Friday, December 30, 2011

A Disagreement

And oh, he said, what would tonight be without moon,
he said, with the sway and the step of winter's wind.
And oh, he said, moonbaby wouldn't shine like music,
he said, without moon melody to carry her through.

But oh oh, she said, ain't no moon worth its sweet shine,
she said, without the volume and purr of wet oil night.
Oh oh, she said, the moons in my eyes wouldn't shine like music,
she said, without midnight and mascara to carry us through.

Sunday, October 16, 2011

The Rake's Lament

Remember the passion of the ankle,
Blanched and supple like glistening wet milk
Left shimmering, under morning sweetlight,
While the pasture girls sing under hay lofts.

How the rake’s impetuous mouth must have
Watered, tantalized by the odor and
fleshy rind of that white pear’s sashay as
it hummed upon the wooden portico.

There is something yet erotic about
Waiting at front doors, beneath snow and rain.

The carnivorous rapture of ankles
has dissipated across bodies of
young pasture girls who have forgotten the
dance because they have forgotten the song.

Just what could her moonskin say about love?
See it engender the genuflection.
Her feet the altar and the cross, the praise
To you—my sweet!—to you I kneel.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Midnight Snack

grandaddy’s tummy
would rumble
when i sat
on his lap

he and i
i think on it
were just too
big for that
brown recliner

his tummy would
rumble when
grandma made french
toast before bed

bed i got
with grandma and
granddaddy
one night when
i could not sleep.

i saw in
the night
her shining
white bra strap

the night
when grandaddy
woke
to my tummy
rumbling

Monday, August 29, 2011

A Storm at Night

That night the young man opened the window
as the storm slid across the velvet mountains.
The sweat of summer air flushed his turbid face
Like women's breath at a drunken party,
warm and sour, the violet effluvia
leaving him regretful, uxorious.

June’s solstice lingered in his home with some
clandestine odor of verdancy—gleaned
from the crepuscular whispers of trees;
Silly ladies gossiping languidly.
The light of June hyper-ventilated
Around his dingy lamp, moth-like, love-like.

The young man gazed into the buxom air,
Seduced by some already-begun dream.
Silver raindrops shimmered softly in the
husky honeyed drip of Virginian air.
While storm-haze perfumed across the mountains,
A cascade like dreams on blue-dark mountains.

And there in the darkness while the twilight
shivered beneath trees that held the secret,
The young man caroused within the fecund air
and pooled the water and the haze against him.
Sweat of storm like fragile adultery,
the roiling night kissed him, and was soon gone.

Sunday, July 24, 2011

The Lycanthrope

Then the wild child spoke, always
In an eager ambush, the proselyte!
The voice that shrugs shoulders and
Galvanizes the stagnant air past
Redemption or prophecy, past
Any reduction to time; no, just the desperate
Will to create the desultory bliss of (now!)
Tonight, here, (now!) again, always (now!).

The wild child who bristled on the neck
When the moon turned full, bristled with
Urgency and fever and the furious will
To exhume the evanescence of tonight
(now!) with those that longed to jazz and howl
Beneath the fragrant creamy moonlight.
The wild child! May he never know
The inert yet ceaseless accumulation of
These wild nights.

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Two Horizons

In a summer of ennui and youth
One glimpse remains, a lingering still-frame
Murky in the haze of its own languor.

In that strange hour of husky sweet dawn
When the sunlight and starlight entangle,
Quietly I watched you under bed sheets.

Your hips the white mountains of cool satin
Your silver sensation like snow soothed me.
In summer sweat I let myself shiver.

Your wet hair blossomed like some strange flower
Upon the still shores of our crisp pillow.
I buried my eyes against your wet neck.

When you turned the horizon unfolded
Briefly, into milky pools of white sighs.
But the hills slowly tumbled back again.

Could I leave you there in the blushing dawn?
The morning air blanketing you, melting
Your rolling curves? In another day I will.

But as sunlight licked the blue hills outside
I traced my finger on your quiet peaks.
The two horizons blurred in starry sleep.

Friday, February 25, 2011

What the Water Sang

Your hands the calm hands of some tribal Chief,
leathery with faint fumes of violet smoke.
Carved from the old stories of aspen trees.
Your hands, somehow so soft in their coarseness.

Your hands submerged me into the current,
My tears enflamed the vigorous pool.
You let the water cleanse me in your hands.
There in the water you taught me to sing.

There in the current’s hush you laced into
my mute volition the dreams of water—
murmurs among the rocks, the sweet pool!—
“Coalesce to the mermaid’s elegy.”

In water we bore our love together,
Your hands trembled like the kingfisher’s wings.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Reaping and Sowing

And then she said,
"Love me please,
please love me please,
or these lonely days
won't ever leave."

And I replied,
"I love you so!
Oh I love you so!
But this kinda love
from lonely grows!"

My Better Half





Sometimes during the night
When I wake up lost in that limbo
Between cognizance and the purgatory of sleep,
I see out of the corner of my half-closed eyes
My own leering wickedness.

Undulating in some type of rhythmic lurch,
He throbs like some primordial artery
Always in access of
the ancient deposits
of shadows lost in the cold
fractures of consciousness.

Slithering in periphery
He—I—seduces with gnarled
Fingertips of mirror-like obsidian
The Fetus of memory trembles
Inside its dismal shell.

Quick! I feel his head tilt
And the eyes like drunken nebulas
Tumbling gently in the frost of the night
That drapes upon us as he sings:

“Merry lost child! So far from the green path!
How many lives you have trampled upon!
Your happiness the solemn fruit,
The red liquor drenched across
Your arduous trek—how many children
Have you transformed to lonely
Women and men? So quickly
You grabbed her neck and felt the power
Surge through your arm the sabre.
Know this, child—before you squeezed,
She could have sworn in the midst of that
Inferno, that blur of rage and shame,
That hairs sprang up on your coarse neck,
And fangs of venom and white white love
Corrupted your sweet sweet smile.”

And before I turn away from
My manic, leering self,
Before I rid myself of guilt and agony,
Before I dream easy,
My loving wickedness, My
Better Half,
Whispers so sweetly
To the night (our cool sweetheart):

“You love so much child, you
Gon’ be the death of someone!”