Saturday, September 30, 2017

-Considering meadows and trees and sheetmetal and the sun-

I went to the meadow.
Sure, it was remarkable and I've spoken of the meadow,
The romance in the meadow of my youth, the dry, yellow
Ochre grass cutting knee-high, and burnt,–– a place
Unpopulated but for the billboards calling my attention to bathing
Beauties hawking lotions, perfumes and long, long cigarettes
Standing guard at the perimeter.
It's this poet's obligation to say something of such things.
I've seen my share of trees, impressive regardless of season,
Reaching for the clouds being born to do this, and the sun
Which rises from the morning's east splitting the Narrows
Making way for early salesmen on the road,–– and with others of my kind,
Scaling the wire-crowned fence to give the broken hulks of
Sheetmetal in crisis another shot at a new kind of life,––engine hoods
The size of continents once sporting chromed ornaments of winged-
Women piercing the wind's oncoming rush, ornaments of rockets
Blasting-off toward the horizon, toward the beaches, the drive-in
Theaters, the seduction of the quarter-mile pole, the constant relations;
Imagery undefined at the time, now it seems my only chance at redemption.






Friday, September 29, 2017

-problems with my black hole-

Its existence was deduced as near certainty.
that in itself was close enough to have sucked me in.
now it appears they've got art in glorious color.
It’s through my fault, the opening of its door
when I should have been dreaming with the rest of the saints.
but I recall my visits in vivid detail, and once inside
I snoop around like any nosey neighbor, or common poem-writer,
lingering on occasion without much concern for the outside universe.
sea cucumbers live like this, and strains in protozoa, too.
my black hole isn’t working as prescribed, as I'm pushed aside
without being torn apart knuckle-by-knuckle, and further, there isn’t
a repair shop around the corner specializing in the mechanics
of catastrophic gravitational collapse.
––but my black hole remains deeply internal, hesitant to return anything
other than myself,–– and I fear the next visit will kill me, but if so,
what satisfaction will I have when I'm finally told the answer?













Monday, September 25, 2017

-the science behind the art of the squint with a closing nod to e.e.cummings-


squinting increases the lowest value in middle tones.
it's also engaged when reading the restaurant menu
at table 6 if Auntie Pauline forgets her eyeglasses.

the squint is also applied when one is quizzical,
as in confronting something nearly undefinable,
(see: Joan and Pataphysics) ––
and is a near requirement in the studios of just about every
art school this side of Jingles' East Sedalia.

applied to poems in print, squinting
compresses the field of darker text while lowering
the intensity of the brighter field of the illuminated screen.
we start at the screen.

like unmarked paper before it, the illuminated screen is good-looking,
and sometimes, with the assistance of a healthy dose of imagination,
reflects street-life behind us; the insistent joggers passing,–– and
panting dogs stopping on occasion for a quick sniff of the good stuff.

now, it's true I've been away for quite some time, and returning,
it seems that the application of the squint has become
something of a lost art as defunct as, well,–– e.e.'s "Buffalo Bill".







Sunday, September 24, 2017

-Antoine has the day off-

Antoine plans a trip to the great art museum on Huntington Avenue.
there, he walks around slowly looking at the exhibits of paintings,
sculpture, hanging renaissance tapestries and heavy-looking, ancient
Egyptian jewelry laid-out in atmospherically monitored display cases.
Antoine takes the time to stop in order to look at things which catch his eye.
at the Contemporary Wing, he might shake his head in disapproval,
but frankly, not very often.
he's learned to understand that he won’t always understand.
In time, Antoine heads for home.
there, things are also displayed for viewing. for example:
here's a poster of three unadorned doves on the wing across a field of grey.
it says: "Georges Braque: Galerie Maeght Sur 4 Murs, 1956".close by we have a  small, artificial Rembrandt: "The Artist In His Studio", darkly varnished by commercial industry replete with convincing hairline cracks.in the hallway we find Goya,–– with his famed killings at the wall; unframed $30.00. framed: $50.00. Antoine opts for Goya, framed,
and in the living room there’s an end table holding a hand-crafted ashtray, hardened in
fired terra cotta, hand- painted by first niece Penelope when she was eight years old.
now married with two kids, Penelope's ashtray is long considered a household treasure,
colored in yellows, greens and reds, albeit in a perplexing Mexican motif, a sombrero
with its high central conical protruding upward from an extra-wide brim.
he recalls her sweet instruction on how to balance the burning cigarette
within the conical's ample indentation.
Antoine's in a reflective mood as he examines young Penelope's ashtray
then places the beloved piece back upon the table with care, knowing

