Thursday, May 21, 2015

The Unacknowledged Legislation of the World

 B.Z. at Good Harbor Beach
—Photos by Denise Flanagan, Newton, MA
—Poems by B.Z. Niditch, Brookline, MA
 


WAITING ON A PHRASE

When will understanding
mend our wronged lives
a poet waits on a phrase
with his words landing
from an instructive sail
on a morning's longed-for map
over our chilled Coast
after a dawn's brief nap
as in a moving equation
adds up to a verse's line
may suddenly surprise us
by its bird song brevity
and make our praise
the most minimalist
on such glorious May days
such as this shine,
knowing as former formalist
in my profession
and briefly academic
make a confession
who someone who turned
completely Beat at sixteen
going to his reading
as James Dean
on a motorcycle
then insisted on a most informal
sun-flowered reality
drove me as summer seer
and wine drinking urbane poet
to seek his own nomenclature
with a sleek urban partiality
as a Whitman city slicker
with an A personality
in a contrary nature free of care
to that which the critics expect
on a bar of selections
to choose a cask
of a different liquor,
as a glancing free spirit
with his own resonant sect
shadows my own predilections
in a masked conduit of taste
not asking any favors
but what proverbs asks us
in a semblance saves us
from a wasted sunrise
along the dunes meadows
holding onto a sheepdog
from the highlands
his orange kayak
plunging into the sea
without a seersucker suit
by the islands to compose
playing a viol and flute
at last feeling to be free.

_____________________

MONET

Your light captures
enraptures us
by the horizon's rays
of a May's dawn
then is gone
at sunrise
plays on our day's prisms
of our impressionism
and quickens as a jazz riff
in a sandstorm of time
or grain
on an open field
in Northern California's plain
shaken and gone as breath
dazzles our landscape
shapes our way
in wings of a swan
waters our eyes
like rain sings outdoors
among the crocus
and drops into oblivion.



 Flowers



WAITING ON

Those mornings
waiting for a line of bass
or any fish to appear
losing no time on the tall grass
by the dock and deck
admiring the black swan's neck
in the springtime of adolescence
after our papers are examined
and our moving eyes
stop to look at the clock
when the academic year
is through for vacation
we flee to our passions
wishing to ride out early
in a rowboat or kayak
over the motionless shore
on the Pacific Ocean waters
to catch up to our poetry
and complimentary love life
with a fearless conscience
embracing an opening wave
by a school of salmon
in frenzy then motionless silence
of too much cool memory
already tasting the filet of sole
cooked along the sea.

_____________________

AN ACTOR WAITS FOR GODOT

To locate my part
along the bare stage
in a windowless studio
to find his lines
standing in a circle
motionless for his helplessness
murmuring in gestures
before we go on stage
not forgetting Beckett's words
or nuance
just to have a chance
to take in a part in summer stock
to survive the clowning reasons
for several dress rehearsals
and to live in another's soul
for an open air season
by the ferryman and south shore
out by nature's scythed grass
for scenes in the park's theater
is to be once again alive
expanding my portfolio once more.



 B.Z. on Ben Bench



DANTE ALIGHIERI'S BIRTHDAY
May 21, 1265

Wherever sealed
in a waiting room
shading in a portrait
or fading out of love
my Latin returns
of your verses to me
or watching a Saturn sky
having lost hope
from my old telescope
of viewing
a meteoric pattern of stars
of my own visibility
here in Manhattan
writing in nine circled bars
for sax and orchestra
by leading a comic, satire
or a satyr play
your words still enthrall
here on your birthday
along the sea shore
fixing my friend's oboe
and I call on our Abba
to rescue me
as only you know
reading of your journey
through stories
of love poets
trembling in awe and majesty
of undone absurd times
over weird griefs
treated to middle-aged
bruised law's iniquity
that through your harmony
of verse we are free
to share our beliefs
my friend, Dante Alighieri
with an open window
of nature's spring relief
in an upstaged conduit
of mythical divine
or diluvian sights
scuttling our awkwardness
of veiled or impaled
mystical reflections
from a horizon of delights
with no directions
away from empty dark nights
to recover our souls
as an exiled refugee
in a concealing purgatory. 

