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    Miss Lena Raven and Other Poems

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      Thirteen feet

      from Mrs. Brown's step,

      it showed just enough

      to cause generations

      of scars and bruises.

      I dreamed of using TNT

      to blast it loose

      not foreseeing

      a landing in

      this garden

      prone to knotweed.

      What boy could imagine

      that the man would know

      the rock at second clank

      but not have the back

      to build the wall

      of boyhood dreams? --

      settle for just

      a doorstop.

      Cannoball

      We met at your obituary:

      Emanuel Zacchini, dead at 84,

      set the human cannonball

      record: 175 feet, 54 MPH in 1940.

      (Only one “n” in cannonball)

      You returned me to childhood,

      a one-ring circus, a sideshow

      featuring an exotic dancer.

      Even if I’d had the money

      I was too young to enter

      so I lifted a tent flaps

      as if skirts

      but couldn’t locate her.

      I settled for the cannon man.

      I saw his pockmarked face.

      A cigarette fighting

      a shaky hand

      down to fingertips.

      His costume was the grey

      of his launcher.

      Even his cape was patched.

      He seemed unaware

      of any record worth breaking

      except one that would fire him

      through the “little top”

      and into peaceful orbit.

      The blast wasn’t in sync

      with the spring.

      He hit the net previous

      to the cloud of smoke.

      I imagined the boom a sound

      effect from that exotic

      dancer’s delicious bumps.

      The obit reported

      no worldwide memorial

      cannon salutes

      nor clear sky turning

      gun metal grey.

      No clergyman praying

      that all your years

      of eternity

      feel like nineteen-forty.

      Steel Shot Zone

      Bars line the shopping center

      gun shop windows.

      The owner is authorized

      to sell Remington,

      Browning, Smith & Wesson.

      A sign asks, “What politician’s

      Oldsmobile killed more

      people than my gun?”

      A Jersey barrier sits

      sidewalk width

      from the door.

      There’s blue-red revolver

      and rifle neon in the transom.

      This is a Winchester

      Steel Shot Zone

      and there’s Nitex

      to polish your firearms.

      Sitting outside in your car

      with coffee and newspaper

      any April, June or November

      morn you might hear

      Dion singing on the radio

      recall where you were

      two of the shootings.

      At the gun shop you can buy

      Yellowjacket ammo,

      a Weatherby Scope,

      walk away with a Marlin rifle,

      a speed loader for your pistol.

      Mother Fog

      Route 8

      fog tricks

      a Buick into

      smashing

      into a pickup

      full of roadwork

      cones.

      Instantly

      the driver dies.

      One worker’s

      leg, cleanly

      cut just above

      the knee

      lies

      by a pothole.

      Denim rag

      and sock

      still life

      completion.

      Lifting fog

      reveals in blur

      the escapee

      boot

      voila! erect

      but hides the body

      like a mother’s skirts.

      Wind and Sand

      The record played and played

      as I chased sleep on the floor.

      The Sax dipped to the lowest

      notes I’ve ever dreamed,

      covering me like Medea’s robe.

      I woke just as I started to melt.

      Standing on the Lido with her,

      sirocco blowing, sandy ices

      dripping over our fingers,

      we found the children

      still alive and running

      to us showing shells.

      Mythic Alms

      Black-winged redbirds southerly race

      over a bottle-bound stranger staggering

      to a house with drooping gutters,

      paint cracking like winter lips.

      Heady bebop jazz jumps at him

      when Olympia opens the warped door.

      I’m not afraid of death, he says.

      It’s probably like leaping

      into the ocean’s hip pocket

      just fine when your eyes adjust

      much like a movie house.

      But at the moment cheese.

      The music distracts her

      and she thinks of melodies

      rushing in menthol rivers crushed

      in a red mill’s pokey wheel.

      I’ve seen you before she says,

      on a listing liner in a seaweed tux,

      pint after pint pinching you

      past the cheeks of calendars and clocks.

      Cheese, everyday American in all I ask.

      Last time you wanted scarlet

      stories warbled from pages made

      of feathers from my mattress

      atop a bed of decaying brass.

      Ah, the sonata of fondling,

      the parchment laughter!

      Cheese first, lady.

      The birds are gone, she says,

      so crack the pact with Ahab,

      he’s no birder; tanagers have

      never showered in the mist

      of leviathans.

      Bluesy harmonica for some cheese!

      I’ll ballpoint scrimshaw

      on your boney back, he says,

      crossing his eyes and drooling.

      A grackle flies in the door

      and Olympia applauds.

      No scarlet, but he or she will do

      the singing to trail the bloody

      echo searching for silence

      in this squeaky cottage mansion.

