whatever it is,my wife finds anything out of line,
anything at all, she’ll be pissed
doesn’t matter what it is.
hope there’s nothing i’ve missed.
i’ve got to anticipate, that means
clean up after myself, not make a mess
and keep her kissed . . . well, at least amused.
no one gets a free ride round here,
not even the frogs. not these days,
and make them damn robins pay
for all the worms they’re taking;
those dirty dirt peckers.
and i’m turning myself a new leaf, sure enough,
starting first thing tomorrow if i can,
well, tomorrow afternoon at the latest,
you can bank on it, cause that’s the plan.
so you may not recognize me,
cause i’ll be the one all the time head down an working, an I’m not
jerking you around, that’s for certain, well, that is the plan.
i’m the new man til they pull the final curtain, practically.
wa ya'think?
Friday, May 07, 2010
Thursday, May 06, 2010
pilgrims cry
was a file
kept with my others.
title looked intriguing,
opened it,
nothing inside,
only a title.
i thought it would grow
from that small beginning
it didn’t; so what does that tell me?
writing beginnings can sit for a long time
unlike buds in spring or leaves in the fall that let go.
i made a sandwich to stall and consider.
had a model of the mayflower when i was a kid,
from the bar in a restaurant my folks took me to.
don’t remember ever playing with that ship
but i had it for a while, or at least i think i did.
now, pilgrims,
you're not usually thought about in May,
you are a story, seems from forever so long ago,
and should be remembered more, 's what i say.
you were before trains, TV, traffic,and airplanes,
when our country was land full of trees,
a lot of rolling earth, Indians and lightening bugs,
and many down sloping clean, fresh running streams.
good night kisses and motherly hugs,
that’s how it was done. now don’t you cry, pilgrims,
you did yours starting out and getting us here. thanks
from the generations that followed in the Mayflower's wake.
there’s still trouble with religion, war, and government,
the same old woes do go on; and like others in their time,
you know, we too did both our job and made a bit of mess.
patching, between accomplishments, an living with the stress.
kept with my others.
title looked intriguing,
opened it,
nothing inside,
only a title.
i thought it would grow
from that small beginning
it didn’t; so what does that tell me?
writing beginnings can sit for a long time
unlike buds in spring or leaves in the fall that let go.
i made a sandwich to stall and consider.
had a model of the mayflower when i was a kid,
from the bar in a restaurant my folks took me to.
don’t remember ever playing with that ship
but i had it for a while, or at least i think i did.
now, pilgrims,
you're not usually thought about in May,
you are a story, seems from forever so long ago,
and should be remembered more, 's what i say.
you were before trains, TV, traffic,and airplanes,
when our country was land full of trees,
a lot of rolling earth, Indians and lightening bugs,
and many down sloping clean, fresh running streams.
good night kisses and motherly hugs,
that’s how it was done. now don’t you cry, pilgrims,
you did yours starting out and getting us here. thanks
from the generations that followed in the Mayflower's wake.
there’s still trouble with religion, war, and government,
the same old woes do go on; and like others in their time,
you know, we too did both our job and made a bit of mess.
patching, between accomplishments, an living with the stress.
Wednesday, May 05, 2010
guy problems
icebergs are melting,
great globs of trash are floating in the oceans,
the universe is expanding or shrinking ;
scientists have conflicting notions.
is it hotter
or colder,
what’s going on;
and what about the economy?
more than i can handle sometimes.
though i can squeak by knowing two things:
is what i have on okay?
and, what’s for dinner?
great globs of trash are floating in the oceans,
the universe is expanding or shrinking ;
scientists have conflicting notions.
is it hotter
or colder,
what’s going on;
and what about the economy?
more than i can handle sometimes.
though i can squeak by knowing two things:
is what i have on okay?
and, what’s for dinner?
Tuesday, May 04, 2010
i thought chili peppers were hot
i thought chili peppers were hot,
that was the story, just hot.
then i ate a few,
okay, maybe more than a thousand.
not all at once, you know,
only if you add them up. a lot of them
in my lifetime, you see;
and what i got was an understanding
and an appreciation
for peppers in general.
sounds like a civil war commander
General Pepper,
and i did work for an old Pepper too.
Bill, he was from Kentucky.
Waddy, Kentucky to be exact.