_____________________

ROBERT CREELEY'S DAY
May 21 (1926-2005)

There were two of us
who spoke together
of Martial
after your shielded reading
during your partial recital
when time came to a stop
and soon were translated
yourself to passing glances
in a memorial
on a free-wielding
rush of your words
by keeping the lamp
of dancing verse
of our blushing flames going
in a changing season
by a college room fireplace
of a strong voice aiming at
swaying your delightful
flirting audience
suddenly all
in inescapable silence
as if to say, Robert
only in taking off
all our night shirts
for your love poetry
can still make my day.



Glory Cloud



JOSEPH BRODSKY
May 24 (1940-1996)

How you learnt English
from the Russian
you told us it was Auden
who made you modern
after "the bronze horseman"
of Pushkin
in the land of Lenin,
how you wished to emigrate
after reading
"Notes from the Underground"
and we signed petitions
to the new heads of state
and waited for years
until you came
appearing to be our emigre
reaching out to us
suited for us in grey
to teach us by our shore
in newborn smart verses
you held us captive
as a sounding millstone
took your enlarged heart
only too soon leaving us
as we translated
and celebrate your day
in a nightfall you depart.

_________________________

EMERSON'S BIRTHDAY
May 25 (1803-1882)

We stood on the rude bridge
you wrote verses about
on the same earth
under the soft blue sky
by red-winged blackbirds
on the Evergreen and Elm
as if they sing out
your very words and sentiment
on the branches above us
as kayak riders on riverbeds
with their freshened white oars
waving to us as amazed students
over the sea passerby wind
circles us from down below
on the Concord riverbank shore
the scent of lilacs overwhelming us
my faithful eyes in silence
at your buried back of history
comes alive as a hall of mirrors
of the sun's floodlights reflections
we take out your poetry, criticism
devouring lunches from our knapsacks
and relax on the May tall grass
in spring's full-flowered accord.

_______________________

A POET'S COMMANDMENT

You may look back
in distracted sentiment
offering a poet's
enacted commandment
by living freely
in our universe,
or you may choose to curse
some of your past verse
or bottle it as milk
for nature's sake
as in a robin's red breast
or take on Daphne under a tree
and make words come alive
from a dictionary's treasure chest
of silk or at a measured snow
or target a free verse phrase
and fly with St. Sebastian's arrow
as in a somersault of Apollo,
there is always tomorrow
to take cover in the rain
words are often contrary
from the finest brain,
you may choose directions
on any page
for a new collection
as you relax with a latte
on a repast
over tables of confections
with any number
of cucumber sandwiches
or with watercress,
so put on your flowered laurel
with poetry as a lasting prize
or quarrel with an eidetic critic
at Browning's monologues
with an empowered surprise,
you may be blessed
in an ecumenical sharing
on altars of bread and wine
and learn in a searching dialogue
calling on the rabbinical divines
with garments of cassock
reciting in a church, mosque
or synagogue,
we remember to earn our paradise
from our language vaults
in all the shamrock of years
that from our last venal penalty
is to seek to alter and pardon
when our venerable imagination
does not yield or falters
its garden's flowered vegetation
as Shelley said of poets
we are the unacknowledged
legislation of the world.

______________________

Today's LittleNip:

WAITING BY BIRCHES

Ski season is over
by the birches' branch
in Mount Snow, Vermont
the borderline wind wants
to make us cold
when we are told
of the disordered avalanche
from the hilly ranges
near the emboldened rescue
everyone is a friend
in the whitened frenzy
there are no strangers
in the craggy bends
that we know.

______________________

Our thanks to chefs B.Z. Niditch and Denise Flanagan for today's contributions, and a reminder that there is a lot going on today and tomorrow in NorCal poetry! Scroll down to the blue box (under the green box) at the right for all the details. 

—Medusa



 B.Z. at the Poetry Wall










  

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

All Too Red

Keely Dorran, Sacramento



meteor IX

The Pellegrino has gone to my head.
I’m quite sure there’s a baby in there.

Little one, I just turned 40. Don’t come
knocking on my door, begging for me to

find some kind of lover. It’s the middle
of the night and only thieves are awake.

____________________

california drought

five-minute shower every other day.
dusty, pollen and spore-covered car;
lungs tight. dishes done in tepid grey-water*,

and in the best neighborhoods:

the vast lawns and golf courses
are as green as emeralds.
 

