| (Sleep is a dangerous choice)
(2010-01)
Sleep is a dangerous choice. Voluptuous and strange, borne off course, ranging wide on a foreign horse. A choice, strange, and forced.
He decides. I hear a voice saying: he decides. A strong voice, familiar, my own, inside. He decides. In the cellar he decides.
I crouch like a frog on the bed and run my fingers through my hair, I stroke all the skin on my head, my lips, my ears, and down from there. My shoulder blade says I'm not dead. My belly tells me why I care. I weave myself out of this thread. My warm hands cover everywhere.
Clothed again in my own skin, I decide. I decide to take up the risks of sleep and the word.
I won't worry the day away over what never was, but I'll stay up all night for one good line.
One good line, and Jan gives me an extra hug, and Sue turns the page. Pam gasps, Paul chuckles, Maria twinkles, and Mark snickers. Even Tom requests an encore and Julia goes: huh.
One good line, and for a moment we all wake up.
And me, I just get through the night.
| |
| (why do you leave)
(2009-08)
why do you leave your eyes open in bed your tag sticking out at the back of your neck
I think on purpose your tag sticking out your eyes open in bed why do you leave
for my kiss at the back of your neck your tag sticking out so I'll tuck you in
because I'm yours your eyes open in bed for my kiss so I'll tuck you in
I think on purpose for my kiss so I'll tuck you in because I'm yours
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| What Helps
(2009-01)
I could take a walk, it's a sunny day But that won't make this feeling go away It runs beside me when I run The sun is gray, like everything is gray
I could try a movie, or a sweet dessert Or porn, the healthy kind of dirt I love to paint, and that's good for pain But fun will hurt, like everything will hurt
I hit it to restart it I hit it to reset it My heart is stuck inside me My heart just doesn't get it
I only cry to my favorite songs Hugs from my beloved help me along Priests and pills would kill the joy They just feel wrong, like everything feels wrong
I hit it to restart it I hit it to reset it My heart is stuck inside me My heart just doesn't get it
I should get up and mow the lawn And call my cranky uncle before he's gone And help someone who needs my help So I'll go on, like everything goes on
I hit it to restart it I hit it to reset it My heart is stuck inside me My heart just doesn't get it
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| Hunger
(2008-11)
The gladiolus stalk towers over the tiny bird. Beyond the half-open blinds of my office window the bird clicks and buzzes. It swoops and then stops, reaching its tongue into the chosen flower. The stalk trembles and bows down over the tiny hungry bird.
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| Maria in the Garden
(2008-06)
Who is this digging in our ground? She has no wheels, no claw, no beak. She's making sounds, as if to speak. You with your fur, sharp ears and teeth, sniff out the secrets between her toes. You anxious parents hopping in the trees, circle her head and squawk where she goes. You with eyes tucked in your house beneath, lie still in her lively hand, and doze. Today there will be no fall, no fuss. No paw crushed under a careless wheel, no tiny wing torn by claws, no shell cracked by a hungry beak. Not while she is here for all. Who is this watching over us?
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| Duct Tape Lexus Blues
(2008-03)
I'm drivin' in my Lexus I got duct tape on my shoes Yes I'm drivin' in my Lexus I got duct tape on my shoes These boots ain't made for walkin' Got those duct tape Lexus blues
I'm drivin' down the freeway And I wish I's on a bus Said I'm drivin' down the freeway And I wish I's on a bus Ain't no place in the fast lane For old school guys like us
I'm drivin' down 580 And I see I'm not alone Yeah I'm drivin' down 580 And I see I'm not alone Snail's climbin' up the windshield Hang on buddy, I'll take you home
I'm drivin' to the doctor Got a pee-jug on the shelf Oh I'm drivin' to the doctor Got a pee-jug on the shelf Ain't no way this here sample Gonna analyze itself
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| On the Roof
(2008-01)
I brush my teeth over the big utility sink in the coldest room in our house. When it rains in the winter, the ceiling leaks a little. This time it was dripping on my head, and it was too much. We called a roofer, and I went up the ladder after him. He pointed out weak spots and told me how to caulk them, and that might do it. The roof is shallow, and the shingles and vents and tar overlap, but not quite right. It's another world up there. I looked down at the neighbor's back yard and saw their ginger cat, slipping out of a half-open window and between the bars. We always wondered how he got around when his parents were out. The roofer dug something out of the tar: a 32-caliber bullet, he said. Fired straight up, and fallen back to us head down. I felt its weight and put it in my pocket. He didn't charge us a thing.
