Friday, February 25, 2022

                  -Pablo’s molar-


Examining its unearthed cavity,

the forensics may have detected trace elements of poison,

the science behind a finding of possible foul play!


How uneventful that the great Chilean poet

should succumb to the commonness of cancer.


Better to be romanticized for the drop of poison;

to have been murdered!  Assassinated! Remember,


this is the man who wrote:


“I left no one in peace

so they’ll grant me no peace.

That’s clear,

but it doesn’t matter––

they’ll be publishing my socks."


Now they'll be publishing his tooth.









Wednesday, February 23, 2022

                  No!  For chrissakes listen!–– It’s..



Up  the first base line


Over  to second base


Into  third base


Down  the third base line to home.



Nomenclature, 101.










Tuesday, February 15, 2022

                 poem


the sound I’ve chosen in order to be alerted

to incoming calls above countless others available to me,

is that of a doorbell chime.

it’s the standard chime of the ages,

the chime recognized 'round the world,

and in situation comedy reruns,–– like

"The Donna Reed Show" when the whole family would

look to one another in bewilderment whenever the doorbell rang.

it's that ding-dong chime, with “ding” tolling in E,

and “dong” descending by a fifth in time to C,

with both repeating until I decide to respond.

it’s like opening the front door to happiness or despair,

to who knows who, or who knows what.


today is February 15th, the date of my birth,

accompanied by so many well wishers; artists, poets,

and retirees of all stations, the busily active, the vagabonds,

the brilliant and dim-witted, the lonely hearts, and tedious

hearts-full-of-joy crowd,–– and all,

(with the exception of the dead, who've appointed me

to represent their interests in whichever ways I see fit to do so.)


meanwhile, "The Office of Doctor Pedrotty" calls in greeting

with a “ding-dong” approach set to amphitheater mode,

wishing me a “Very Happy Birthday”––

which seems not to be recorded from the heart at all.

the year is 2022.








Friday, February 11, 2022

                  is Picasso still making art?


not new art administered by his immediate hand

but art you hadn't seen before nor known of,

something recently discovered in that glossy,

outrageously oversized book sitting unopened

on the coffee table next door or ripped-off

as on the cover flap of the Christmas card

sent last year by Auntie Emilia who didn’t know

Picasso from the guy who painted Elvis on velvet

or maybe while passing time on the downtown bus

a young woman climbed aboard from the stop

in front of the public library clutching a takeout

of carnage in Spain, and you thought:

“what in the name of all that’s holy is that?”


you see, not new art, but new to you.

so,–– that’s my question.










 

Thursday, February 10, 2022

                    Had my early father been a poet / c. 1937

He speaks:–

"Time for a snapshot.

I’ll get the Brownie Instamatic Uncle Frank gave us for Christmas.

Out there, the morning's rain

has released a scent of the junkyard's metal."


He'd go on:––

"It lingers there still. Let's go.

There's not a moment to lose.

Wear that dress you bought at Cherry & Webb

last Saturday. Remember"?


He continues:––

"It's the one you grabbed

from the rack, and it looks great on you.

It fits you well, Annie. You’ve got an eye

for these things. I guess I have, too. haha."


He concludes:––

"Let's go. No kids, cats, friends or relations.

Annie, this will be one for the scrapbooks!

Just you, my love, out back against the house

standing at the drainpipe."


Had my early father been a poet.


Quequechan








Wednesday, February 9, 2022

             -The confessional and the young woman on the run-


             1.

             The steps to the church are forged of chiseled stone

             quarried from the city's ledge of granite.


             I've climbed them.

             Once inside, I looked things over;

             used the holy water to dab the trinity.

             I'm church legal.


             I'll choose a back row pew to better sample the fickle

             confessional line, (the mortal sinners make me wait)

             side-stepping into the pew, dropping to the kneeler.


             I kneel there. babble a prayer.

             Not a very good one.


             2.

             Someone’s whispering,

             one to another one.

             The sound's muted,

             a strange kind of resonance.


             Finishing, I'll use the required right hand.

             you know, the hand of God.

             

             (here, proximity is close enough)

         

             Father

             Son

             The Holy Ghost gets two.

             

             3.

             The preamble:


             During the un-enlightened ages on a Saturday afternoon,

             I lifted the kneeler to slip to its waiting position.

             I'm next to confess and then,––


             she draws back the curtain with a fury

             fleeing the box as she would the scene of a crime.

             (she's young and warm-looking, like a pane fresh from the bakery)

            

             I’m in.

             Blah my sins.

             So sorry. So sorry.

             

             It’s a penance of 5 “Our Father’s” and 5 "Hail Mary’s” for me,

             but I've learned to do the time in little more than a minute.


             An "Act of Contrition" more or less to tidy things up.

             The "Act of Contrition" is like a feather duster, clearing away

             the dead skin left behind by the absolutions. 


             Now homeward through the ballpark

             hopping the left field fence with time on my hands

             enough to covet my neighbor’s goods all over again and build

             erotic fantasies over what in hell it was she'd said she'd done.


             c.1952 / Quequechan


             






Wednesday, February 2, 2022

                 stories in a column with a death knell's accompaniment 


I call them poems.

they look like poems

and they act like poems.

their silhouettes

resemble my profile. 

now comes a funeral's

call as the day begins.

somebody croaked.

a stranger.

a man or woman.

young or old.

only a few can say.

Saint Michael’s bell

tolls in its measured cadence.

a soft breeze from the east,

and sound travels with it in the deep

density of permanence.

this is it.

I call them poems

because they look like poems

and they act like poems.

but outside my window

somebody's completely

removed from everything

past and present and future,

and the knell beckons: "next"?