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Imperfection
To leave a giant whole
Has been my only goal.
A place for friends and lovers
To gaze into,
Bottomless and deep,
Full of mystery as they think,
“Who was he, even?”
To leave my meaning everywhere
Has been my single care,
To gather love, to throw it out
To see what comes back,
Or not
To see what floats and sinks,
To dig my hole in peace
And gather things I see–
A handful of crushed dry leaves,
Bare feet in vernal ponds,
Kissed by tadpoles,
And now my oldest daughter’s eyes
Describing garra rufa fish
Then friends and lovers
And family members,
Slowly gather near again,
And shrink my hole to substance again,
Gather and hug and rejoice again,
Because my filled-in hole,
Gives then a place to stand again. -
Grandparents’ Houses
Time stood still at grandpa’s house.
That’s why he had all the clocks—
chiming and clicking to remind us time was, in fact, passing.
But after a while, you didn’t notice them,
just like you don’t notice you own breath,
or heartbeat,
until they finally fall silent.
Then, again, there is no time,
just a vast expanse, as wide as the Kansas prairie at sunset,
with the oranges and browns and yellows merging
at a horizon you will never reach.
I wonder if everyone sees their grandparents’ houses
As places where every object–
every smell,
every picture on the wall that’s hung for your entire life, and longer–
is infused with electric magic
that pulls at you from across the long hours
that hang in the back seat of a car,
like apples on a tree,
waiting to fall?The bottle cap frozen into the sidewalk,
The front porch catty corner from the farm implement place,
The train creaking and wailing past the grain elevator,
The big tree at the hospital, lit for Christmas,
The books in the back room, the fish in the tank,
The old woodworking magazines and Popular Mechanics, stacked
in a corner of the bathroom–
Everything sits and waits, gathering dust and magic.You need patience to get to such a place,
And patience is all they seem to have there—
the patience of a slow-melting snow,
the patience of watching a crop grow, and thrive, and fade,
the patience of waiting for us to come again. -
Mind and Me
See feet as feathers
Feet are feathers
See feet as stones
Feet are stonesMind is might
Mind is maybe
Mind is power
Mind is notThe same as brain–
Brain houses mind,
And mind is more
If you let it.Brain is matter–
Axons, dendrites,
Sodium-potassium pump
Create realityBut mind is electric
Mind is soul
Mind is numinous
Mind persistsWhen we go,
Flashing fog overhead–
All we knew
And all we wereJust waiting
For another conduit
Another current
To ride uponSee feet as feathers
Feet are feathers
See feet as stones
Feet are stones -
‘Lou Money
Fur money
Farm money
Boat money
Slave money
Sell you down the river for the
‘Lou moneyBrick money
Lead money
Iron money
Coal money
Dig it here, burn it there, turn it all back into
‘Lou moneyFeed money
Meat money
Beef money
Pork money
Open up and eat it, it’s just
‘Lou moneyTruck money
Barge money
Rail money
Bridge money
Go anywhere you want for your
‘Lou moneyGrocery money
Dry goods money
Shoe money
Hat money
Retail, wholesale, just don’t chase your own tail
‘Lou moneyStrike money
Riot money
Blood money
Greg’ry up the Arch money
Gotta walk the line for the
‘Lou moneyTank money
Shell money
Cartridge money
Bomb money
Wrestling at the Chase to win the
‘Lou moneyDoctor money
Funeral money
Grave money
Headstone money
It’s just the ’round and ’round of life with the
‘Lou money -
Lessons from Leonard
Leonard taught me to write short and plain.
He could say more in a four-line poem
(“If only we could win/(One of) these wars we like to start,” ends one)
Than all the free-form, stream of consciousness
Poets in the world, whose books fill the shelves
Of Target.He didn’t write anything as short as Ezra,
Who wrote a two-line poem about a station of the metro–
“petals on a wet, black bough”–
That serves as the very embodiment
(I learned in grad school)
Of Imagism.But Leonard, Oh, Leonard,
Captured the mysteries of war in just four lines,
Not a bad trick if you can do it, but still–
He also penned a song that made the Shrek movie,
And that is commonly mistaken as a song about
Christmas.How he must have hated that, I think–
The hardest thing is to be grossly misunderstood
(The man was Jewish, after all)
To write happy and have it heard as sad,
Or sad and have it heard as happy, or worse–
Accidental.Leonard’s poems and songs play on now
(He’ll be gone five years in November,
A time I was hell-bent on destroying my life and (luckily) failed)
Leonard wrote short, but Leonard thought long,
Lessons of love and sin and atonement that I couldn’t hear
Back then.Thanks, Leonard.
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Teenage Love Song
Well we sleep all night out
In the park
The lights are the brightest when it’s
Really dark
Then I wake up just to
Look at you
And you say hey, what you
Wanna do?
And I say …
I wanna get high
With you
Do all the bad things we
Shouldn’t do
Yeah I wanna get high
With you
Do all the bad things we
Shouldn’t do
Wake up wet all
Damp with dew
Grab a booth for breakfast eat an
Egg or two
Take hot shower in your
Parents’ house
Soak us in the tub to get off
All the dirt
Soak real long so we dont
Have to hurt
Because …
I wanna get high
With you
Do all the bad things we
Shouldn’t do
I say I wanna get high
With you
Do all the bad things we
Shouldn’t do
Now time crawls by then time goes fast
I pump on the breaks while you hit the gas
Now I’m not sure if I said it or dreamt it
I just hope that you never forget it!
