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    A Chapter of Verses


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    r of Verses

      By Richard George

      Copyright 2013 by Richard George

      Verses encapsulate a moment. A few words shape an incident in the cosmos. The moment may be defined by an image, an event, an emotion, or a whimsy. A new perspective expresses a reality, sometimes one so obscure even the poet is unsure what it is. Then along comes a reader, reads the poem, and another perspective is born. Reader, enjoy making out with these poems.

      Making Poems

      I stuffed an ibis

      I caught one dream

      with cotton swabs

      from aspirin bottles.

      I stitched the skin

      with nylon thread

      from raveled socks

      and waxed the beak

      with paraffin

      from jelly jars.

      I propped it up

      against the wall

      above my mantel.

      It shook its wings

      and flew away.

      Villanelle for a Silver God

      I made a silver god

      and put it in a shrine.

      I thought my work was good.

      I made an altar of wood

      and set it on the lawn.

      I made a silver god

      with eyes I painted red,

      because I was alone.

      I thought my work was good.

      A priest came by and said,

      when everything was done,

      I made a silver god

      because I was so bad.

      I did not think I sinned;

      I thought my work was good.

      He was amazed, and mad

      with faith, he burned my shrine.

      I made a silver god.

      I thought my work was good.

      A Caveat to New Converts

      Beware the Tiger hidden in the Lamb,

      his wool-sheathed claws and sheep’s eyes veiling fire.

      Hosea married Gomer, a common whore,

      and got three children in her well-worn womb

      under the Tiger. Jeremiah came

      to Jerusalem a poet, and wore

      away his poetry and died a bore

      in Egypt. Lamb-beguiled, the saintly dream

      of fleece and limpid eyes. The Tiger waits,

      crouching in the wool, to strip and break their bones.

      Dream on, oh would-be saints, of God, of sweets

      in Paradise, rewards for repented sins.

      Sleep with the Lamb between the silken sheets.

      You’ll wake to find the Tiger always wins.

      A Dream of Dolls

      I dream of dolls

      under my feet.

      Their celluloid heads

      crackle and crunch

      as I walk over them.

      Their plastic hair

      tangles my toes,

      threatening to trip me.

      I wake, terrified,

      to find my lover

      shelling walnuts

      and my toes wriggling

      through the holes in my socks.

      Ossuary

      Lost in a search for God and truth,

      I wander on wind-worried silt,

      stepping over bleaching bones

      others left in this barren place.

      Barren myself, a spastic puppet,

      yearning for an ever-absent god,

      I shake my fist at uncaring skies.

      This is a storehouse of crumbling skulls,

      a place designed for stacking bones

      in piles ordered by length of shin,

      in heaps by size of scapulas.

      I will wander till thirst and dust

      strip my bones and I lie down

      in this ossuary of broken faith.

      God Thoughts

      The pious people come to church

      shining and clean from soap and water

      to hear the clergy caw of god.

      The pulpit crows presume to hedge

      divinity with scarecrows conjured

      from rags of their own dustbin natures.

      Priests fear the unchained power of god.

      Pagan and saint alike craft idols

      plaster gods to front our fears

      and cardboard saints to be our models.

      Whatever god might be is other,

      beyond our naming. We need our idols;

      what use is a god we cannot know?

      Do not smash our idols, lord.

      Ascension Sunday

      Three sparrows play musical roost

      on a wire across the street.

      A robin gathers weeds for a nest

      she’s building in the elm. The preacher

      says “Glory, Hallelujah!

      God’s gone to heaven in glory.”

      His shouting scares the birds,

      scares them into the heavens.

      Elegy for a Dead God

      My God died yesterday.

      Outside my windows rat claws

      scrabble waltzes on the sidewalks.

      My God of the golden smile

      died in an alley last night

      among the orange peels

      and scraps of Styrofoam cups.

      Under the neon stars

      knives flashed and fell and rose

      to slash at him again,

      again, ‘til he fell and died

      in a huddled heap by the gutter.

      His laughter is lost on the wind

      prowling the hidden alleys.

      His unseeing eyes are staring

      at an empty sliver of sky.

      Overnight, I’ve grown old.

      I stumble. My feet make echoes

      in the hollow chambers of our house.

      Outside the devils chatter

      like copulating squirrels.

      I’m too feeble to silence the devils.