On a sunny day I came back with my caulk gun and latex gloves. I stepped lightly, feeling the grit wearing off the shingles. That room was added as an afterthought, maybe 50 years ago. It has siding all around the inside, so you almost think you're outdoors. So does the rain, I guess. I prodded the bullet hole with my finger. I spread the caulk on thick, like white icing, over the gaps and in the tiny hole. I said hello to the cat, who rolled over and looked at me from his back porch. Once I found him sleeping up here under the eaves. We've seen him jump from roof to neighbor's roof.
Softballs and spent fireworks have also appeared on our property. We put the bullet on the mantelpiece. It's blackened and coppery. What if the cat had been lying there? Is my head harder than that sticky tar? Would the the bullet fall more gently than it rose? Was it launched in anger? Celebration? Curiosity? Why shoot something that might fall on you?
I'm just waiting to see how the roof will hold. I'm waiting for a good hard rain.
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| Christmas comes but then it goes
(2007-12)
The time from Christmas up to New Year's is a feast of Camemberts and Gruyères.
But the time from New Year's till next Christmas is just a barren, rocky isthmus.
So stay with me, like a lion with Daniel, and make a perennial of this annual.
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| Stutter
(2007-10)
You're looking at me, about to smile. Somewhere there's a hot glowing coal, with a flame just barely forming.
I stutter. Say, state, tut, utter. Saystatetututter. Stutter.
Have, even, essence, sent. Haveevenessencesent. Heavenescent.
Earthy, here, eerie, real. Earthyhereeeriereal. Earthereal.
That's you. Heavenescent. Earthereal.
| |
| The Death Times of a Damn Fool
(2007-03)
Oakland, California. Sitting in the World Ground Café, I pick up a free paper. It's called "The Death Times of a Damn Fool". It's all about me. That's creepy. The first headline is:
DAMN FOOL FALLS FROM OWN ROOF, BREAKS NECK Oxford, England. It was nighttime, and my homework was done. I wanted to see the city. I want to see as much as I can. I sat with my legs dangling over the window ledge, looking up to the roof. Maybe I could follow the sturdy metal pipe that went through the overhanging tiles. How old was the pipe? Would it pull the tiles right off? It was two stories down to the concrete path. There was nothing else to hang on to. I reached around the eaves and scrambled up, with my heart thumping. I enjoyed the sparkling view. I scraped up my good trousers, but it was worth it.
DAMN FOOL FRIED BY POWER LINE UNDER OWN NOSE Boston, Massachusetts. On the sidewalk, I found a barrier blocking my path. Tree branches had fallen, and a power line. I like to go forward once I start. I'm private with my emotions. There was no one nearby. Someone down the block caught my eye, waving me away urgently. I stared blankly. I stepped over the barrier, the green leaves, and the cable. I walked past it all. I saw my rescuer shrug. I kept going.
DAMN FOOL DROWNED ON OWN WEDDING ANNIVERSARY Jenner, California. Jan was sleeping in our rented cottage that clung to the side of the valley. I was taking a morning stroll to explore. I stood on the sand at the mouth of the Russian River. On the other side were seals, just a pebble's throw away. I don't like getting wet, but I wanted to cross. I took off my boots and hung them around my neck. I waded in to my ankles and felt the water, cold and fast. I turned back, walking barefoot over the rocks. Later we drove to the other side, a long way around. I jumped onto a rock in the pounding waves. One wave came too close and scared me off. Then we saw the signs on the beach: undertow, riptide, danger, strong swimmers drowned.
DAMN FOOL SHOT FOR NOT MINDING OWN BUSINESS Oakland, California. It's the last headline. I put down the paper. I have to walk out into my neighborhood. I have to turn a corner and find, suddenly, two young thugs menacing an old lady. She clutches her coat and refuses to cry out. I forgot my cell phone. I look around, and yell something, and step between them. I do not just let that happen. But a bullet smacks me down. It's like nothing I've ever felt. And I'm gone.
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| 2007
(2007-01)
I knew exactly where I was going: to the ground floor of the science building. I stepped into the elevator, the doors closed, and it took off sideways.
I looked at the other passengers. They were calm and bored, like anyone in an elevator. It knew just what to do: slow down, rise or fall, make a turn, speed up again. It flew fast and smooth. It didn't stop. A little porthole showed the city outside, rushing by. I told my neighbor I wasn't used to this kind of elevator. She said, "Oh, I'm from Houston, we have lots of them there." Once or twice it paused to tilt 45 degrees. We stepped onto the diagonal footrests in the corner. Then it straightened out, and we were off again.
