Thursday, January 29, 2009
Hardt
sorry – this poem has been removed due to some delusional endeavor to get published. i’ll put it back once i come to my senses.
Thursday, January 22, 2009
407 South
Beyond the desert’s
painted sand
the Rockies held
an outstretched hand
before the
undulating plain
perfumed with cornsilk
earth and rain
towards the little white house
on sixth street.
The valley’s rich
and steady slope
bore sugar beets
and cantaloupe,
and a small town
in a copse
of sorghum and
alfalfa crops
with a little white house
on sixth street.
There was chicken
on the fry
as the mijos
pedaled by
there was peach pie
on the sill
as lark buntings
chirped and trilled
there were roses
on the trellis
as the afternoon
befell us
we’d get kisses
on the stoop
homemade noodles
in the soup
at the little white house
on sixth street.
Took us to
the five and dime
paint by numbers
lemon-lime
or the fort
built wide and low
for St. Vrain and
Jean Charbonneau
we’d climb on
his lap to drive
in the weathered
fifty-five
or we’d simply
tour a past
inadvertently
amassed
in the little white house
on sixth street.
painted sand
the Rockies held
an outstretched hand
before the
undulating plain
perfumed with cornsilk
earth and rain
towards the little white house
on sixth street.
The valley’s rich
and steady slope
bore sugar beets
and cantaloupe,
and a small town
in a copse
of sorghum and
alfalfa crops
with a little white house
on sixth street.
There was chicken
on the fry
as the mijos
pedaled by
there was peach pie
on the sill
as lark buntings
chirped and trilled
there were roses
on the trellis
as the afternoon
befell us
we’d get kisses
on the stoop
homemade noodles
in the soup
at the little white house
on sixth street.
Took us to
the five and dime
paint by numbers
lemon-lime
or the fort
built wide and low
for St. Vrain and
Jean Charbonneau
we’d climb on
his lap to drive
in the weathered
fifty-five
or we’d simply
tour a past
inadvertently
amassed
in the little white house
on sixth street.
There were letters
bronzed with age
from a father
seeking wage
carbon paper
fountain pens
penny knives
tobacco tins
ration books
left in a drawer
dated nineteen
forty-four
a Silvertone
and pork pie hats
a pocket watch
and canvas spats
in the little white house
on sixth street.
There was comfort
there was ardor
cricket singing
in the larder
there was kindness
there was order
pinwheel cookies
for each boarder
there had been
a son and daughter
who grew fast and
true as water
and the two
who had remained
in their temperance
were sustained
by the little white house
on sixth street.
***
One by one
we buried three
still my mother
sits with me
recalling Rockwell’s
Evening Post
and plum butter
spread on toast
and for all
our souvenirs
and photographs
throughout the years
we’ve found nothing
quite akin
to walking back
through memories in
to the little white house
on sixth street.
bronzed with age
from a father
seeking wage
carbon paper
fountain pens
penny knives
tobacco tins
ration books
left in a drawer
dated nineteen
forty-four
a Silvertone
and pork pie hats
a pocket watch
and canvas spats
in the little white house
on sixth street.
There was comfort
there was ardor
cricket singing
in the larder
there was kindness
there was order
pinwheel cookies
for each boarder
there had been
a son and daughter
who grew fast and
true as water
and the two
who had remained
in their temperance
were sustained
by the little white house
on sixth street.
***
One by one
we buried three
still my mother
sits with me
recalling Rockwell’s
Evening Post
and plum butter
spread on toast
and for all
our souvenirs
and photographs
throughout the years
we’ve found nothing
quite akin
to walking back
through memories in
to the little white house
on sixth street.
[2 of 2]
Thursday, January 15, 2009
RĂ©sumain’t
I was the little kid
in class
who never paid
attention,
whose daydreams were
his slide and swings,
his playground of
invention;
I was the chunky
awkward boy
whose skin would
never fit,
fumbling through
a formless fear
he never could
admit;
I was the dude
in high school,
when house parties
broke off pairs,
wrapped his arm
around the keg
and woke up
on the stairs;
I’m the guy
who cannot give
a single reason
he
waits for
something great
to come
from mediocrity;
I will be the old man who,
decaying
in a wal-mart vest,
smiles as you
hurry past,
inconsequential
as his
best.
in class
who never paid
attention,
whose daydreams were
his slide and swings,
his playground of
invention;
I was the chunky
awkward boy
whose skin would
never fit,
fumbling through
a formless fear
he never could
admit;
I was the dude
in high school,
when house parties
broke off pairs,
wrapped his arm
around the keg
and woke up
on the stairs;
I’m the guy
who cannot give
a single reason
he
waits for
something great
to come
from mediocrity;
I will be the old man who,
decaying
in a wal-mart vest,
smiles as you
hurry past,
inconsequential
as his
best.
Thursday, January 8, 2009
Southern Moon
I ain’t too close and ain’t too far,
white lightnin’ from a mason jar,
seen my sister? She’s a star,
catchin’ out a parlor car -
tip a hat to the southern moon.
I seen Grandma Moses ferried
(I know why the rabbit tarried)
I seen Elvis get remarried
(I know where the money’s buried)
can’t hide from the southern moon.
I seen more debauchery
than three of me’d care to see -
out ‘neath the honeylocust tree
the devil stacks his dowry
by the light of the ol’ southern moon.
I seen Richmond torched and torn,
I heard Satchmo blow his horn,
the dyin’ and the barely born
is mad as magpies in the corn
lookin’ up at the low southern moon.
I ain’t concerned about your lot,
or what your mamma said you ought -
just once, before your farm is bought,
throw back your head
give all you got
howlin' up at the full southern moon.
white lightnin’ from a mason jar,
seen my sister? She’s a star,
catchin’ out a parlor car -
tip a hat to the southern moon.
I seen Grandma Moses ferried
(I know why the rabbit tarried)
I seen Elvis get remarried
(I know where the money’s buried)
can’t hide from the southern moon.
I seen more debauchery
than three of me’d care to see -
out ‘neath the honeylocust tree
the devil stacks his dowry
by the light of the ol’ southern moon.
I seen Richmond torched and torn,
I heard Satchmo blow his horn,
the dyin’ and the barely born
is mad as magpies in the corn
lookin’ up at the low southern moon.
I ain’t concerned about your lot,
or what your mamma said you ought -
just once, before your farm is bought,
throw back your head
give all you got
howlin' up at the full southern moon.
Thursday, January 1, 2009
Hanging in the Hush
sorry – this poem has been removed due to some delusional endeavor to get published. i’ll put it back once i come to my senses.
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