[*grey-water is water that has already been used for another purpose and is being re-used to conserve]

__________________________

good-bye haiku

15 years ago
you asked to meet at a cafe
then never showed up

on my way home
i saw you with your wife
in a restaurant

that is why
i love you like a friend
and always will

__________________________

good-bye two

if i could remember the seasons
i could forget those rains
that came down when she kissed you

_________________________

no such thing as color

No such thing as color, all too red.
Dark as night and black inside, all too dead.

When his heart grows cold as ice
The power goes to his head

No such thing as color, all too red.
No such thing as color, all too red.

White like the light but it's all lies,
All the things they did and said.

Like his father, like his pride, so well-fed.
No such thing as color, all too red.

_________________________

Today's LittleNip:

tea house


a serene garden
is cultivated over time, with great
mindfulness

 
________________________

Our thanks to Keely for today's poems and pix! Keely S. Dorran is a poet and artist active as such in the Sacramento area since the late 1980s. She studied Painting & Drawing at Sacramento State and Academy of Art University, San Francisco. Her art and poems have been shown and performed throughout California, and published in journals nationally. They also reside in private collections, archives, and special collection libraries nationally and internationally. She recently completed a BA in Art History at Sacramento State University. For more, see Keely's website at www.KeelyDorran.com And watch for more of Keely's work in the Kitchen in the future.

Keely is one of many poets and artists to be featured in the latest issue of Rattlesnake Press's WTF! which will be released at Luna's Cafe tomorrow (Thursday), 8pm. Editor frank andrick and Co-Editor Rachel Leibrock will be co-hosting, as contributors to the issue read their work. Be there!

_______________________

—Medusa



—Portrait of Keely by Esteban Villa







Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Mirrors Made of Air

—Poems and Photos by Joyce Odam, Sacramento



HE SLEEPS AND DREAMS HER
(after "Arab Song, 1932" by Paul Klee)

It is late afternoon. The colors of the room are dim-
ming to a soft haze. She is hiding in the curtain.
She closes her eyes to mask her fear. She does not
belong here, but here she is, waiting for his dream to
release her. There are spies everywhere; they lurk and
listen for her breathing; the corridors are full of them.

The hours slow and thicken. Still he sleeps, holding
her fast in his dream. She gropes and gropes at the
folds of the curtain that twines and twists around her.
The light in the room is almost gone. He watches
her through his sleep. He keeps hiding the door. The
window is a mirage. And in the mirage is the curtain.

_______________________

THE WAITING DAY
(after "Summertime, 1943" by Edward Hopper)
 
What is left for the young woman
of yesterday to do

but go on waiting, poised and ready
to step down from the stair.

But she is held by something :
the sun on her face—

her hand on the white pillar,
perhaps to balance her indecisiveness.

The door-shadow behind her
seems to draw her back,

an open window-curtain
sucks in.

Her white dress
flattens against her.

Wall-shadow stays perfectly still
as soft green sunlight swiftly changes

to the harsh light of the lengthening hours
while she still stands there, as if frozen.






LOW WINDOW LIGHT

The window used to hold her there,
standing and watching the day change,
her eyes holding the vague eye of distance.

However far it was, she was patient.
The room darkened behind her, the window
glinted, caught the last of the sunlight.

She grew timeless then. The waiting
never ended. The patience understood
There was never any end to the story.

______________________

WAITING ROOM

Russian wolfhound outside the window,
small black birds pecking at cement—
things to ponder in times between.
You—so sad you start to cry,

asking if truth is worse than lie.
Things to ponder in times between:
small black birds pecking at cement,
Russian wolfhound outside the window.






PRIVATE WOMEN IN DOCTORS’
WAITING ROOMS

these women in
Doctors’ waiting rooms
some complainingly
some with good humor
some with
terrible quiet
on their faces
one woman
with a baby
caught all our attention
became the one
to watch
she never
looked at any of us
her eyes phrased past
into her own shadows
which were everywhere
she was mysterious
unattractive
mussed and
common looking
her child
wore only a diaper
and squirmed on her lap
took the bottle
she offered
lay back in her arms and
looked up at her
her only
direct look
was at the child






AS IF I AM THE IMAGE OF REGRET

the rush of wings
through a fast mirror
made of air;

as if I am the waiting glass
for the escape of
something wounded—

a word of long ago,
finding me here for its use,
and I am blessed—

as if I am the certainty
of wisdom . . .
to let all this happen,

even as I hold my breath
through the forgetfulness of others.