Later I thought of your rages and the way I ride them out, I thought of waiting at a bus shelter for the thundershower to pass, I thought of taming the horse by clinging to its mane. But in the elevator I didn't know that I was dreaming and it was the morning of New Year's Day. I just watched as it slowed down toward my stop, a place I'd never been, a forest of huge buildings, sculptures and scaffolding and people working on them, everything new.
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| The Queen of Kleenex
(2006-10)
The Queen of Kleenex reaches out and puffs of cloud leap up into her hand, and then at her command they fly around the world erasing doubt.
"If snot were gold," her mother said -- well then she'd have a soft and glowing throne, a wadded pile that shone, a nest of golden roses for her bed.
Her tissue issues her decrees: good wishes, e-mail, sticky notes of love that flutter like a dove, all these are borne aloft on Kleenices.
I pile the boxes up, and grab a pocket pack to learn the Kleenex Way. The brief instructions say to SOULEVER, or LIFT, the tab.
I peer at this until I see SOUL EVER LIFT is what they really mean. So my beloved queen will rise, and float, and rise along with me.
We'll build our fluffy castle high. Our paper raft on paper rivers drifts. And when we wrap our gifts it's cellulose, not gold, that gets us by.
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| (I am a romantic engineer)
(Oct. 2005)
I am a romantic engineer. I make notes. I love quotes. When I twist two wires together tight, I hold one hand behind my back. I watch for shocks. I think because it feels right.
My beloved is a wild storyteller. She could plan a whole battle or find a cousin in Seattle. When she holds a slippery sentence, she won't let go till it's done and polished. She's brutally modest and everyone knows her kind attention.
I hold my beloved with both hands to feel the spark jump through my heart. To breathe I let her go with the same hands only to hold her closer, heart to heart.
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| Civilization
(Aug. 2004, Oct. 2005)
I love the creative destruction of recycling. Breaking down a cardboard box tells me how it was built. Some factory stamped a rectangle from a giant sheet, and with cuts and folds and glue, up jumps a perfect container. With a printed logo, it's just the thing to package the new, improved Left-Handed Widget (TM), version 2.0. All this from busy bees with clever design. That plastic wrapper, blowing down the sidewalk, is something I couldn't make on a desert island. This box holds civilization, like the bishop's pocketwatch. I work, and you work, in an industrial cathedral, and some of its skill is ours.
I love the raunchy delicacy of flowers. The iris puts out its lovely symmetrical sex, painted and powdered and scented like a hooker, opened up for the flies or anything with wings. Then you cut it down and box it up in plastic, keep it moistened and chilled, on life support, and put it on sale in the airport dispensing machine. I give it to my grandmother visiting from Duluth. I watch it stand on the piano, slowly withering, paling and falling and never losing its grace. When you're dead and gone, and your hometown and religion too-- the flowers bloom again.
I love the orderly rot of composting. I throw the stinking leftovers in a pile, trying to look away while I turn it with a stick, and while I sleep the ants and worms come out for the free 24-hour all-you-can-eat buffet. The pile spits out the plastic and grows deep and dark and rich. When I die, don't put me in a fancy box. Throw me on the pile with the forgotten avocadoes. Shred my poems and sprinkle them on for carbon. Heap on dead flowers to keep away the feral cats. And when my bones are clean, make them into a sculpture, for the tomato vines.
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| The River Fleet
(Jan. 2004, Sep. 2005)
There was a river, and they called it the Fleet. Maybe a young girl, doing the wash. Maybe some ducklings, with their busy small feet, swimming through the reeds, rocked by the wake trailing a fishing boat that's loaded with meat. Straightening, the girl stretches the ache out of her shoulders, and wrings out the last shirt. She's the one who spits, right at the drake. Fisherman laughs, and thinks that no one is hurt-- not the frowning girl, striding on home, not the old river with its burden of dirt, not the hungry ducks, sniffing the foam. Here's to the Fleet, on this good morning and day, shining in the sky's brightening dome, rushing on forever, stopping only to play briefly with a boat, spinning it round, then rushing on toward the Thames and the bay. Look at all the things divers have found, sunk to the bottom and embraced by the muck. Here is where a life's savings were drowned, silver from emperors now down on their luck. Here is where a bronze crucifix fell, hands reaching outward like a butterfly stuck.
