Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    New and Selected Poems

    Prev Next


      In Praise of Worms

      I only have faith in you, Mr. Worm.

      You are efficient and dependable

      As you go about your grim business.

      There’s a carcass of a dead cat

      Waiting for you in a roadside ditch,

      And cries from an outdoor birthday party

      As one young girl spins and falls

      With a blindfold over her eyes

      Underneath some trees festooned

      With pennants and Chinese lanterns.

      A stroke of lightning and a few raindrops

      Is all it took to make them run indoors

      And restore the peace in their yard,

      So you could take cover under a leaf

      And go over your appointment book,

      Cross out a name here and there,

      Ponder an address or two and set out

      In your slow way to pay someone a visit

      Among the rich scents of summer night

      And the sky brimming with stars.

      The Lives of the Alchemists

      The great labor was always to efface oneself,

      Reappear as something entirely different:

      The pillow of a young woman in love,

      A ball of lint pretending to be a spider.

      Black boredoms of rainy country nights

      Thumbing the writings of illustrious adepts

      Offering advice on how to proceed with the transmutation

      Of a figment of time into eternity.

      The true master, one of them counseled,

      Needs a hundred years to perfect his art.

      In the meantime, the small arcana of the frying pan,

      The smell of olive oil and garlic wafting

      From room to empty room, the black cat

      Rubbing herself against your bare leg

      While you shuffle toward the distant light

      And the tinkle of glasses in the kitchen.

      X

      from MY NOISELESS ENTOURAGE

      Description of a Lost Thing

      It never had a name,

      Nor do I remember how I found it.

      I carried it in my pocket

      Like a lost button

      Except it wasn’t a button.

      Horror movies,

      All-night cafeterias,

      Dark barrooms

      And poolhalls,

      On rain-slicked streets.

      It led a quiet, unremarkable existence

      Like a shadow in a dream,

      An angel on a pin,

      And then it vanished.

      The years passed with their row

      Of nameless stations,

      Till somebody told me this is it!

      And fool that I was,

      I got off on an empty platform

      With no town in sight.

      Self-Portrait in Bed

      For imaginary visitors, I had a chair

      Made of cane I found in the trash.

      There was a hole where its seat was

      And its legs were wobbly

      But it still gave a dignified appearance.

      I myself never sat in it, though

      With the help of a pillow one could do that

      Carefully, with knees drawn together

      The way she did once,

      Leaning back to laugh at her discomfort.

      The lamp on the night table

      Did what it could to bestow

      An air of mystery to the room.

      There was a mirror, too, that made

      Everything waver as in a fishbowl

      If I happened to look that way,

      Red-nosed, about to sneeze,

      With a thick wool cap pulled over my ears,

      Reading some Russian in bed,

      Worrying about my soul, I’m sure.

      To Dreams

      I’m still living at all the old addresses,

      Wearing dark glasses even indoors,

      On the hush-hush sharing my bed

      With phantoms, visiting the kitchen

      After midnight to check the faucet.

      I’m late for school, and when I get there

      No one seems to recognize me.

      I sit disowned, sequestered and withdrawn.

      These small shops open only at night

      Where I make my unobtrusive purchases,

      These back-door movie houses in seedy neighborhoods

      Still showing grainy films of my life.

      The hero always full of extravagant hope

      Losing it all in the end?—whatever it was—

      Then walking out into the cold, disbelieving light

      Waiting close-lipped at the exit.

      My Noiseless Entourage

      We were never formally introduced.

      I had no idea of their number.

      It was like a discreet entourage

      Of homegrown angels and demons

      All of whom I had met before

      And had since largely forgotten.

      In time of danger, they made themselves scarce.

      Where did they all vanish to?

      I asked some felon one night

      While he held a knife to my throat,

      But he was spooked too,

      Letting me go without a word.

      It was disconcerting, downright frightening

      To be reminded of one’s solitude,

      Like opening a children’s book—

      With nothing better to do—reading about stars,

      How they can afford to spend centuries

      Traveling our way on a glint of light.