      Walking to the back yard, the stranger

      pulls on his liter wine bottle.

      From a window, Olympia hums an aria,

      tosses cubes of blue cheese and cheddar.

      The Last Episode

      Mumble of rain streaming

      Swiftly through

      Copper gutters

      But for spotty verdigris

      Nearly a river of gold

      Grey gloves absentmindedly

      Buff the long silver handles

      But for the fine wood

      Sturdy staffs to guide

      Through paths of wilderness

      Cloudy rehearsal in a mirror

      The black sheep vows

      Not to break at graveside—

      Schooling with hard lip

      Bite and pinch cues

      First dirt hits the box

      Like a handful of drought

      Flung against a barn

      Straining, the vaguely

      Welcome stray

      Musters up

      What hate remains

      Yet does not quake

      On kilter he walks

      To the limo so safe

      In murky disguise

      Spying some stranger

      In the wax fighting

      The beading rain.

      The World

      Smile and I’ll call you the sun

     
    ; says Carlo the street man,

      gut is too big

      for his buttons

      to a woman

      whose globe earrings

      remind Carlo

      of ones that used to sit

      atop small pencil sharpeners

      in grammar school.

      He tells her he had a globe

      bank once and he is a planet.

      Count the blue rivers,

      lakes and streams

      on my dying belly.

      Carlo names her the sun

      although she refuses

      to beam.

      A coin she tosses lands

      with a barely audible slap

      on his version

      of the Mississippi

      and Ohio confluence.

      Her perfume mixes

      with the aroma of trash

      overflowing a barrel.

      The scent faintly reminds

      Carlo of pencil shavings

      he used to empty

      when he was every

      nun’s pet.

      Arbor Day

      With the parents buried

      there’s no winner posted

      in the contest of care.

      Strange, such a fragile

      quality should splinter

      so large a family

      like a boy’s balsa

      wood model plane

      against an oak.

      Now the apartment

      to be cleared and each

      one plots to work alone.

      On a kitchen shelf,

      among the herbs and spices

      a long lost roll of film

      catches an eye.

      A son wonders what days,

      what faces, are furled

      tightly as swallowed grief.

      His mind develops stills

      of sweeter scenes

      and as if stung by poison

      thorns, he tosses

      the find into the trash.

      But thinking twice, he pulls

      it from the coffee grounds

      run outside and pokes

      around for some soft earth.

      With the hope of a child

      sowing seeds of fancy,

      dreaming orchards of candy

      and such, he plants that roll.

      Imagines black-edged leaves

      against the sun, the calico

      tones of a clan reborn.

      Redemption

      I figure sirens

      panicked

      the driver

      into tossing

      the fat wallet:

      eight singles,

      a Green Card

      and a snapshot

      of a girl

      three or four

      out the window.

      There was cocaine

      too, snug against

      a laminated

      Blessed Virgin

      prayer.

      Returning my find

      intact, postage paid,

      I had no regrets

      although many

      would argue

      my act was

      in no way

      good.

      I felt great

      just helping out.

      Well, think of it –

      mystery me

      celebrated in

      duel tongues

      on clicking

      rosary beads,

      folded into

      family lore

      like a lucky

      dollar bill.

      Dylan and the Missus

      Ours was not a love story proper; it was

      more a drink story. Predominately a drink

      story because without the first aid of drink

      it could never have gotten on its rocking feet.

      -- Caitlin Thomas

      Drink and brawl

      and bedlam made

      up the marriage

      motto until it failed

      him in the White

      Horse Tavern, 1953.

      Sprawled in St Vinnie’s

      comatose, he heard

      her vaguely --

      like a poem

      in the eye

      of a howl.

      She bit one

      attendant,

      fought

      the others

      but couldn’t maul

      the woman sitting

      at his death side.

      No fray could

      rouse him,

      so goodbye Dylan.

      What’s left?

      Marry a Sicilian

      film director --

      outlive the poet

      bastard four decades.

      Share his grave

      near the sea,

      turn a ghost ear

      to the gossip

      of tourists

      stone-rubbers

      and tides.

      Vinnie's Girls

      Of the Project girls

      who were nuts over Vinnie

      Bern was the one

      we could least understand

      because she’d escaped,

      married a sane guy

      with a good job

      who was more

      handsome.

      They had a kid

      a mortgage and a new car

      but she kept sneaking out.

      One time before Vinnie got fired

      from EPS it was rumored

      the husband wanted to settle it

      once and for all and would be

      waiting near the White Tower

      we walked by to get

      to the Town Lounge

      to watch the minute hand’s

      fifteen ticks to last call.

      I remember Vinnie’s switchblade

      practice flashing in the rain

      under a parking lot light.