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| This Next Poem
(Jul. 2005)
This next poem is about the death of my cat in October 1993, so before I begin, I should explain about our special inter-species spirituality. Our relationship existed on a higher mental plane, and when it ended, most of my chakras just went down the drain. That was a really transitional period of my life. I felt like I had nothing except my poems and my ex-cat and my ex-wife. And then when I took Sundragon to be cremated, the pet cemetery mixed him up with someone else's giant lizard, and I got a little aggravated. They were not very polite when I explained to them about our special bonding cathexis. Later I looked them up on the net and found out they're a chain from Texas! With all that negative energy they made such a mess that for my self-esteem I finally had to sue them for emotional distress. But I am so blessed to have the spirit of poetry and creation to keep me centered through that and all my other litigation.
Also, before I begin, I have some copies of my chapbook, "Garlands and Maypoles". Oh, no, actually I don't, because I ran out of staples. But soon I'll have a multimedia DVD with a logo in silver or gold, whichever is cuter, just as soon as my nephew gets back from camp with his computer. Also, I might have some trouble reading the poem in this light since I revised it again while I was in kind of an alternative reality last night. I put in some stuff about how Bush and Ashcroft would have called Jesus a commie, and about 9/11 and Israel and who really caused that terrible tsunami. So you can tell I'm not just a soulless corporate drone even though during the day I sell mortgage products to strangers over the telephone.
In conclusion, before I begin, I would also like to say that my philosophy is also deeply influenced by Starhawk and Alastair Crowley and Japanese anime. There's some other stuff that's important for you to understand -- yes, yes, I see you over there with the stopwatch in your hand -- but I still need to make the announcement about my reading at the Tibetan Oyster Feast -- and come on, I haven't even started reading my piece! My time is up already? God, you're worse than my old gym teacher! I'll just have to come back and tell you all more after the feature.
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| Nightmare
(Nov. 2004)
There's something there. You have to listen. The room is warm. It's dark. It's quiet.
There's an orange light. They're whispering. You're awake. You think you're awake.
They're going to do something. They're near the bed. They're rustling. They're fading away. They're still there. This is their last try.
They want you to jump. You have to hold still. The room is warm. It's dark. It's quiet.
There's an orange glow. They're waiting. You're awake. You think you're awake.
They don't have to do anything. They wait for your fear. You think what they might do. They might touch the back of your head. They wait. You pull the covers around your neck.
You try to focus on the light. The glow has a shape. It's a tiny picture. It's a spider. It's not real. It burns like fire.
They want you to cry out. You have to stay silent. The room is warm. It's dark. It's quiet.
There's an orange light coming into focus. It's glowing brighter. You're awake. You think you're awake.
Sweat crawls on your neck. You look behind you. There's the shadow of your shoulder. You look at the light. It's the heater switch. You're in your hotel room.
They're gone. You can breathe. The room is warm. It's dark. It's quiet.
There's the light of the heater switch. You're alone. You're awake. You think you're awake.
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| Dictionary Poem
(Aug. 2004)
You know the bird that couldn't fly -- that's the ancient moa. And bugs too small for the naked eye -- those are protozoa. But have you seen a desert rat living in a bottle as big as a vat? Only in a poem. Because that's a jerboa -- in a jeroboam.
When you're sitting under the shady trees -- you have found asylum. When you wonder "what kind of trees are these?" -- that would be the phylum. When the wood sucks water from the ground and the bark draws food from the leaves all around, then you have a poem. Because that's the xylem -- embraced by the phloem.
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| The Rain
(Jun. 2003)
Someone is calling my name. It's the rain. Always the same, like the brain of a drum. Shameless and painless, it comes for us all, Dangerous, humble, to fall with no aim.
Let's go out walking. We may not come back. Stalk what's amazing, attack your regrets. Pay off your maximum debts now. Don't balk. Jack up your bets. Play it raucous, but play.
Run in the mud in the hills in the dark. Puddles and chills are remarkably fun. Spills in the park, in the wonderful flood, mark us as one, with one blood for all wills.
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| Recipes
(Dec. 2002)
1. How to take a walk.
Pause. Leave your easy chair and home, and find the open road. Take the path you know the least. When in doubt, turn right. Don't forget the pause, but don't linger on the corner.
Now walk. Don't worry where you're going, just look at where you are. See the tree roots and the clouds, and rainbows on the lawn. Listen to the roses, and talk to all the cats.
That's all. At the crossroads, choose again, the same way as before. Your path will wind around your head, strange but never far. When you've seen a thing or two, go home and check the map.