Poems on the wall,

as on the wind,
poems written in passing,
waiting to be read by
lonely strugglers of life
—on their way
to exile, or to
unknown destinations
—oh, through all weather
and stories of strife
—oh, limping and falling forward
into time passing before them.
            And there I am.
Waiting—
having left my words
in little time-cracks—whisperings
that faded there, holding
the thoughts I had to leave,
dateless now, and viable,
though very hidden
under shadow-dust and grime.
And it is for this that we say such things.

______________________

Today's LittleNip:

PERSPECTIVE ON WAITING

Time is
too short—too long,
too measured by
itself—too much a part
of slippery timelessness.
Here.    Then gone.

_____________________

Our thanks to Joyce Odam for today's tasty poems and for her photographic raindance. Wouldn't an inch or two be great right now? 

While we're waiting, our new Seed of the Week is County Fair. Tell us about sights, sounds, smells, and other nostalgia of ferris wheels and livestock and cotton candy, and send your poems, photos and artwork about this or any other subject to kathykieth@hotmail.com/. No deadline on SOWs.

—Medusa











Monday, May 18, 2015

Inside, Commotion

—Photo by Katy Brown, Davis, CA
 


WAITING ROOM NOIR
—Kevin Jones, Elk Grove
 
After things had quieted
down outside the window,
I looked back
to see that her seat was empty. 
“Must have gone in
to see the doctor,” or so I thought.
I checked the magazines.
All from this century, but just barely.
I waited some more. 
After giving a good bit of thought
to starting the copy of H.G. Wells’
Outline of History there
on the coffee table, I decided to check
with the receptionist instead.
“She left. You’ll forgive me
for saying this, but with your face looking
like it does, I thought it was you
coming in for treatment.  I’m sorry, sir.  No, wait.”
The other guy had looked worse,
but wasn’t feeling things anymore. 
Which is why it seemed like a good time
to visit the doctor.  Still, I should have counted
on her to have still yet another agenda.
Outside, the wind had picked up again. 
I stood for a moment letting my eyes adjust
to the darkness, pulled the Borsolino
down carefully so as not to dislodge
any of the stiches or bandages, and began walking.
There were two ways I could go:
I could spend hours checking every dive
on the Southside, or I could go back to
The Sandman’s apartment just to see.
Besides, somebody
was going to have to let out his
Rottweilers and feed them anyway.


 
 —Photo by Katy Brown
 


RIGHT-BRANCHING SYNTAX
—Tom Goff, Carmichael

           for composition teacher Peter Elbow


So many influences, elbowing in, I see:
your expert book, Vernacular Eloquence;
song-phrases of Arnold Bax, transforming, right-branch
themes, his grammar through seven symphonies;
Sam Johnson’s rightward-tendriling Big Sentence.
Such systems are taxonomies of sense,
but also springs of streamline and of pounce,
not hesitance. Put these in place, to entrench
our thoughts in memory—we move ahead by traceways.
First, knowledge we know, then newness. Test by lips,
teeth, tongue, and voicebox. Echoes in the ear
turn night-vision lenses. Cop-probe each room. Clear!
Confident minds can speed (old-new!) vast spaceways
no moonblock obstructs. Star-radiance, not eclipse.

(Like Finnish: all stresses first-syllable, hammers like laughter.
We won’t lose big things in small sounds that come after.)

_______________________

FOR A CIVIL UNION
—Tom Goff

Every love generates tension and strains
into balance. A desire, a question: What can we
hope for from Love? Love instantly retorts:
What can I hope for from you both?
Different these two demands, desires, both
valid, each as righteous as the eyes that meet
till the blended gaze turns unbearable. Outside
your smallest possible human circle
where four hands join, life’s hurry,
the aggression of work, the potential for love
in the going and doing. Inside,
stillness, affection, and quiet. Outside, commotion;
inside, communion. Happiness, arriving
in its one lonely way,
here now.


