown the ball.
A Knuckleballer like Pieroni.
But someone's inshoot, high, fast and tight
Tailed-in to find its mark.
There's a deep hole at Short.  
Frankie Teixeira played Third Base
Thinking he was Frank Malzone;—
Tough and smart and slow. Great glove.
Talked the infield like a poet:
“Hum baby, hum you kid, hum baaaabe.”
Homered in a win against Saint Anthony of Padua,
The Church three blocks down the street.
But on another Planet.
Albie danced the way we danced,
Right arm wrapped around her waist,
Left hand opened for her hand,
Mouth to her cheek,— she floated on air
Like the knuckleball floats.
His young wife has the eyes of the girl;
Is cradling his son in her ams,
Kissing him goodbye in the morning.
Time for work. Time to support his family.
Had he lived.
Had his girl become his wife and had his son.
There's a deep hole in life.
On second, “Ducky” Carvalho
Once dropped a popup,
To lose a game in extra innings,
Now falling silently in the clanking Diner,
Far in the distance;
The booth closing in on us.
Teddy “Blue” Dicorpo held down First.
From Albie to Ducky to Blue.
There’s a deep hole at Short.
Albie wasn’t College material.
Not many of us were.
We heard of a kid from Holy Name
They said was invited to try-out for the Red Sox.
I played Left. Couldn't hit.
But ran fast and bunted with accuracy.
When they chanted “No batta, No batta,”
They weren’t thinking bunt.
There's a deep hole at Short.
Lionel Morrais was our Center Fielder.
Long and lanky, “Leaping Lee-Lee,”
In any Street Game played by the community of friends
Which required speed and an ability to jump,—
Peggyball, Bowl-a-Wicket, Buck-Buck,
Was mined from the pick-ups like he was gold.
Now he sat to my right in the booth
Trying like hell to talk to Pieroni.
“Albie was hit by a pipe when he was a kid,
Remember?”
This was an invention used to assuage
Our collective sorrow, as if something else,
Anything else but a baseball caused Albie’s death,
As if something else, anything else
Would make some sense.
Had there been a pipe to temper our guilt.
Paul Pieroni, Knuckleballer, will cling to it.
When Tommy Curry wasn’t playing Right Field,
He pitched in the rotation behind Paul.
He twice struck out the mighty “Chicker” Machado
In a close loss to Immaculate Conception.
I always found it strange that Tommy
Didn’t hang-out on the corner with the rest of us,
Believing that anybody who could, would.
She'd spin in her dress, bare-footed.
She'd pause when he'd pause in the warm
Embrace, goodnight sweetheart, and slip
Her foot on the hard-wood floor, pulling his foot
To follow in his lead.
There's a deep hole in life.  
John “Pappy” Tacovelli was the consumate Catcher.
Rough, hard-skinned and constantly bruised.
His Mother, Carmella, chain-smoked Camels
Which hung with a wet duck’s-ass from her mouth.
The fast-ball was favored by Gino DiNucci
As the pitch of preference to Pieroni’s
On-going consternation.
Smart, right-minded,
Uncompromising in his devotion to his team.
Like a Baseball Coach.
For the Holy Rosary baseball team of the CYO League,
There's a deep hole at Short.
In the Summer of 1958,
Albert Bernard, “Albie,”
In Fall River, by cause of a baseball,
Died after being hit in the head.
He leaves behind,—
A loving Mother,
A Brother and Sister,
His Grandmother, grief-sick.
He leaves his Teammates.
He leaves behind,—
The girl of his arms,
His wife and their child,—
Had that he lived.
There's a deep hole in life.
He leaves behind,—
A glove, olive-
Oiled, hand-rubbed and ready,
Threaded through the handlebars.
He leaves behind,—
This singular romance of him:

Bernard, Albert, “Albie.”
In Fall River. All Star.
Shortstop.
Bats right.
Throws right.

Quequechan