Again. Take the path you know the least. When in doubt, turn right. Don't worry where you're going, just look at where you are. Your path will wind around your head, strange but never far.
2. How to clean your house.
First clean the easy places. Sweep up the muddy traces. Take out the trash.
Then pick a tricky corner. Move the piano over. Polish the brass.
The rest, do some other Sunday. Every eventually comes round at last.
3. How to make pancakes.
A story so old begins with the eggs. Beat them in a bowl. Don't leave any dregs.
Mix in milk and flour till it looks like batter. Vanilla? Baking powder? They don't really matter.
Your pan's hot and greasy. Make squiggles and shapes. Holding, releasing, Xes and 8s.
For a minute of care, a second of glee. Make some to spare and save them for me!
4. How to write a poem.
Unfold the work so far done. Hear its cry. Listen for the next line.
And then, and then, yes, and then, then you see words that you had not seen.
Keep it up, bit by bit. Let it grow. Then you'll know the last note.
Recite it. Don't write it down. Make it stay. Drink it like a deep stain.
If you can't keep what you thought, how will we? Throw away the bad meat.
And when you know how it goes, set it free. Show us what your heart sees.
You can draw ten thousand lines on somebody's wall. You can play three silences in a crowded hall.
Make a score, a script, a scheme, a screenplay, a scansion, a skipping-rhyme.
5. How to find inner peace.
Well, you can hear a lot, you know. Like Rhonda snoring in the room below. The echoing, appalling wail of last night's cat, and even beyond that, a workman thudding home the nail that's holding up the wooden curtain rail some ten or twenty years ago. Yes, you can hear an awful lot, you know.
But keep your ear against the ground and listen for the farthest breath of sound. The growing grass beneath the tracks, the bed of rock absorbing every shock, the galaxies in parallax serenely sweeping in their tracks the dust that swirls all around. So keep your ear pressed tight against the ground.
And listen to what's always there: the silence hiding in the busy air. The silence, not the motor's hum. The silence, not the compliments you got. The silence, not your aching thumb. The silence, not the siren songs that come from radios and everywhere. Just listen harder to what's always there.
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| (A joyful anniversary)
(Oct. 2000)
A joyful anniversary, my amatory bursary! (Forgive these lines their skipping feet and silly nursery-versery.)
Happy Halloween, my sweet! I incrementally repeat. It's time for streets of fancy fleet, for circumlunar Circery.
Joy to my beloved Jan, my joy in reciprocity! For you the best, the best I can, my life and love and prosody.
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| (When you come to lift me up)
(Feb. 1999)
When you come to lift me up, I'm up above the line, my love, A raft on a river flying high. Here you come again, Rising like a shiver or a laugh up my spine and up the sky.
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| (I must go to meet my fate)
(Dec. 1998)
I must go to meet my fate. Here I am -- my fate is late. And it's so unfair, you know, To be on time without a date.
Good things flow to those who wait: Grumble, squirm, and salivate. To and fro the waiters go -- I want what's coming to my plate.
All this woe the gods create, Hooking humans on their bait! I could throw a better show For half this comic, painful rate.
I will go to make my fate, Bravely storming heaven's gate. From a nobody below To lord of some surreal estate!
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| (Walking home)
(Sep. 1995)
Walking home, One more time of many times, With the chill and the sea fog, The quiet emptiness of the streets, The darkness of my steps, One more step of many steps, And putting this into words: If I can embrace these things, If I can make them all my friends, Then I will have no enemies.
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| (Beautiful scars cover my body)
(Jan. 1995)
Beautiful scars cover my body Hooks go through my heart Look at me Look at me You can still see the place where James used to be
Beautiful scars cover my body Hooks go through my heart Look at me Look at me I'm just like everyone else Conceived in joy Born in pain Dressed in my sickness and health Look at me Look at me You can still see the place where James used to be
Beautiful scars cover my body Hooks go through my heart Look at me Look at me You can still see the place where James used to be
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| John and Tracy
(Sep. 1994)
John and Tracy in the backseat talking The new US invasion and the price of beer We almost hear the ticking He says the boat is rocking It's Tracy and it's John again bringing up the rear
Steve wants Mexican and I want Cajun The movie's over Madonna's got the guy We wait for John's decision He says that Tracy's fading Then she says it's bedtime and we all look in her eyes
We like to see some action, and we like to feel suspense We're tired of these little games of passion and defense We like to bring some happiness to the friends that we adore We love suspense and subtlety, but we love the action more.