nobody smokes in the house anymore.
nobody stops by to look at anything in the house anymore.




  

Friday, September 22, 2017

Introducing the all new
“Dotard's Rocket Man Heavy Roller”!

Stick both of them together with library paste
and seal 'em tightly with a few rounds of bubble wrap.
Let the kids play with it for awhile,
snapping the bubbles to their little hearts content.
Watch as it squirms and wriggles, no batteries necessary. 
Watch, as they push it to the floor only to have it pop-up again!
Watch as they roll it across the backyard and possibly
through the tree-line, into the river!
Mom and Dad? Not to worry! the “DRMHR” serves as a fine
floatation device as well! (Non Airline Approved)
And the kids will have fun, fun, fun, ‘till all the sane
people take their “Dotard's Rocket Man Heavy Roller” away!

Next up:
How to properly dispose of  “Dotard's Rocket Man Heavy Roller”.




Wednesday, September 20, 2017

-when no one’s around-

1.
I’d walk to all the familiar places
but nobody’s around.
I have money in my pockets
but not much.
two dollars and thirty five cents would be a close call.
the scent of the bakeries has long faded.
Whitey’s two-pump Esso Station is closed
and the little shack where he sits, listening
to the radio between each dollar's worth of regular, is locked-up tight.
this is the little shack where he sobers-up, unconsciously.
it's a short walk across the street, and at the door,
I cup my eyes to peer through the nicotine-stained window
to see if he's laying on the greasy floor
in a pool of blood and vomit.
one phone call from my house and I'm a hero.
or a fink.

the Marconi Club is closed since midnight, yet stinks-up
the surrounding atmosphere in stale Bohemian beer and cheap Port.
the park’s empty–– empty and quiet, perpetuating
the usual early morning anticipation of rejuvenation.
the art of the overpowering center billboard of three
between Whitey and Marconi is terribly torn by weather or vandals.
the tear looks like an icy stalactite, one jagged point
hovering over a cigarette smoking blonde's big blue eye!
maybe something new is going-up.
maybe it’s the end of its existence.

just beyond the roof of my house, the once
complex mechanisms of the junkyard rest in peace
without the nuisance of their ornaments
being crowbarred and ripped from their hoods
like so many gems of the mine.

2.
prime examples of physical and metaphysical industry
will soon reclaim themselves.
the Diner's stainless frialator will begin to crackle and spit.

the Church, having absolved its weekly sinners
at Saturday confessionals will begin to toll for their communion.

the early Sunday morning Sun is inching its way above the fresh-
water ponds of the Narrows, glinting the great Watuppa, but as of yet
nobody, and I mean nobody's around.

let’s say..1953. Quequechan










Sunday, September 17, 2017

-left-handed jews had it easy-


"he ascended into heaven
and was seated at the right hand of god"––
so that means the left hand sits for Beelzebub.
and so it went from early on. 
Nonna! Nonna! don’t squeeze
the pencil into the hand of god
when the hand of the devil yearns
to crayon a spiked yellow sun upon
a waxed blue sky!
it's the devil’s hand smudges the pencil's soft lead
(here, "lead" refers to the heteronym noun: a blue-grey
metallic substance used in pencils
before it was considered poisonous and graphite
was developed to replace it)
as it moves across the page after her announcement
that "neatness counts"!
impossible writing paddle’s bolted in favor to the right hand of God!
and so I’m born to fail at letters. Nonna! Nonna! 
pick-up those beads and sing the prayer of absolution meant only for me.






