Wednesday, June 29, 2016

Terrel

I was playing “I’ll Rise When the Roster Crows” on the banjo –
song from the minstrel shows.
A big black guy came up on my front porch,
and I met him in my shorts, barefoot. He said his name Terrel,
and said he wanted to do some yard work for twenty dollars to
collect for his basketball team.
Attractive, friendly face.
Robin disagreed, but I said sure,
but I wasn’t really sure
that it wasn’t a con – I asked him
about his team, and he said something with the word
“union” in it, traveling around the world, it seemed,
kind of like the Harlem Globetrotters.
I also wasn’t sure what he'd work on –
I’d mowed the lawn already yesterday.
Couldn’t see much else that needed doing, so I asked him to mow
the lawn front and back, and gave him
my pretty-OK manual push lawnmower.
Terrel took it, but he had a negotiation point – he’d meant
the front yard, it’d cost me another ten bucks
to have him do the back.  We hit
on the agreement he’d mow the back for ten dollars.
He started, using repeated quick strokes with his strong arms
that really cut the grass – although he did leave one
unmown stripe. I sat up on my cedar porch and watched him,
feeling like a plantation owner drinking a toddy
while his slave boy labored for him – but Terrel and I did have
a financial arrangement – ten dollars for fifteen minutes work –
not bad. I could see he was taking pride in it.
When I suggested he could just walk the mower down the rows
and make the work faster, he said his method cut the grass better,
and he was right. When he was nearly finished he said,
“That looks pretty good,” and I had to agree.
I did have him mow the stripe he missed.
Then I took the mower and gave him a twenty out of guilt –
when clearly I should have had him mow the front yard too.
He had me put my number into his i-phone.
I thanked him when he went away,
feeling basically fine about the whole transaction,
but appalled by the bottomless ocean of racial apprehension and distrust
I felt in myself.

Tuesday, June 28, 2016

You've Got a Friend in Me

There’s a Photoshop trick—you can cut people out of photos,
leaving white blanks with human shapes.
My brother-in-law, Oliver Wasow, posted a couple this morning.
Someone thought of Stalin. In the Hemschemeyer Akhmatova book,

there’s a photo of Alexander Blok and Korney Chukovsky.
Their right hands are clasped. Blok is looking at Korney’s face;
Korney’s eyes are fixed furtively
on a spot just to the right of the camera.
If Blok’s silhouette were whited out,
we might still recognize him from the nose and forehead.

The photo was taken in 1921, Blok’s death year, the year he famously said:
“There are no sounds any more. Can’t you hear that there are no sounds?”
Korney had a wonderful career through the Stalin years—
the “Soviet Dr. Seuss.”

Monday, June 27, 2016

Duende

There’s a word from Lorca—
duende

pretty trendy now in the poetry communities—
meaning dire, deep,
hyper-passionate, black,
reeking of doom and destruction.
Somehow, it’s that deep core
of quivering emotional reality
we try to plumb as poets. When I
look at the source, though,
I find Lorca mainly associates duende
with great flamenco singers and guitar players—

it's the deep intention in performance
that makes it impossible
not to listen.

Sunday, June 19, 2016

South Denver: The Skeleton Views Mt. Evans

named after Colonel Chivington’s ally
skulls without hair
housed at the Smithsonian

Friday, June 17, 2016

The Skeleton Crosses Into Nebraska

two roan colts by the road
still too early
to give up the extravagant dream

Wednesday, June 15, 2016

Cosmic Fibs: The Jig Is Finally Up

De'duke men a' sela'nna
kai` Plhï'ades, me'sai de`
nu'ktes pa'ra d' e'rxet' w' 'ra,
e'gw de mo'na kateu'dw.   Sappho

There
can
be no
doubt. The big
dipper has tipped and
scattered its contents into space.
Quite
the
cosmic
happenstance.
Stars spilled and wasted.
A final-days scenario.
Used
to
be, you
could count on
stars remaining in
their same places, but now you can’t.
No
fixed
stellar
assurance.
You can’t sow your fields
with any confidence these days.
I
know,
right? Checked
out Taurus
to be certain. Yup.
All seven geese’ve flown the coop.

Saturday, June 11, 2016

Evening Bird Walk

stone steps to Hidden Falls
flash red tanager
can’t spot it
finding our regular route
between the river flowing with us
and the cliffs
limestone sand dirt trees
accretions of weather as we
walk pleasantly together
smooth grip of poplar stick 
probing the path
easing my right hip

Iris Park

never set foot before
Episcopal Homes
Golden Living Center no valuables
in parked cars no dogs not
on six-foot leashes no
alcohol possessed or consumed
unauthorized loud music crashing
scateboarders smoking
in the presence of youth
food 
for the birds and
wildlife

Friday, June 10, 2016

Straightening Cassidy

scared by my
own loquacity stop
thief stop
thief I’ve lost my
watch I’ve lost my
lowclassity
redford-newman
what a punum
crisped on that naugahide couch
da doo ron ron ron
da doo ron ron
bhiku arms
in the gear box hop
along hop
along hop
along you scurvy
botch hop along you scurvy
botch

Tuesday, June 7, 2016

Apollo Becoming Daphne

The tree still panted in th’ unfinish’d part:
Not wholly vegetive, and heav’d her heart.

boughs of my
quick maple
planted the day Wellstone died

arborist showed me
a stem-girdling root
but I never cut it

a big up-curving branch
black streak running down it
pan mark on a bratwurst

I could climb up to it
even as I am
discarding my blue terrycloth bathrobe

I could lie along its length
toes curled around
a perpendicular twig

silver bark
on the backs of my legs
groin hair a tuft of leaves

heart beating up there poor tree
even now he
won't leave you alone

Sunday, June 5, 2016

Sitting Under the Tree That May Crush My House Some Day

For one not looking forward optimistically to their death


neither I nor
the impending
boxwood tree
the blue
behind
the day’s-eye green

that
and the calling
birds

Saturday, June 4, 2016

Return of the Alligator Bride

Wore sandals on the path to Sand Creek BEWARE
all those Little Bighorn soldiers
but never saw a rattlesnake in the wild
ankles toes aspiring nails gleaming
thousand-headed crown of Patanjali
snakes and feet both kitschy
brown swim-suit girl oggled in the Penny’s catalogue
Lizzie Lover helping buy a grad school jacket
TA training razor cuts on face
enjoying even those challenging days
symbiotic with billions of microorganisms
at the core just microorganisms myself
a microorganism’s not an individual
who’ll put flowers on the grave of their own cell nuclei
simulacra replicated trillions of times in one body
but didn’t their feet stink
for your feet not to smell bad you have to take your shoes off

Don't Blame Saint Patrick

Genitum, non factum. Consubstantialem Patri.

Blond kid again not the same one
toeing the rubber

Trinity purple
versus Trinity green

runner on second
how’d he get on

finally kid throws
too fast for the big metal bat, but

ball in play runners don’t stop
massive grounder home run

green-shirt jubilation
Trinity wins

Thursday, June 2, 2016

Beautiful Thoughts

"To Come So," Sister Mary Virginia Micka


the body's attractiveness
poignant
but kitschy

O Holy One
I am ashamed
to come so full of words

Satipatana meditation
bones of my corpse
turning to dust

but my body
is not
repulsive

we can love ourselves
and love
our impermanence

traditions can’t live
unless
their elders die

the poet can’t know if
the little bird
will ever fly