Steve's in Canada and things are boring John and Tracy have been playing chess That game was old this morning They don't like people staring Amy gives them three more weeks but I don't want to guess
On vacation, it's the same old story Steve likes his place better, I like mine We still aren't getting married My mother's getting worried I saw John in April, he says Tracy's doing fine
We like to see some action, and we like to feel suspense We're tired of these little games of passion and defense We like to bring some happiness to the friends that we adore We love suspense and subtlety, but we love the action more.
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| All of You
(Mar. 1994)
My sweetie she comes home and she flops down in the chair She says, "This job is gonna put me in the grave. I just can't give you any of that tender loving care, 'Cause I'm too tired to work the microwave."
I tell her that I love her, but it doesn't always help I tell her she's the lady of my dreams I tell her I can push those little buttons by myself And then I'll bring her chocolate-chip ice cream.
I say, "I love your wavy hair, I love your perfume in the air, I love your toes and fingers and your spine; I even love your spleen and all the parts I've never seen, And every single rib, like it was mine."
She's looking kind of peaceful with her feet up on the couch She says, "It's good to have my crazy man around But what if someday he begins to have those little doubts And he leaves me with my fifteen extra pounds?"
I say, "Listen to me, darling, and I'll tell you once again I guess you didn't hear those things I said There's something deep inside of me that says I am your man, From the bottoms of my feet up to my head.
"I love the way you giggle and I love the way you sneeze, I love each little wrinkle of your nose I could sing forever about either of your knees They're sweeter than the petals of a rose.
I say, "I love your wavy hair, I love your perfume in the air, I love your toes and fingers and your spine; I even love your spleen and all the parts I've never seen, And every single rib, like it was mine."
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| Almost
(Jan. 1994)
Now you have me.
You don't like our weather? Wait a minute -- That face will flicker like a school of fish turning, And change into something quite different. Now you have me.
You want to know what I'm feeling right now? I can't remember the real story, it's much too complicated. Look: I'll do the trick again slowly, so you can see how it works. Nothing up my sleeves.
Am I making sense? Am I being consistent? Excuse me for a moment. Speaking of my feelings, did you ever see that movie? Now you have me.
This is as accurate as I can make it. The map shows where the current is strongest. At the crucial words, turn away from the audience slightly. Tag, you're it!
"He said I was cute! I wonder what he means? He said he wants to live! He said he wants to go to the bathroom! I wonder what he means?"
"He's talking in riddles. What are you getting at? Just say it!"
See the diamond shine, how it bends the light! But you can't see the center, can you? So what's the point? Now you have me.
She asked me: why? Because I love to put my face in the dirt. I love to be at your center. I love my humiliation and total power. I want to make you scream, to frustrate and satisfy. I love to say and not to say, To move like a chessboard knight on pleasure bent.
You have me not. I run under streetlights at night.
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| Edwin the Bedouin
(Dec. 1993, for J.N., help from T & T)
Edwin of Arabia was known both far and wide: That fiendish outlaw, Ed the Dread, a man from whom to hide. He terrorized the caravans from Florence to the Nile Until one winter night there came a sudden change of style. While just about to ambush the Angolan Jewish Choir, He heard their song behind the dune and there became inspired.
He leapt into the startled band and cried, "This man behold! I now resolve to be a citizen both pure and bold! Go in safety, gentlemen! Let nothing you dismember!" And joyful tidings followed ever since that fine December. Edwin the Bedouin, defender of the peace! Protector of the great unwashed, and may his tribe increase!
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| The Nights
(Dec. 1993)
When I held you and I saw the water running off your face You were gone already far away
And when you said goodbye is when you moved into my place and I still have to pay, you'll never leave
Hold me Hold me Hold me
I have no strength in front of you Hold me And everything you said was true Hold me I can't remember how it feels to feel OK Hold me
When I held you and I saw And when you said goodbye, the water running off your face You were gone away You'll never pay
Hold me Hold me Hold me
I have no strength in front of you Hold me And everything you said was true Hold me I can't remember how it feels to feel OK Hold me
Hold me Hold me Hold me
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| We All Live Here
(Oct. 1993)
This is my place. It's small but it's home. Pacing back and forth, one end to the other, there's not much room. But this is my skull.
Here is my family. Not friends, not enemies, they're just there. They feed me, I feed them. We can only be together.
Red Scrawl says this: The walls are too white. Cut yourself with a knife. Open your heart. You're a well full of blood: make it sweep through the air, make it smash like a wave. That's Red.