How would i possibly remember that;
except that he wrote a song and
wanted me to help make it a hit, no kidding.
he called it - Move your Body to the Waddy.
and i thought i was making this up.
well, maybe with the Internet
and who know what all,
Bills words will live long, on into dark nights,
down rolling hills and by bushes where animals call;
but i swear it is true as clear water
gushing out of a mountain stream;
tasteless yet refreshing,
but no way a hit, you know what i mean?
all this takes us back to peppers
or at least me, where i began, it does.
i’ll sprinkle red hot ones on my food
cause it gives my mouth that happy buzz.
they were eating pepper five thousand years ago
in the Americas, that’s a fact;
and they stayed cause they are good,
but i don’t have to tell you that.
come on Bill, let’s make a song of it,
for the mountains and the trees and the birds
and the new people who came over and started
this up, along with and especially for, the Indians.
that was the story, just hot.
then i ate a few,
okay, maybe more than a thousand.
not all at once, you know,
only if you add them up. a lot of them
in my lifetime, you see;
and what i got was an understanding
and an appreciation
for peppers in general.
sounds like a civil war commander
General Pepper,
and i did work for an old Pepper too.
Bill, he was from Kentucky.
Waddy, Kentucky to be exact.
How would i possibly remember that;
except that he wrote a song and
wanted me to help make it a hit, no kidding.
he called it - Move your Body to the Waddy.
and i thought i was making this up.
well, maybe with the Internet
and who know what all,
Bills words will live long, on into dark nights,
down rolling hills and by bushes where animals call;
but i swear it is true as clear water
gushing out of a mountain stream;
tasteless yet refreshing,
but no way a hit, you know what i mean?
all this takes us back to peppers
or at least me, where i began, it does.
i’ll sprinkle red hot ones on my food
cause it gives my mouth that happy buzz.
they were eating pepper five thousand years ago
in the Americas, that’s a fact;
and they stayed cause they are good,
but i don’t have to tell you that.
come on Bill, let’s make a song of it,
for the mountains and the trees and the birds
and the new people who came over and started
this up, along with and especially for, the Indians.
Monday, May 03, 2010
on Pasquali's family business
daughter.
good cooking daughter
satisfied to be there,
smiles when she sees us,
serves us well and plenty.
son.
son seems content in his labor
finding his own self,
following his father’s way;
stays on task throughout the day.
husband.
Pasquali is the quintessential good guy,
out there, friendly and happy,
he’ll stop and talk;
sits down with us if it’s slow.
wife.
don’t rush to pay if you see her,
now here’s the real score,
when old wifey takes the cash
it always costs a little more.
good cooking daughter
satisfied to be there,
smiles when she sees us,
serves us well and plenty.
son.
son seems content in his labor
finding his own self,
following his father’s way;
stays on task throughout the day.
husband.
Pasquali is the quintessential good guy,
out there, friendly and happy,
he’ll stop and talk;
sits down with us if it’s slow.
wife.
don’t rush to pay if you see her,
now here’s the real score,
when old wifey takes the cash
it always costs a little more.
Sunday, May 02, 2010
as a measure of time
as a measure of time,
tables - use old wood to build them,
or poems that i scratch out;
the tables aren’t much.
just made a small one
to hold my keyboard nicely,
the computer keyboard,
not the piano.
the piano sits well enough already
on the floor in the other room
where it ought to be,
like you, like me,
in place where we ought to be.
can i measure time building tables,
make a clock of it? there are pictures
to paint, engravings to do, and writing, eh.
all comes from within like breathing country air
and i let it out as it happens.
need i direct it more, control
and make a neat scene
or continue to write poems at random,
then build something,
paint something,
read or write when it happens?
at least, at most,
i am happy about it,
like life in the city
and many people to talk with;
what they do is their affair.
i keep head down with what i do,
although she has mentioned that
we don’t need another table.
rising early in the morning
in stillness, alone,
far trains passing
clocks ticking, tripping silence.
tables - use old wood to build them,
or poems that i scratch out;
the tables aren’t much.
just made a small one
to hold my keyboard nicely,
the computer keyboard,
not the piano.
the piano sits well enough already
on the floor in the other room
where it ought to be,
like you, like me,
in place where we ought to be.
can i measure time building tables,
make a clock of it? there are pictures
to paint, engravings to do, and writing, eh.
all comes from within like breathing country air
and i let it out as it happens.
need i direct it more, control
and make a neat scene
or continue to write poems at random,
then build something,
paint something,
read or write when it happens?
at least, at most,
i am happy about it,
like life in the city
and many people to talk with;
what they do is their affair.
i keep head down with what i do,
although she has mentioned that
we don’t need another table.
rising early in the morning
in stillness, alone,
far trains passing
clocks ticking, tripping silence.