 
 —Photo by Taylor Graham, Placerville, CA
 


DRAFT
—Taylor Graham, Placerville


 
Six black horses in a field. Draft horses, a matched hitch of six. They graze apart on this halcyon Monday, blue sky verging to platinum at the horizons, the edges. In our world there’s always an edge, a fence. Perfect specimens of myth and legend, a child’s dream. Creatures to bear an armored knight into battle or on to peace. Earthly Pegasus, a star on each dark face. The poundage of their hooves! They gather closer to me, curious. I have nothing. One after another leaves, resumes grazing. A single stays, its soft breath through chainlink fence. What message passes between? what petition? First draft of a poem waiting.

_______________________

TATTERDEMALION
—Taylor Graham


 
His medium is muck & smatter. I spent Mother’s Day burning papers—a bounty of outdated news scrapped & blended with puppy poop, stuffed into bags & waiting till I had time to sanitize the deck. Eight pups lived in squalor (a mother’s term), squealing in play, then comfort-piled one atop another, asleep. Seven pups are gone to new homes, new mothers. Sunday I burned & scrubbed; laid down narrow strips of linoleum unearthed from the shed; cardboard & fresh newsprint for Scout—my one pup remaining—to smirch and splatter. No complaint, I smiled at how neat & tidy for the moment. Just wait! A solo patter of pawed feet, papers scattered across scrubbed redwood. Scraps & tatters. Scout. His tail sports a new ring of shiny black finesse—first hint of grown-up guard-hairs. Before I know it, he’s an old dog too creaky to make mess.
 
______________________          


KEEP-AWAY FROM TIME
—Taylor Graham

Morning mist breaks to blue-blanket
clarity, a stringer of heirloom vines along
the county road—the road itself a stringer,
fault-line between ranches and encroaching
town; a slow-down curve to circumvent
this hold-out homestead.
As if a dance, your pup leads mine
under a 1930s gate toward the old stomper-
barn—echoes of polka, schottish, Ländler—
mountain-hideaway of Frisco bohemians.
Rusting metal dragonfly has lost its lacquer-
gloss but still presides over the grassy swale.
Our puppies dash apart on whimsy
sketches of adventure, then bunch together
like camp-kids to Kool-Aid—a sprinkler’s
sprung a leak. Beside what used to be
pond, a small stone frog like a temple
keeps the waters and the days.


 
 Zelda and Scout
—Photo by Taylor Graham

 

Today's LittleNip:

After a long winter, giving
each other nothing, we collide
with blossoms in our hands.

—Chiyo (trans. from the Japanese by David Rey)

_______________________

—Medusa



Hollow Point Stumblers at UC Davis, May, 2015
—Photo by Michelle Kunert, Sacramento













Sunday, May 17, 2015

Perfect Is The Silence

—Anonymous Photo


ELIS
—Georg Trakl (1887-1914)

I

Perfect is the silence of this golden day.
Beneath ancient oaktrees
You appear, Elis, at rest with wide eyes.

Their blue mirrors the slumber of lovers.
On your mouth
Their rosy sighs were stilled.

At evening the fisherman  hauled in his heavy nets.
A good shepherd
Leads his flock along the forest's edge.
Oh how righteous, Elis, are your days!

Softly the blue silence
Of the olive tree sinks near the naked walls,
The dark song of an old man dies away.

A golden skiff,
Your heart rocks, Elis, on the lonely sky.


2

A gentle glockenspiel sings in Elis' breast
At evening,
When his head sinks into the black pillow.

A blue prey
Bleeds softly in the thornbrush.

A brown tree stands in isolation there;
Its blue fruits have fallen from it.

Signs and stars
Sink softly in the evening pond.

Beyond the hill it has turned winter.

At night
Blue doves drink up the icy sweat
That flows from Elis' crystal brow.

Along black walls
Forever drones the lonely wind of God.


(trans. from the German by Robert Firmage)

______________________

—Medusa







Saturday, May 16, 2015

Sometimes the Fault Line...

 Lion Dance, Locke
—Poems and Photos by D.R. Wagner, Locke, CA
 


“WHIZ DUMB BRIDGE”
                   —William T. Wiley

If these words begin to say
Something, it will be untrue
And this blanket that I wrap them in
Will be a brilliant blue.

