Sunday, January 27, 2008


ESCAPE CAUSE


Under the streetlight, the skins

of old animals are dancing,
laughing at the white thing
that huddles by the tree,
afraid to breathe.


A face is raised to me

in pity like poor bread,
but I’ve already
crossed the street.

Saturday, January 26, 2008


HUSK


So, I am quiet, and the chorus of dead things
rasps at my borders; dried husks, withered wheat.
This is not night, but a forward hush of senses.
Deliver me of this, weighted by objects

I accumulate, these skirts which lift so gently,

their breath spelled out in dust.

Thursday, January 24, 2008


CRUSADE


Bumper stickers proclaim
the wonders of the salt mines,
stretch their beckoning ribbons

across a continent.


Crusader ghosts wander

the outskirts of the great pyres,

their grey armor transparent.

A last radio crackles,
"No solution left

but to burn it all down!"

A man wavers, numb but jubilant.

I have never heard a voice
clearer than his as he sings,

"Match sticks, match heads.

Light me up--I'm ready to go!"

Tuesday, January 22, 2008


THREAD


My brother stands, a shepherd in wool-cap,

on the rough concrete stage of a half-finished housing tract.

He tells how a single lash of long white thread
could trick an angel down the sink-hole, how we could

tangle its wings with soda pull-tabs, then keep track

of it by its jangle and clank, how if that doesn't work,

we could do the same thing to a cat.


We both forgot what we were thinking

by the time we got home for dinner.

Monday, January 21, 2008


SCHEMATIC

I see eager bodies wasted beneath bed sheets,
late-shadow buses taking strangers to a place

where they ring the cord, Stop.

Street lights are the split-open veins of night.

This is a place that still sleeps.

What is cold was once warm.


Factories in their steady grease of silence, the old man drunk on the porch-step, letting
secrets slip, broken electronic bits swept off

the work floor, and in the dust

his grand-kids make turtle-shells, dinosaur bones

from the brittle shavings he brings home.

Sunday, January 20, 2008


CYCLONE FENCES

Tapping toward the forest grove; we make up
the trees as we go, past the floodlights and the blue
crinkled tarpaulin-covered swimming pools;

All of us in depraved backyards, by rust-colored

monotonous teeth of picket fences, wanting to poke

each other in the eye, thinking of the schoolyard,

its’ wider green boundaries marked by gym sneakers

and dull grey chain-link, bulging in certain places,

as if a tremendous force tried to find its way through.

“They don't call ‘em cyclone fences for nothing!”

(Dad said that)

Lipstick, pencil stubs, charcoal gravel kicked up

by the track team. Panties stained with algae
beneath the bleachers. The sixth grade choral group,
the girl in the green wool sweater let her breasts rest
on the beaten piano as they did their recital. My eyes could take in nothing else. If only
they marked holidays by events like these:
The Day I Discovered Breasts,
The Day When Sulfur Met the Match Head.
The impossible maps we go crawling to.

Saturday, January 19, 2008


HUNGER PSALM


I know my pores will open.
Swell toward that hunger, radiant.

To cling to any warm, uncertain body

like it was a fragment of the Creator.
Rapture just a matter of letting go.

Monsters