-The Seasons-
-The Seasons-
-The Seasons-
1.
my son is reading “Howl”
with four eyes
two are tinted dark-colored
two are frozen below the shutter.
2.
people are walking
the sidewalks prepared for them.
3.
I know the stars are behind the Sun.
4.
I’m impatient.
I want the drawing to be done
before I start to mark the page.
this got me into trouble in New Bedford.
5.
New Bedford, an old salt, went down
to the sea in ships of wood.
6.
this to make oil.
to make perfumes.
to grease industry.
these things from blubber.
7.
my heart aches at the closing door.
my fear is being among the same sort of souls;
blanched grey. all of the same mind.
suffering the same way without name tags.
8.
they call this Heaven,
once the back bench-seats
of limitless two-door sedans.
9.
my son is done with Carl Solomon
and has moved into the Footnote.
psalms.
I'm rich, some with less might say
and to some degree, warm-hearted.
maybe. it sounds distant. I don't know.
and not to nitpick daydreams, but
from time-to-time I've been known
to lift the head of God from the table
to the level of my eyes as if God's head
had eyes to see me.
my saints are ––
the liquor salesman on the road
and the inner-hatband stitcher
and my sister and my brother
and all my lost loves and loves lost.
if I bleed beneath the barber's
errant straight razor,
some might say I had it coming.
but when I die, the undertaker
will fold my arms, hopefully,
just the way I would have.
Manuel Alphonso writes:
Dear William.
What ever happened to
the “Woman in the Landscape”?
Well, Manny,–– she passed away.
She entered the scene and sat on the little stool
which I’d placed for her in the landscape.
I asked her if she would like some water
or a glass of vodka and she said: “No, thank you.”
She didn’t fuss with her clothing.
She didn’t ask questions.
She instinctively knew her mission.
I took out my fine point pen and a graphite stick
and began transferring her likeness to the page.
Eventually, I wrapped things up: “Well, I guess that’s it.”
She got up from the little stool, collected her twenty bucks
and vanished into the night like the angels do from our dreams.
midmorning overcast gave way
to low-lying clouds.
the breeze was a 5 knot
drift from the southeast.
a light surf broke at the shoreline
to the delight of waders and colorful
inflatable paddlers.
the forecast was for sunlight to break through
before noon with clear skies to follow.
nearby, a man found a nearly whole crab shell
and washed it in the surf.
he used it to frighten the kids.
his wife yelled at him and the shell
disappeared from view of the family blanket.
from the chaos I considered their wood-woven
picnic basket and fantasized what was in it;
sandwiches. soda pop. juice. potato chips, bananas…
and when the day is done this family will change
from their bathing suits to more functional clothing
in the parking lot on the driver’s side of the car.
the doors will be open. the subterfuge is perfectly timed.
for me, six days will pass before another trip to the beach.
it’ll be on that day when “Spindrift dream girl”
will walk across my sightline, alone and aloof and memorable.
"Screwed"
as in
I’m screwed.
man, you’re screwed.
un-truncated form:
I’ll screw you up, motherfucker.
alternative:
“Toast”
I’m toast.
we’re toast.
you’re toast.
proper usage:
pumpernickel toast.
"Toke"
as in toke-up
toke-down
gimme a toke.
“Screwed”
the planet is screwed.
"screwed" (at the movies)
Claire Standish
when asked about
the status of her parents says:
“they’re both screwed”
as in: “screwy”.
it’s inventive. I rather like it
and I like Claire Standish, too.
next up: “hot”
as in: “I’m hot for Claire Standish”