      Used Clothing Store

      A large stock of past lives

      To rummage through

      For the one that fits you

      Cleaned and newly pressed,

      Yet frayed at the collar.

      A dummy dressed in black

      Is at the door to serve you.

      His eyes won’t let you go.

      His mustache looks drawn

      With a tip of a dead cigar.

      Towers of pants are tilting,

      As you turn to flee,

      Dead men’s hats are rolling

      On the floor, hurrying

      To escort you out the door.

      Voyage to Cythera

      I’ll go to the island of Cythera

      On foot, of course,

      I’ll set out some May evening,

      Light as a feather,

      There where the goddess is fabled to have risen

      Naked from the sea—

      I’ll jump over a park fence

      Right where the lilacs are blooming

      And the trees are feverish with new leaves.

      The swing I saw in a painting once

      Is surely here somewhere?

      And so is the one in a long white dress,

      With eyes blindfolded

      Who gropes her way down a winding path

      Among her masked companions

      Wearing black capes and carrying daggers.

      This is all a dream, fellows,

      I’ll say after they empty my pockets.

      And so are you, my love,

      Carrying a Chinese lantern

      And running off with my wallet

      In the descending darkness.

      Used Book Store

      Lovers hold hands in never-opened novels.

      The page with a recipe for cucumber soup is missing.

      A dead man writes of his happy childhood on a farm,

      Of riding in a balloon over Lake Erie.

      A sudden draft shuts his book in my hand,

      While a philosopher asks how is it possible

      To maintain the theologically orthodox doctrine

      Of eternal punishment of the damned?

      Let’s see. There may be sand among the pages

      Of a travel guide to Egypt or even a dead flea

      That once bit the ass of the mysterious Abigail

      Who scribbled her name teasingly with an eye pencil.

      Battling Grays

      Another grim-
    lipped day coming our way

      Like a gray soldier

      From the Civil War monument

      Footloose on a narrow country road

      With few homes lately foreclosed,

      Their windows the color of rain puddles

      About to freeze, their yards choked

      With weeds and rusty cars.

      Small hills like mounds of ashes

      Of your dead cigar, general,

      Standing bewhiskered and surveying

      What the light is in no hurry

      To fall upon, including, of course,

      Your wound, red and bubbling

      Like an accordion, as you raise your saber

      To threaten the clouds in the sky.

      Sunlight

      As if you had a message for me . . .

      Tell me about the grains of dust

      On my night table?

      Is any one of them worth your trouble?

      Your burglaries leave no thumbprint.

      Mine, too, are silent.

      I do my best imagining at night,

      And you do yours with the help of shadows.

      Like conspirators hatching a plot,

      They withdrew one by one

      Into corners of the room.

      Leaving me the sole witness

      Of your burning oratory.

      If you did say something, I’m none the wiser.

      The breakfast finished,

      The coffee dregs were unenlightening.

      Like a lion cage at feeding time—

      The floor at my feet had turned red.

      Minds Roaming

      My neighbor was telling me

      About her blind cat

      Who goes out at night—

      Goes where? I asked.

      Just then my dead mother called me in

      To wash my hands

      Because supper was on the table:

      The little mouse the cat caught.

      Talk Radio

      “I was lucky to have a Bible with me.

      When the space aliens abducted me . . .”

      America, I shouted at the radio,

      Even at 2 A.M. you are a loony bin!

      No, I take it back!

      You are a stone angel in the cemetery

      Listening to the geese in the sky,

      Your eyes blinded by snow.

      My Turn to Confess

      A dog trying to write a poem on why he barks,

      That’s me, dear reader!

      They were about to kick me out of the library

      But I warned them,

      My master is invisible and all-powerful.

      Still, they kept dragging me out by the tail.

      In the park the birds spoke freely of their own vexations.

      On a bench, I saw an old woman

      Cutting her white curly hair with imaginary scissors

      While staring into a small pocket mirror.

      I didn’t say anything then,

      But that night I lay slumped on the floor,

      Chewing on a pencil,

      Sighing from time to time,

      Growling, too, at something out there

      I could not bring myself to name.

      On the Farm

      The cows are to be slaughtered

      And the sheep, too, of course.

