Thursday, March 24, 2011
Repose
Thursday, December 2, 2010
Aversetising
kind of heavy
kind of short
kind of loud
you know the sort
clingy clothes
and heaps of hair
ample cleavage
some to spare
draped in baubles
sparkly heels
makes a living
makin’ deals;
nice enough
but I can’t tell -
what’s she really
tryin’ to sell?
Thursday, November 25, 2010
Gravy
Praise the Lord and pass the gravy
Dave got drunk and joined the navy;
raise a glass to Aunt Louise
who passed away and pass the peas
Turkey’s cold but so’s the beer
send them sweet potatoes here
grab a plate, don’t mind the clutter
green beans and some bread and butter
Cousin Crystal brought her kids
(Lord knows who their daddy is)
Cousin Carl’s ex-wife Jan
(call her Jim now – she’s a man)
Someone go tell Uncle Teddy
time to wash up – supper’s ready;
he’s up under Ann’s corvette,
still ain’t got it started yet
Grandpa’s gripin’ ‘bout his gout
collard greens and brussels sprouts;
grandma’s mixin’ up her lunch,
that famous bowl of julep punch
Some stuffing and some dirty rice
cranberry sauce and pop on ice,
sure wish Cousin Frank was here -
hope he makes parole next year
The kids is raisin’ hell, I swear –
s’why they’re sittin’ over there,
sneakin’ more potato chips
and olives on their fingertips
But that’s the whole damn point, I guess -
the din and fights and food and mess –
sure we’re rowdy, plain and poor
but we’re what we’re all thankful for.
I’ll take pumpkin and pecan
someone turn the ballgame on -
praise the Lord, the last is first,
sweet Jesus, think I’m
gonna burst.
Thursday, November 18, 2010
Knowvember
I slept ember far too long;
woke up where I don’t belong.
Gilt and gold are all I find,
some migrant Midas left behind.
I walk tober through the park;
scarlet billows, like a shark
prowls through fog and rips through limbs,
shredding hymnals into hymns.
I know vember very well;
rumors that I can’t dispel.
Cultivating our eclipse,
scent of spirits on her lips.
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Luger
He brought back a Luger
from World War II;
we all need our trophies
and he had a few.
A Purple Heart medal,
a couple of scars,
a letter in German
and one silver star.
And he had his stories,
his songs and his rants,
his men in the trenches,
a young gal in France,
but he never mentioned
how he came to own
a Jerry boy’s pistol
one night near the Rhone.
Fifty years later
he left it behind
with three other guns
that his son had consigned
to buy a piano;
he hadn’t a need
for his father's weapons,
souvenirs of his deeds.
Sometimes, even now,
I can hear his son play
when the window is wide
and the breeze blows this way,
and maybe it’s crazy,
but I think somehow
those hammers are beating
a sword
to a plow.
Thursday, November 4, 2010
An(d)them
We’ve labored in your grand machines,
you corner office libertines,
we built your smoke and mirror screens
while burying your go-betweens;
with avarice, with arrogance
with no regard for consequence
your words will make no difference
when you collect your recompense
we’ll build a new economy
with music, paint and poetry -
when words become our currency
we’ll learn to use them carefully
the banker and the Bedouin
will stand and sing in unison -
as sentinels, as bastions
regardless of our origin
Doesn’t matter what you tell us
you have nothing new to sell us
peddle deference as rebellious
but your hoaxes won’t propel us
engineer some new afflictions
to endorse some new addictions
blur some facts to grease the fiction
flavor helps reduce the friction
we’ll build a new democracy
with music, paint and poetry -
when harmony is liberty
we’ll play it out responsibly
the grand duke and the destitute
will shrug their station and repute
to raise their voices, resolute
united in the same pursuit
although we’re bruised and bandaged
in a world fouled and damaged
by disasters you’ve repackaged
and the faith that you mismanaged
we’ll still tear down every rubric
of each populist and maverick;
let you choke on all your rhetoric
as thick and sweet as arsenic
we’ll build a new reality
with music, paint and poetry -
when art is made invisibly
we’ll learn to live life beautifully
the children and the elderly,
the indigent and pedigreed,
will slip the chains of enmity
and close the book on history.
