Sunday, January 15, 2012

-the curiosity of the girls-

The imagery gets more and more peculiar.
The Hugo A. Dubuque School
On Oak Grove Avenue sits three
Blocks east of our house, and two
Blocks south of the Cemetery where
Lizzie Borden rests in her family’s plot of ground.
I think she did it.
In the schoolyard during recess
When all of us ran around 
Like one hundred thirty six pinballs
Bouncing into one another,
Everything seemed natural. But,—
Whenever something was organized by the boys,
A stickball game, a fist fight, a foot race,
Planning the de-pantsing of the new kid,—
The girls stopped whatever they were doing,—
Tag, Jumprope, Jacks, 1,2,3, Red-Light,
Whispering things to each other,—
Gathering like early morning hunters,
Measured, lining the fence,
Waiting there in their dresses,—
Curious of our planned activities
But more distant than within an arm's reach.
At the time, I was unaware of this phenomenon.
Now I struggle to separate
Fact from romanticism,—
The imagery of them in the schoolyard,
What it was about them which sucked us in,
Made us pay attention to their presence
As we plotted an adventure and they mustered
At the line of the chain-link fence
Waiting for their time, baiting the hooks,
Casting their eyes to the unsuspecting
Even then,—
Hooking their boys,
Reeling us in.


                           Quequechan





Thursday, January 5, 2012

-flight-
the plectrum moon
this snow-filled twilight
rises to stroke the untuned
wires wilting above it.


it continues its upward stroke
so I'll stick around. 
only time will tell.
across the street, the rooftop
warmed by the furnace of my neighbor’s house
keeps an attentive company

and darkness strengthens it
adding to the night's harmonics.
I'll stick around.

only time will tell, if,
when the Moon lifts its weight
from the stave of my neighbor's roof
it will end with an overture and the promise
of an encore.
                                  









-gallery-
It was raining a lot last week
And the cows were swimming.
When the pastures are flooded,
Something rises from the water.
Today it’s the light.
When light rises from the water,
The Painters come out.
                            for Erik Johnson








Tuesday, January 3, 2012

-Sincere Confessions-
Sure I'll race him.
He’s fat.
The slowest kid in school.
I could’ve run backward,
Backpedalled like Ginger,
Moonwalked like Michael
And got to the chain-linked fence
Separating the schoolyard from the woods
Long before him.
He’s fatso Freddie Dagada.
I’m a sprinter.
Fast as hell down the first base line.
That’s who I am.
The girls line the side of the tarmac
Like wallflowers;
Ladies in waiting; little maids in a row
To watch me run.
Ready...Set...and
The toe of my Red Ball Jet,—
The toe of the push-off sneaker, is resting
On an invisible drizzle of sand.
On the “Go!” shouted out by crazy Richard Carrier,
The kid who took it out behind the building last year
To a curious Michele Indigo,
I slip and fall to my face on the tarmac
Of the schoolyard bloodying my nose
As fatso Dagada waddles to the fence
Like a walrus pushing his weight
Toward the cow of his choosing.
The girls relax to their knees,
Returning to their game of Jacks
Which the race interrupted at twosies.
The knee of my corduroys is torn;
The skinned knee is dotted in bloody droplets like my nose.  
At home, I’ll tell my father I was in a fight.—
And that I won.
                          Hugo A. Dubuque
                          Quequechan








Monday, January 2, 2012

-the spit-shine-
Call it Kiwi.
Some-time ago the young sergeant sits
At the edge of his bunk
The bunk on the bottom
Unclothed save for teeshirt and shorts
In the open space of the emptied barracks
Socked feet on the floor
One hand
For the boot, pressed firmly inside it, 
The military issue, braced for a spit-shine.
Some-time ago
One boot on the floor is laying on its side
On a newspaper page
Waiting its turn, not yet unlaced.
Call it Kiwi.
Some-time ago the art student sits
At the edge of his bed
The twin not wide enough for two
In underwear and socks,
Feet on the floor,
Newspaper down like its a rule,
One hand for the boot, inside all the way
To the toe, in a fist,
Stretching the soft leather out,
One hand for the cloth, dabbed in black.
Call it Kiwi,
Circling the surface of leather
Near panting at the fingertips.
Some time ago the buffing brush
Slaps and glides across the radiance 
Like a yacht to weather over the water,—
One hand for the boat,—
One hand for the boot,—
One boot on the floor is on its side
Not yet unlaced,
Is waiting its turn for the shine of its life,
And its history recurring.
                                     



-utility-
Crap!
The old guy upstairs
Just got his Gas bill
And he’s at my door
Wanting to know
How much my Gas bill is.
Two hundred thirty five he yells.
He inquires frantically: You pay that much?
How much you pay? He insists.
He’s a pain in the ass.
But so's the Gas Company.
So I'll let him.
He’s got the bill in his hands
Threatening to shut off his own gas,
And it’s February.
He’ll do it too.
He’s nuts.
He spends a lot of time in the basement
Bopping things with a hammer,
And he builds and paints giant plywood cutouts
In Christmas themes;— little boys in their vestments;
In Surplice and Cassock, holding lit candles,
Their oval mouths wide as if singing 
Looking more like the vinyl blow-ups on display
In that dark little video joint on the corner of
Bedford and Eighth. 
Once in a while I hear glass smashing down there.
Now he’s sitting at the table in my kitchen
Ranting with a sticky string of spit
Exercising at the edges of his mouth
As I put the sharpest knives in the drawer.
I think he expects me to do something
About his Gas bill.


He’s married to an old lady who walks with a walker,
Who calls me on the telephone
In fear of a strange car parked across the street.
They're doing some drugs over there she says.
She asks if my smoke-alarms are beeping.
Do I have any batteries?
Can I make her some copies of Social
Security documents?
What's he doing down there she wonders aloud
Through the sweating earpiece.
I'm a-scared she moans.
Christ.
I’m done for.
                                           Fall River