      The same for the hogs sighing in their pens—

      And as for the chickens,

      Two have been killed for dinner tonight,

      While the rest peck side by side

      As the shadows lengthen in the yard

      And bales of hay turn gold in the fields.

      One cow has stopped grazing

      And has looked up puzzled

      Seeing a little white cloud

      Trot off like a calf into the sunset.

      On the porch someone has pressed

      A rocking chair into service

      But we can’t tell who it is—a stranger,

      Or that boy of ours who never has anything to say?

      Snowy Morning Blues

      The translator is a close reader.

      He wears thick glasses

      As he peers out the window

      At the snowy fields and bushes

      That are like a sheet of paper

      Covered with quick scribble

      In a language he knows well enough,

      Without knowing any words in it,

      Only what the eyes discern,

      And the heart intuits of its idiom.

      So quiet now, not even a faint

      Rustle of a page being turned

      In a white and wordless dictionary

      For the translator to avail himself

      Before whatever words are left

      Grow obscure in the coming darkness.

      To Fate

      You were always more real to me than God.

      Setting up the props for a tragedy,

      Hammering the nails in

      With only a few close friends invited to watch.

      Just to be neighborly, you made a pretty girl lame,

      Ran over a child with a motorcycle.

      I can think of many other examples.

      Ditto: How the two of us keep meeting.

      A fortunetelling gumball machine in Chinatown

      May have the answer,

      An old creaky door opening in a horror film,

      A pack of cards I left on a beach.

      I can feel you snuggle close to me at night,

      With your hot breath, your cold hands—

      And me already like an old piano

      Dangling out of a window at the end of a rope.

      Sweetest

      Little candy in death’s candy shop,

      I gave your sugar a lick

      When no one was looking,

      Took you for a ride on my tongue

      To all the secret places,

      Trying to appear above suspicion

      As I went about inspecting the confectionary,

      Greeting the owner with a nod

      With you safely tucked away

      And melting to nothing in my mouth.

      The Tragic Sense of Life

      Because few here recall the old wars,

      The burning of Atlanta and Dresden,

      The great-uncle who lies in Arlington,

      Or that Vietnam vet on crutches

      Who tries to bum a dime or a cigarette.

      The lake is still in the early-morning light.

      The road winds; I slow down to let

      A small, furry animal cross in a hurry.

      The few remaining wisps of fog

      Are like smoke rising out of cannons.

      In one little town flags fly over dark houses.

      Outside a church made of gray stone,

      The statue of the Virgin blesses the day.

      Her son is inside afraid to light a candle,

      Saying, Forgive one another, clothe the naked.

      Niobe and her children may live here.

      As for me, I don’t know where I am—

      And here I’m already leaving in a hurry

      Down a stretch of road with little to see,

      Dark woods everywhere closing in on me.

      In the Planetarium

      Never-yet-equaled, wide-screen blockbuster

      That grew more and more muddled

      After a spectacular opening shot.

      The pace, even for the most patient

      Killingly slow despite the promise

      Of a show-stopping, eye-popping ending:

      The sudden shriveling of the whole

      To its teensy starting point, erasing all—

      Including this bag of popcorn we are sharing.

      Yes, an intriguing but finally irritating

      Puzzle with no answer forthcoming tonight

      From the large cast of stars and galaxies

      In what may be called a prodigious

      Expenditure of time, money and talent.

      “Let’s get the fuck out of here,” I said

      Just as her upraised eyes grew moist

    &
    nbsp; And she confided to me, much too loudly,

      “I have never seen anything so beautiful.”

      The Absentee Landlord

      Surely, he could make it easier

      When it comes to inquiries

      As to his whereabouts.

      Rein in our foolish speculations,

      Silence our voices raised in anger,

      And not leave us alone

      With that curious feeling

      We sometimes have

      Of there being a higher purpose

      To our residing here

      Where nothing works

      And everything needs fixing.

      The least he could do is put up a sign:

      AWAY ON BUSINESS

      So we could see it,

      In the graveyard where he collects the rent

      Or in the night sky

      Where we address our complaints to him.

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026