Saturday, May 01, 2010
folly of spring
I
here i am, there are no geese.
must i go looking
in the usual places
where they congregate,
i don’t think so;
they can wait
and better they do,
a lesson for them all.
they know only their own reflection in the lake.
if they can recall other than their own image,
let them vent their wings and
see if they can find me.
a walk on the pier will show me many fish,
occasional mouth open bobbers and long swelling floaters,
but i don’t want to encounter any geese;
not that way, not today, not yet anyway.
II
wretched clean up
after a winter of winds blowing sticks,
knocking things about and new spring growing,
making a mess that we will reassemble into order;
it has to be done,
our part of the bargain
for being people living in this community.
have you noticed, the lucky nonliving don’t do shit.
they lie still in the recently frozen soil
watch the stars, wait for visitors,
or walkabout, return to favorite haunts in cover of darkness
or in thin air, thinking thoughts they didn’t know they could in life.
so i gave a kid relative of a neighbor
five bucks to cut our long front lawn.
when he finished tipped him a dollar for immediate service.
his two minutes would take forty-five from my life.
the kid is a tall, well built,long hair seventeen.
at that age i could have sliced weeds and then run the gauntlet,
now a wobbly sixty-five, can use the help
and kids always need money. good for both of us.
earlier i asked the school teacher next door how much
should i offer the lad to mow, he said five or ten.
this neighbor cuts it for us for free when we’re away.
teaches fifth grade math but not economics.
III
Frank the bluegill is gone from our pond
should i cast along the bottom with a net
dragging for skeletal remnants, traces
or did an invader, man or egret, go fishing.
no frogs yet, not this first of May.
they’ll come home in due time,
when it’s warm, humid, still and bugs are about.
scratch that last; there is one out there barking now.
IV
old friend LeeH. wrote to tell me of poet Wallace Stevens;
said my stuff was reminiscent. thought he joked
until i kept reading; it's a stretch, but now with a thousand
poems down i learn something new. that’s how life goes,
especially when you tire
of your own reflection in the water
and then pick your head up and look around.
there are nearly seven billion of us in this pond.
here i am, there are no geese.
must i go looking
in the usual places
where they congregate,
i don’t think so;
they can wait
and better they do,
a lesson for them all.
they know only their own reflection in the lake.
if they can recall other than their own image,
let them vent their wings and
see if they can find me.
a walk on the pier will show me many fish,
occasional mouth open bobbers and long swelling floaters,
but i don’t want to encounter any geese;
not that way, not today, not yet anyway.
II
wretched clean up
after a winter of winds blowing sticks,
knocking things about and new spring growing,
making a mess that we will reassemble into order;
it has to be done,
our part of the bargain
for being people living in this community.
have you noticed, the lucky nonliving don’t do shit.
they lie still in the recently frozen soil
watch the stars, wait for visitors,
or walkabout, return to favorite haunts in cover of darkness
or in thin air, thinking thoughts they didn’t know they could in life.
so i gave a kid relative of a neighbor
five bucks to cut our long front lawn.
when he finished tipped him a dollar for immediate service.
his two minutes would take forty-five from my life.
the kid is a tall, well built,long hair seventeen.
at that age i could have sliced weeds and then run the gauntlet,
now a wobbly sixty-five, can use the help
and kids always need money. good for both of us.
earlier i asked the school teacher next door how much
should i offer the lad to mow, he said five or ten.
this neighbor cuts it for us for free when we’re away.
teaches fifth grade math but not economics.
III
Frank the bluegill is gone from our pond
should i cast along the bottom with a net
dragging for skeletal remnants, traces
or did an invader, man or egret, go fishing.
no frogs yet, not this first of May.
they’ll come home in due time,
when it’s warm, humid, still and bugs are about.
scratch that last; there is one out there barking now.
IV
old friend LeeH. wrote to tell me of poet Wallace Stevens;
said my stuff was reminiscent. thought he joked
until i kept reading; it's a stretch, but now with a thousand
poems down i learn something new. that’s how life goes,
especially when you tire
of your own reflection in the water
and then pick your head up and look around.
there are nearly seven billion of us in this pond.