Then we go to the bedroom flip on
Your TV
Pull down the nightshade so we don’t
Have to see
The world outside it’s so …
Confusing man
Pull the sheets over our heads ‘cause we don’t
Give a damn
And then …
I wanna get high
With you
Do all the bad things we
Shouldn’t do
One more time …
I wanna get high
With you
Do all the bad things we
Shouldn’t do
Do all the bad things
We wanted to -
The Garden Inside
My baby has a garden inside
That’s never grown as planned
Weeds and sprouts and oddball things
But nothing on demand.For 30 years she kept her watch
As the garden just lay barren
Even worse came uglier things
Borne of toil, blood, and barrowThe garden blossomed only twice,
Once in summer, once in fall–
Two wild flowers, but constant and true
Who grew, but that’s not all–Their tendrils twined around our hands
Their blooms up to the sun
Their gentle stems a balm to us
Their roots where they’d begunAnd now we see the garden’s gone
But oh, what’s left behind–
Proof that when the world’s gone mad
The best buds stay behind -
Relative Motions
“Alone, rising from the level of the plain, and appearing lost in the open country, the two steeples of Martinville ascended toward the sky. Soon we saw three: wheeling around boldly to position itself opposite them, the laggard steeple of Vieuxvicq had come along to join them. . . . Then the steeple of Vieuxvicq moved away, receded into the distance and the steeples of Martinville remained alone. . . . We continued on our way; we had already left Martinville a little while before, and the village, after accompanying us for a few seconds, had disappeared, when, lingering alone of the horizon to watch us flee, its steeples and that of Vieuxvicq still waved good-bye with their sunlit tops. At times one of them would draw aside so that the other two could glimpse us again for an instant; but the road changed direction, they swung around in the light like three golden pivots and disappeared from my gaze. But a little later, when we were already close to Combray, and the sun had set, I caught sight of them one last time from very far away, seeming now no more than three flowers painted on the day above the low line of fields. . . . and while we moved off at a gallop, I saw them timidly seek their way and, after some awkward stumbling of their noble silhouettes, press against one another, slip behind one another, now forming, against the still pink sky, no more than a single black shape, charming and resigned, and fade away into the night.”
–Marcel Proust, Swann’s Way, “Combray”
Sidewalk blocks move fast,
Being about the length of a stride,
And to the right and left, grass blurs by,
But a tree 20 feet away moves slower,
And a tree 20 feet beyond even slower,
The first tree moving to eclipse the other,
Which moves then from the left to the right,
As roofs, steeples, other trees further off
Move the slowest of all, eventually eclipsed
By even the second tree.It’s all illusion, of course–
Everything moves at the same pace,
Which is to say, nothing moves at all, but you–
You are the only thing moving
(except that everything is moving, the earth spinning,
but that’s another story).
A firetruck approaches from behind,
All those tightly compressed sound waves wailing,
Or making a trick like wailing,
And when the truck passes you,
The sounds quickly blurs and fades
As you are left in a wake of wider and wider waves,
Scattered.Time is the same, as events nearer to us speed by,
And events in the past are frozen in mind, eye, and time.
You can’t change them, and as soon as the near events pass,
You can’t change them, either. It’s all past.There must be a formula for this, I think,
Like when I learned that the ratio of sides in a 30-60-90 triangle
is 1x to 2x to the square-roof-of-three x.
I spent a summer once measuring the height of trees with this formula,
A string dropped from a branch and held to the ground
To form the 60 degree angle, and the height of the tree
Was then exactly twice the distance of that angle of string and ground
To the trunk.Sure, I could have just dropped the string straight down,
Then measured the string, but where’s the fun in that?This is how my brain works. This is why I loved geometry.
This is why I still say that, in terms of learning to write.
Taking Geometry was the best thing I ever did.
Euclid, Pythagoras, Archimedes–they figured it out,
Did the calculations, wrote the proofs, all while moving
–at their own pace–
With their own pasts frozen on the horizon,
Superstition, magic, wild guesses to make sense of it all.They ended all that because they knew,
As surely as a sailor knows that following a particular star will move him “north,”
That time and sound and light and space
Don’t move with us, but simply seem to move with us,
And faster, too,
The closer they are to ourselves. -
Origins Story
I want to go home in the spring–
Run the Parkway’s green hills,
Packed thick with Loess soil and history,
Accidents of birth–
Roads curling beyond themselves,
The creek, the ball fields,
The secret places along the way,
Hidden by trees and shrubs,
Into the woods, deeper, deeper,
So much unexplored, even by me,
But passed by on the way to the pool,
King Hill, the water tank on top, and below–
Stockyards, empty now but teeming once with life
And death, and dust, and cries, and stench . . .
And to the north, all the way across town,
Wyeth Hill, near the Parkway’s other terminus.
Sad town, slow town, hugging the brown water,
The highway and streets and the bridge crossing the river.
This is the Genesis, the home of sins (original and not),
The Alpha and Omega.
The long summer days of bicycles, golf balls, and beer cans,
Begin here and end here and in between,
Only the lilting funk of sweat meeting spring.