Things will go without a name
To keep away from time,
A broken glass, a wild lament,
The lighthouse searching the sea,
One never speaking a word
While preparing food.

It makes a coarse and ugly
Garment despite the diamonds
Laid across the skin.
It will offer you a million doors
Yet not one of them leads in.

The outside disappears
When the lights are on.
The surface becomes hard
And cluttered looking.

We glide across the line
Hoping we will reach the end
Before we become totally confounded.






CHINESE SUITS

We were invited to the trial
But somehow the children got confused
Or were unable to handle any information
That came from the world outside
Their heads.  We were sorry for them.

The entire field became transparent.
There were guardians dressed in Chinese
Suits and carrying huge swords.
They probably wouldn’t have hurt
Anyone, but there was no way to be sure.

Headlights flooded the sides of the road
Near the bridge.  Even this far back
We could hear the tires squealing and
See the blue smoke.  The sound of metal
Crunching sounded like someone eating.

Reflections began popping back and forth
From the shields carried by the servants.
They had their own concerns and we were
Just as dreamers to them.  Whatever
We did, whatever we decided, would
Seem as nothing to them.  They gave
Us jobs to keep us busy.  The children
Sat and watched us as if they could learn something.



Garment
 


THREE BIRDS

There wasn’t anything left
That I could touch.
Christine came in with three birds.
“Here," she said, "try these.”
But when she opened her hands
They flew away.  One of them hit
The window, but that didn’t
Stop it from fleeing.
I was getting anxious to put
My feet back on the ground.

“You must be dreaming,” Ramon said.
He was sitting in the crotch of a tree
Very far above me and was shouting.
“How did you get up there?”
I called to him.

“I was thinking deeply about things
And I fell into a well.
When I woke up, I was up here.”
“That doesn’t make any sense,”
I called.
“Oh yes it does,” he said, but
The tree was growing very quickly
And I lost sight of him before
I could reach a conclusion.

“I can’t possibly live like this,”
I said aloud to no one in particular.
“But you are doing alright now,”
They answered.
“Many swim and some are
Able to cover great distances.
A few even reach the horizon.”
I felt comfortable for a moment,
Then the wind started again.
What happened?  I was so
Involved with the moment
I didn’t see what happened.

A man with translucent hands
Began to speak to me in
American Sign Language.
I think it was Borges.
He wanted me to get him
A glass of water.
That is how I got here.



 Cenotaph, Legion of Honor, San Francisco
 


THE RULES

Not to break the rules, we take the train.  The rails sound like
glass sounds when it opens to its sand, to the fact that it is glass.
“Why must it be this way?" she asks as the train strains toward
the sounds of the sea.
I know now I was wrong when I went to stand in the street
only a breath away from death.  Cars flashed past me.  I started
to sing a song.
“Shut up!  Shut up!” she screamed.  “This is not what we came
here for.”
I dragged my feet back to the curb.  “Why do you want to go
where there are dogs?" she asks, as if it was even close to the
truth.
Each day is like this.  I hear the rails click-clack.  My ears will
not hear her anymore.  She fills a glass with ice and puts her
feet up.  My skin begins to itch.  It is like this now, a sore on
the soul that makes a vile sound.  The train does not help.  The
train did not work at all.
I stare out of a hole in the side of the train.  Time leaves me.
This is the rule now, I think.  I say to her, “This is the rule.”
She laughs and tells me to try to sleep, that we will be there
soon.
I start to dream in words and say them over and over so they
can no longer carry more than breath.  I want to spit, but have
a beer just to be a smartass.
“Why do you do this?" she says.
“I am very strong,” I say, “like stone.”
She looks past me and laughs as the scenes rush past the train.



 Hollyhock
 


FAULT LINES

Sometimes the fault line, sometimes the fault.
There will be consequences for all the actions
Taken here, the wind, the rain, the mornings without
Incident when we neglected to differentiate between
One day and another, believing each day was just
Like another because our surroundings remained
The same.  One cannot trust to consciousness

To explain change.  People die totally unnoticed.
The kind of music they loved may appear in a dream,
Shifting between call and response, Ol’ Hannah,
Then that sound of hammer against huge steel nails.