      Elvis Redemptor

      They come, arid of spirit,

      to worship their Elvis Redemptor.

      His face has appeared in the rust

      on a public bathroom’s tiles.

      They bring their paper flowers,

      to wreathe the holy picture,

      some light candles on the drains,

      some offer their teddy bears.

      The pilgrims shuffle in lines,

      waiting to plead with Elvis,

      plead for water to cleanse them,

      plead for Elvis to fill them.

      They go away empty,

      their nostrils pinched together

      against the reek of stale urine

      and the dust from their own dry hearts.

      Geas

      I must go to the desert, to the clean high country.

      I will call on the winds to sweep away

      the cobwebs the city has spun in my soul.

      I will call on the sand to scour the scale

      from my mind until my thoughts run true.

      I must go among the mesas and rimrock,

      and walk through the sage and rabbit brush,

      breathing their pollen to clean my lungs.

      I must go where nothing grows with ease,

      I must go to my brothers, coyote and deer,

      go where the rattlesnake has her dominion,

      I must go to the desert, the clean high country.

      Abandoned Promise

      I thirst for god, the promised water.

      The springs I drink from are pools of mud.

      The low wells yield a brackish drink

      thick with salt and rotting matter.

      I walk in barrens. My skin is caked

      with salt from my sweat. Sand crusts in my eyes.

      I cry challenge to God the Promiser.

      “Why have you left me broken in this bitter land?

      Here sun has bleached the bushes white

      and bord
    ered the leaves with brown.

      The hot sand glares like amber glass.

      The copper sky sears like a skillet.

      The winds bob and weave in the thistles,

      spreading their thorny seeds on the sand.

      I walk this place and stir up dust.

      It fills my throat and clogs my nostrils.”

      God does not answer, preoccupied

      perhaps, or dead, or harrowing hell

      or otherwise divinely bemused.

      I stumble over the mountain’s bones

      crying through the parch in my throat.

      One day some other unfortunate

      will stumble over my brittle bones

      and fall face forward in the sand and thistles,

      and I won’t care I’m no longer alone.

      Out of the Shadow

      Shunning my shadows has shaped my way.

      Sure I knew the geas of God,

      I stifled the cry of the Spirit within me.

      I danced with angels and dallied with demons

      bound in the pages of the books I studied.

      Weary with turmoil and tumults of spirit,

      I sought haven in a prairie pulpit,

      earnest to soothe my soul in service.

      I affirmed my faith with false fervor,

      gulled with dogmas of God and goodness.

      My shadow deepened, light shunned me as shameful

      I made demons of failure from my fear of freedom.

      Broken, I yielded to the folly I’d fled from,

      and there was God, greeting me with laughter

      and holy healing for heart and mind.

      Sunday Morning

      Old prayers hang from the chapel rafters,

      fallen short of the ears of God,

      dried bats of piety gone dusty.

      The choir intones a solemn hymn,

      a dirge for faith sucked dry of hope.

      The preacher thumbs his tattered Bible,

      seeking a text to prompt his sermon.

      In the market the people sell and buy.

      Two fall in love; two others part.

      One wins a game; one loses money.

      One gives birth; one kills his brother.

      The nodding congregation waits

      to hear the benediction amen

      before they brave the market again.

      Anything is Possible in California

      I bought a tangerine to eat beside

      the California ocean. Rain and wind

      had washed the people away. The ebbing tide

      grasped at the shore; its wrinkled fingers found

      no purchase on the sand. The surf was cream

      on the coffee beach. I used my toe to write

      my name and town. Seaweed erasers came;

      their bobbing pods rubbed all the letters out.

      I sat to peel and eat the tangerine.

      Wavelets tickled my toes and made me laugh.

      Above me I heard a wheeling gull complain

      to God. I threw the peeling at a cliff

      of cloud, and kindled the west with scarlet fire.

      Tomorrow morning I’ll gild the dawn with a pear.

      The Copper God

      I tooled a mold from clay,

      melted copper, and cast a god.

      For eyes I ground pebbles

      from green bottle shards.

      I carved a niche from the rock

      along a mountain highway,

      a shrine to hold my god.

      Most travelers passed it by,

      but occasional pilgrims stopped

      to offer flowers or prayers,

      and once a teddy bear

      with a single button eye.

      When the high


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