      Hubby showed and a deal

      was struck without bloodshed

      that led to Bern’s divorce

      and loss of custody.

      I last saw her outside a Five & Dime.

      Lighting a cigarette she was shaky,

      but smiled.

      After Vinnie’s luck ran out,

      Bern and the other Project girls

      liked how dependable

      prison made him.

      They might have fought over

      who talked through the screen first

      but in time release a bullet

      to the temple

      set up the graveyard hours.

      When the gate was locked

      the stone wall wasn't tall.

      Petal Smoke

      The Sleeping Giant

      is more than a landscape

      in the hills

      to climbers

      who have tumbled

      to death.

      He mingles in dreams

      restless seeds

      and corms collect.

      The Giant gathers

      his ghosts

      at Castle Craig

      less for haunting

      than to cheer brethren

      carrying their fire.

      Bulbs like fists of altar boys

      raise daffodils

      as if candle snuffers

      that will turn

      upon themselves

      as the ghosts and their Giant

      inhale petal smoke

      like old men

      savoring

      burning leaves.

      Hal Lives

      Seventeen years a prisoner:

      robbery, kidnapping, assault,

      mostly a frame-up he says.

      Yet he fought one more

      Garden fight, age 42,

      knocked out cold.

      Ten days later buying a suit,

      a shotgun blast

      ripped through his palm

      claimed eight teeth

      and his upper lip.

      A thirty-eight slug

      in the gut, two in the chest,

      eleven more scattered

      as if the contract read

      so many ounces of lead.

      One sh
    otgun round laced

      his butt for the finale.

      But Hal lives

      in a flat without power.

      His top denture slips

      when he explains that

      young boxers are meeker

      than in old times.

      The hand he uses to cross

      himself passing Our Lady

      of Mount Carmel Church

      still blurs speed bags.

      (Inspiration: NYT article by Ian Fisher)

      Corpse Work

      The golf club Luke uses for a cane

      is beside him on the sidewalk

      like a pratfall prop.

      The V.A. has flattened him again!

      He’s a stunt man for experimental drugs.

      Resting on his elbows,

      Luke imagines a clown film showing

      on the garage across the street.

      They are falling like drunks

      and sick old veterans.

      Their costumes are his

      mismatched plaids.

      His sneakers are as big

      as Bozo shoes yet won’t tie

      right his feet keep swelling.

      This tumble is not as bad

      as the one last July

      when Luke was on his back

      for half a day.

      Nice the TV was on for company.

      Someone will pick him up soon.

      Maybe a guy who just lost his dad

      and didn’t get to say goodbye.

      The kid might buy some beer.

      Luke will play the father,

      smile, nod and forgive,

      say everything is fine

      like an old stunt man

      who has taken falls enough

      to appreciate corpse work.

      A STUDENT’S WILLIAMS, YEATS, FROST,

      CRANE AND THOMAS UNDERLININGS

      IN A NORTON ANTHOLGY

      MINGLED WITH HER NOTES.

      The puppets on her spring

      break are wool gathering.

      The robots of St. Louis

      stop the desire to be whole

      and she embraces the split

      image like two strangers.

      A child looks like what

      she imagines her

      unreachable lover looked

      like as a boy.

      His austere beauty

      is not romanticized.

      Reality is not superior

      to environmental

      inhibitors.

      A glacier can only go so

      so far and then retreat.

      Even Augustine

      could not give

      his mistress up.

      But this boy is ignorant

      of the cinema myth

      as this day ends

      for businessmen.

      The fusion of nature

      and technology

      failed again.

      So what was that

      little object you were

      searching for?

      Sarajevo Smoke Break

      No blossoms,

      real or everlasting.

      Just fleeting ones.

      two cigarettes

      like cuttings

      set in soil

      remembering

      nicotina.

      Stanislav smoked fervently

      so first death anniversary

      his sister and mother

      share his greatest joy.

      The girl thinks her brother

      would have cheered the film

      star who said the fault lies

      in the face not tobacco—

      a single mouth to enjoy it.

      She smiles and exhales

      out her nose.

      Her mother wonders how to quit.

      A year would clean her lungs

      which serves to remind her

      of ethnic cleansing.

      She inhales deeply

      as if recreating

      her son’s last breath.

      The fumes find no ring

      but a rose

      in her lungs

      like in a lavish garden

      she half recalls.

      She offers it to Stanislav

      and it survives

      dull scissor snips of air.

      She controls her coughing

      as if a chant.

      (Inspired by Rachel Cobb photograph)

      Among Thieves

      When Robby

      OD’d, Charlie got

      a lot of flack

      for going to the wake.

      It went back

      to the burglary

     


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