We struggle and swim ashore.  “Are you having
A good time?"  The ground beneath our feet
Opens and the tectonic plates move slightly,
Not much, just enough to bring down Los Angeles.

Our feelings are electric.  They belong to the realm
Bounded by animals, guarded by animals, surrounded
By others who bear a resemblance to ourselves but who
Will always remain other.  We still choose to call them
Brother, afraid that if we do not, we will no longer be able
To read the book, stand in lines with them waiting to get in.

This is a form of praying, or so I am told by the swirl
Time puts on our presence here.  There will be
Consequences for all the actions taken here.
Sometimes the fault line, sometimes the fault.


(first pub. in Medusa's Kitchen, 2010)

 ________________________

Today's LittleNip:

A LITTLE FROG

A little frog
Has been swimming
In my bloodstream.

He told me all my
Blood vessels had names
With street-signs.

He was swimming near
Alpine Way and Minotaur
Court.  Things were
Lovely there, he said,
But there were no flies,
So he had to leave.

_________________________

—Medusa, with thanks to D.R. Wagner for today's delectable magic in the Kitchen!



Graffiti, Fourth & J Sts., Sacramento














  

Friday, May 15, 2015

Love In My Cup

Love In My Cup
—Photo by Cynthia Linville, Sacramento
—Poems by William S. Gainer, Grass Valley



READING FOR BURNING MAN

The bar was loud,
some guy was dancing
to the light show—
blue dots,
no music,
alone,
he had the moves …
The kid in the Army suit—
with the little
branding irons
brought his machine
inside.
It was like hearing
a jet plane
when he fired the thing
off.
The sound system
had its problems
Jesse tried,
several times.
He tried.
I cut the reading short,
about half.
When I was leaving
the guy working
the door said,
I really liked your stuff,
Ed.

________________________

TEXAS FIREFLIES

You saw them?
I'm jealous.
Did you let out a gentle
sigh,
lean up
against someone—
a little closer?
Set your iced tea down—
leave a cool evening kiss
on warm cheek.
Fireflies
do that
to people,
at least they should …

________________________

ONE TEAR AWAY

She had that smile,
you know that smile,
the bad news smile.

She told me what they said
the best results
possibilities
things they could try.

I wanted to say
I’ll miss you
but you don’t
say those things
at least
you’re not supposed to.

We set close
one tear away
from screaming

wanting to know
why
and hoping
goodbye
takes a long time
to say.

_________________________

THE TREE TRIMMERS

The Mexican kids
showed up
to trim the trees
from the power lines.

They did it
very gently.
The jays and sparrows
didn’t seem
to notice.
Even the young oaks
didn’t act scared.

Twenty minutes later
the squirrels returned
to their gossip.

Two houses down
the work continued.

________________________

AN EVENING IN KANSAS

The tornado—
twenty minutes
in the storm shelter.
Climbing out
she falls to her knees
screams thanks
to a vengeful god
the kids
cling
scared.
The old man
surveys the damage
in a low breath
mumbles
Christ
I just mowed
the lawn.
None of it
makes sense
not even
the quiet.

_______________________

KAE ST. MARIE IS AT IT WITH COMCAST:

They want to raise the rates,
but with that
you get the improved package—
it includes a home security system. 
She says
if it doesn’t come with a drone
she doesn’t want
anything
to do with it. 
I am with her on this one,
it would be nice
to buzz the neighborhood
a few times a day. 

_______________________

Today's LittleNip:

ENOUGH TO END ON

As long as I got
a couple of bucks
can sniff out
a warm bar stool
have the strength
to tell one
listen to one—
another lie
wander home
and dream
they were all true—
the lies.
That’s enough.

_______________________

Our thanks to today's contributors, all of whom will be included in the new issue of Rattlesnake Press's WTF! which will be released at Luna's Cafe this coming Thursday night, 8pm. Editor frank andrick is in Sutter General Hospital right now, though (Rm. 5414, Bed 2) after having surgery following some complications from his kidney biopsy. He's hoping to be home in a day or two, and to be hosting at Luna's on Thursday. Think good thoughts for him.

This is a very busy weekend in NorCal poetry! Scroll down to the blue box (under the green box) on the right for details of the many readings.

______________________

—Medusa



—Photo by Wendy Rivara, Sacramento