Thursday, September 14, 2017

-A black-tie affair at the “Sons of Italy Hall”-


No formal invitation is forwarded to 1017 Bedford
or any address in the neighborhood for that matter.
Word spread from mouth to mouth,
from the corner across the street from his house,
to the folding card tables at the crazy “Marconi Club”
where the old-timers drink port just beyond the billboards,––
to the counter at the “Columbus Cafe” waiting for “grinders”
of sausage and peppers, and inside "DeSpirito Brothers Barbershop"
tucked beneath yet another grouping of Saturday morning crewcuts.
snip, snip, “Yeah, my kid nephew’s going”! snip, snip, “Seventeen already”!
Lou Gasperini and his wife showed-up for supper again
and the four of them sat around the kitchen table talking, finalizing their plans.
“Who drove last time?”
(The “Sons of Italy Hall” sits two blocks east of 1017)
They’ll rent tuxedos from “Robert’s Formals” on Bedford––
Shoes and all, corner of South Main.
Their wives will pluck their “gowns” from the rack at “Cherry & Web”
half-block south of “Robert’s Formals”. Shoes, too.
Once a year.
The “gowns” and their matching shoes will be bought to own. 
It was Gasperini who said: “What the hell. Once a year? It’s worth it”.

                                                                    Quequechan




Tuesday, September 12, 2017

the true value behind the new and improved hurricane


it's in the way it takes to the phosphorescence.
it's in the way it takes to the character limits.

it's in the way of the rising point-spread as expected
from such a capricious audience far from the fast-
rising slick of putrefied waters.

now, patron saint of foul weather!
         (she prepped the stilettos at the full-
          length mirror, didn’t she?

and didn't she spin the spear-headed
toe-tips inward, heels up, palming the silky
material at her thighs?)

you nabbed another gold ring before its flight,
didn't you, old man. wheels off the ground.
                        
                              
                             


Sunday, September 10, 2017

-all the faces are watercolored-


I walked inside after arriving out front
before the door was unlocked for business.
It's a small, narrow gallery
with two walls hanging pictures for showing.
on the wall to the right, small paintings
of what appear to be representations of various totems.
colorful oil paintings.

on the wall to the left hang the faces
of men and women, arrested.

neither their names, nor
the charges filed against them are noted.
only a series of numbers identify one from another,
same as convicts locked-up at Walpole State Prison.

hanging:  mugshots of people whose faces
are watercolored.
watercolored mugshots taken from public records,
police blotters from who-knows-where,––
from all over the place it seems, now mugged in an artist's hand.

viewing these pictures in a single row across a bleached-
white wall was visually stunning and all-consuming.
I don’t remember how many, but I’d say about twenty,
hung in a line before my eyes; mugshots of those arrested,––
strangers, far removed from one another in life and yet here,
on this wall of misery, poverty and surrender, are gathered
as in a wretched family's outing, a panoramic reunion keepsake.

                uncle Joe,–– always a problem child.
                cousins Tina and Larisha,–– headed down the wrong path.
                and there’s Kip! straight “A” student. what a waste..

guilty as sin, the lot of them!
the judge should throw away the key.

now I see myself as Guardian ad Litem to the "Arrested".
yes! I'll rehabilitate two of the mugs
to hang on a wall in more comfortable surroundings.
a pleasant sort-of purgatory. easy time. a wall with a view of the water.

                I’ll take: #061317TW /Arrested!
                I’ll take: #120916V  / Arrested!


for Dick Dougherty
New Bedford, Massachusetts / 5 September, 2017




  

Sunday, September 3, 2017

-a few easy steps on how to make it better-


think it over.
check your supplies.
collect what’s necessary to begin the project.
perhaps a light rainfall, or snowfall,
or children playing jumprope, or
maybe a catastrophe of some kind.

think it over.
go easy on dashes and hyphens
of which I am supremely guilty.

go easy on embellishments.
go heavy on the salt of life.
not so heavy on the imagery.
let it breathe on its own without
snazzy comparisons.

lastly

you could say: "there’s a silence to the breath of the poem,
                          even at the end".

you might add: "especially at the end".