Cool Brook says this: Sit and rest for a while. Stare out those little windows. Let me fill up the air around you, let me stroke the back of your neck. I'll make you so calm and slow, you'll never need to move again. That's Cool.
Hard Wall says this: You'll smother in a vacuum. Bash your head on the wall. Who's tougher here, anyway? Slam your bones against the flatness. If you hug it, it can feel you, and you can feel it too. That's Hard.
Hard Wall, Cool Brook, Red Scrawl, and me. We all live here.
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| A Protest Against Tristram's Birthday
(Sep. 1993)
Tristram's getting older! Oh help us! Oh no! Stop him now, before he strikes again! Impudence -- outrageous -- this boy dares to grow! Toss the old tradition down the drain!
We have no precedent for this, A shameless waste of youthful bliss, But maybe all is not amiss.
Be a boy! Have courage and keep yourself pure! Put off getting older for a while. Jumping beans! Not everyone has to mature; Stick it up your nose and go in style!
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| True Story
(Sep. 1993)
I did it, I admit it, and I know that it was wrong But something in the smoky air just made it seem so right The drinks were all too weak and the temptation was too strong Bless me, father, bless me, for I told the truth last night.
I told a guest her makeup would look better on the dead I softened my opinion with a smile I mentioned that I'd rather take an octopus to bed Than walk that handsome lady down the aisle.
See how the groom is all aglow, The bride about to cry! Her period has made her low And he is slightly high.
They called me sacrilegious, and they took away my glass I told them that the gospel is the gossip written down The justice called me other things, but I just let it pass My words are pure as falling snow, or oil from the ground.
I shouldn't speak too harshly of that ancient, bitter judge He never found the perfect man for him And love is written everywhere, if only on the edge The ceremony cannot do it in.
It's with the children, bored to death And playing in the dirt It's in the mudpies and the cake And underneath the skirt.
I know that truth and falsehood is the business of the great, Democratically elected or inspired from on high I know I shouldn't mess with it, but now it's much too late I took the fruit: so help me God, I cannot tell a lie.
I'll never get a girlfriend, or any honest work If I can't tame this beast inside of me I'll passionately serenade the plainest office clerk And scream at all the people on TV.
I won't need any more vermouth My shrink may now retire In the midst of lies we are in truth It's warm here in the fire!
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| Bedtime
(Jun. 1993)
We lie down once again With no lion or lamb And the dreams gather in as we open our hands They come in flying low Like the leaves whirling round A tornado that's nosing its way toward the ground When you stir up the clouds You don't know what you'll see How familiar a crowd full of strangers can be There's a tiger who purrs As he beats you in chess There's a vulture of mercy in full evening dress It's as dark as the wind And as warm as the rain In the lines of your skin and the folds of your brain
Sometimes I just want to give it all up and go to sea Give it all up and fly away
We wake up once again We don't know where we've been
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| The Further Adventures of Jackie
(Jun. 1993)
So they sent me to a convent, and then to the Marines Outranked by God I thanked my Dad And sang a battered hymn to the republic; But they had no place for me I need to feel my soul is free I need to show my shoulders on parade.
Well they sent me to a convent, and then to the Marines But I need to show my shoulders on parade.
So I went to med school, and joined the CIA I hoped to be helpful With my cloak and my scalpel To heal the shattered limbs of the republic; But I was uncivil in this service I could not keep my fears beneath the surface I could not keep a mask on all day long.
That's how I went to med school, and joined the CIA But I could not keep a mask on all day long.
So I fell for a lawyer, and I bought some perfume I laughed like a hostess Whose bathroom is spotless I gaily settled in to the republic; And I felt that my legs were bound I love to kiss the wrong way round I love to splash the sherry now and then.
Yes I fell for a lawyer, and I bought some perfume But I love to splash the sherry now and then.
So I lost my virginity, and I won the Nobel Prize I was addicted to the knowledge Eating liquids, drinking solids I caught a better glimpse of the republic; But I couldn't find a way to make my shame go I'll never be a winner on a game show I'll never read a mind that's not my own.
I say I lost my virginity, and I won the Nobel Prize But I'll never read a mind that's not my own.
I've never owned a restaurant, and I've never fired a gun Or taken dope Or been the Pope I'll learn the Battle Hymn of the Republic; I'll boldly go into the crowd I'll do whatever they allow And maybe I can do a little more.
I've never owned a restaurant and I've never fired a gun But maybe I can do a little more.
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| Novel Romance
(May 1993)
There we were in the late afternoon, Ordering wine with our steak, When you screamed and you swooned and you ran from the room The waiter cried out, "You forgot your soup spoon" I thought I had made some mistake; But I could not ask you what I might have done No gentleman could follow you where you had run So I sat down and cleaned off your plate.
My mother said you were no match for a man Expelled from both Harvard and Yale; But I knew when I saw your tattoo of Japan, Your Sunday-school hairdo and truck-driver hands, That you were my own fairy tale.
You never had much of a taste for champagne Those bubbles that got up your nose; If you hadn't taken the overnight train To the big sold-out show by that girl -- what's-her-name -- We'd never have met, I suppose; But you liked my pink cufflinks that went with your hair You slept with your head on my chest, and elsewhere And the rest of it everyone knows.
My mother said you were no match for a man....
You came back to me with your shoes in your hand The waiters did nothing but stare; "I'm sorry," you said, "I forgot who I am, I needed a mirror and that's why I ran Are you done with that shrimp over there? Stop drowning your sorrows in fancy French names Let's skip the recital and walk in the rain For dessert I think I'd like some air."
Your father said I was no match for a girl Who was heir to a car-dealer's throne; But you knew when you saw my umbrella unfurl, The crease in my pants and the spring in my curls, That I was your sailor come home.
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| Someone Open Something
(Apr. 1993)
Jane is dreaming of a swallowing sky Someone someone someone Jane is breathing but she doesn't know why Someone open someone Her angels and demons don't ever come by Someone open something
Someone, someone, someone -- someone, someone Just lift her off the track Show her a cathedral -- a cathedral That's fallen in a crack Paint the evening landscape -- evening landscape With sunrise at the back
The sidewalks hammer and the days leak out One like another like one like another Like the leaking sidewalk and the hammering days One like another like one like another
Someone, someone, someone -- someone, someone Just lift her off the track Show her a cathedral -- a cathedral That's fallen in a crack Sing a song so sweetly -- oh so sweetly And sharper than a knife Paint the evening landscape -- evening landscape With sunrise at the back Remember for a moment -- just one moment Remember you're alive Forget about your troubles -- all your troubles Forget about your life
The sidewalks hammer and the days leak out One like another like one like another Like the leaking sidewalk and the hammering days One like another like one like one
Sing a song so sweetly -- oh so sweetly And sharper than a knife Remember for a moment -- just one moment Remember you're alive Forget about your troubles -- all your troubles Forget about your life
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| I Thought of You Here
(Feb. 1993)
I see you when I close my eyes I see the sun. It makes me grin that stupid grin Like curtains blowing in the wind, A bag for keeping nothing in, You know the one.
If I thought about you all the time I'd burn my brain. Just climb into my pocket here Come with me when the weather's clear The open air is cheap and dear And knows no pain.
I leaned my back against a rock You're far away. It's still here when I've gone home, Long after sunsets, after poems Warmth is rock and rock is warm You're far away.
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| From the Axe
(Dec. 1992)
You are a phantom, baby You are a pretty face, you are a cute black jacket You are a friend of a friend, a dream of a movie of a party I don't believe in phantoms but you sure can pull me through.
How many dreams will I need? Many as visions before the miracle Many as rumors before the fact Many as tracks of a wounded animal Many as chips that spit, spit, spit from the axe.
I really love you, baby I want to know your name, I want to know your story I want to know what you look like, where you've been and how I met you I kissed you and I felt you up, it's the least that you can do.
How many dreams will I need?...
So many of you, baby So many longing nights, so many hungry mornings So many faces, arms and legs remembered or forgotten You're the one for me, and you and you and you and you.
How many dreams will I need?...
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| I Can't Sleep
(Summer 1992)
A beautiful mistake, a crack in air As if a knife Had carved a window into God knows where And gave it life. The pupil in the eye of some great cat For eating light In daylight squeezed until it's almost flat And big by night. An open wound, a walking tongue of flame I'm here to bleed To listen to my name and speak my name Is what I need.
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| (Oh no)
(Nov. 1989)
Oh no Not hope again.
I was talking to Death, who said, listen, you can't keep ignoring me I won't go away, you know I'm right So leave them and follow me because they don't know you and I do.
But then Hope came by and said, It's Tuesday, it's getting late Get up and wash your clothes and go into town Me and my friends are waiting I know that thing's been with you again and that's OK with me But I'm bigger than it is because I am many people and Death is only one.
And I said, All right.
And Death said, I'll see you later sometime.
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