Friday, April 30, 2010
reading sign
i need go over again,
searching carefully each clue
as to where is up
for me, for you, it keeps changing
there’s been faint trace
like a bird puff gone to wind,
aloft - the shifting of the old tree.
ground level - wind licking long strokes in lawns
stuff is old, i see it around me
don’t let me kid myself
the wind is cold by night
as day old dinner left lying on the shelf
rampant speculation leads to inaccuracies
following closely pit padding heels of worry
abandoning hurry, do softly tread,
leave no space, show nor dread.
as we race handle our duties,
scurrying about have no doubt,
in the end, as my mother said,
kid, everything always works out
searching carefully each clue
as to where is up
for me, for you, it keeps changing
there’s been faint trace
like a bird puff gone to wind,
aloft - the shifting of the old tree.
ground level - wind licking long strokes in lawns
stuff is old, i see it around me
don’t let me kid myself
the wind is cold by night
as day old dinner left lying on the shelf
rampant speculation leads to inaccuracies
following closely pit padding heels of worry
abandoning hurry, do softly tread,
leave no space, show nor dread.
as we race handle our duties,
scurrying about have no doubt,
in the end, as my mother said,
kid, everything always works out
Thursday, April 29, 2010
the egret has landed
more a to a less play the drums tap tap
in my head riding, some.
last time i opened the window
i didn’t know it was the last time
if people dressed better
would they treat us better?
on the other hand
they treat us like cattle, so dress for it
saw a disheveled motorcycle man attired for a sleepover
had on a t-shirt with a decal picture of a motorcycle on it
give him a country name
call him Harley Woodpecker
hug the cushion
to your chest
in the event of evacuation
i’d call that an event all right
don’t mind
much of anything
words people say
or what aggravates
out the window
looked like two fat puffy bunnies
parked on the tarmac
call them big planes in their team colors
lock tray tables down in their
full upright position, why is that?
will it rattle, fall and break on takeoff?
hug the seat cushion to your chest
in the event of an evacuation
or if in need of a cuddle, not while plane is in motion,
or they’ll want to know why you’re taking their plane apart
don’t forget, do not forget this is a non smoking flight, don’t forget
woke up at eleven pm last night your time
been flying, well, riding mostly
go ahead tell me it’s a non smoking flight
nearly forgot, thought i'd quit or something
hurry driver
take me home so i can find the Internet is down
cause a ten cent piece of plastic broke when they
thought they reconnected the stuff no problem
throw out that dot of plastic
get it in the ocean
so it floats with the rest of it
and won’t ever be lonely again
in my head riding, some.
last time i opened the window
i didn’t know it was the last time
if people dressed better
would they treat us better?
on the other hand
they treat us like cattle, so dress for it
saw a disheveled motorcycle man attired for a sleepover
had on a t-shirt with a decal picture of a motorcycle on it
give him a country name
call him Harley Woodpecker
hug the cushion
to your chest
in the event of evacuation
i’d call that an event all right
don’t mind
much of anything
words people say
or what aggravates
out the window
looked like two fat puffy bunnies
parked on the tarmac
call them big planes in their team colors
lock tray tables down in their
full upright position, why is that?
will it rattle, fall and break on takeoff?
hug the seat cushion to your chest
in the event of an evacuation
or if in need of a cuddle, not while plane is in motion,
or they’ll want to know why you’re taking their plane apart
don’t forget, do not forget this is a non smoking flight, don’t forget
woke up at eleven pm last night your time
been flying, well, riding mostly
go ahead tell me it’s a non smoking flight
nearly forgot, thought i'd quit or something
hurry driver
take me home so i can find the Internet is down
cause a ten cent piece of plastic broke when they
thought they reconnected the stuff no problem
throw out that dot of plastic
get it in the ocean
so it floats with the rest of it
and won’t ever be lonely again
Monday, April 26, 2010
ordinary coffee 2
between time has begun in earnest,
sliding along a step at a time in this land
where coffee is not only a drug
it is the ritual, deeply set
saw Alberto a final time
had coffee, bid our goodbyes.
neither here nor beyond, i’m in prep time now,
thinking the way
then near home, woodworker Franco
tells me he’s moving from his shop,
saddened. his friends, already
thinking of his friends
twenty-five years in this place,
Franco has ripened and aged in this studio
of worn brick fabricated in the late middle ages.
he knows these ancient walls, having laughed and cried here
and we all have our paths,
the way for one is never
easy as it may appear to others.
expect and accept surprises
on the way keep your head up,
be alert through change, though fear it not.
remember - it is always easier to ride the horse
in the direction that it is going.
sliding along a step at a time in this land
where coffee is not only a drug
it is the ritual, deeply set
saw Alberto a final time
had coffee, bid our goodbyes.
neither here nor beyond, i’m in prep time now,
thinking the way
then near home, woodworker Franco
tells me he’s moving from his shop,
saddened. his friends, already
thinking of his friends
twenty-five years in this place,
Franco has ripened and aged in this studio
of worn brick fabricated in the late middle ages.
he knows these ancient walls, having laughed and cried here
and we all have our paths,
the way for one is never
easy as it may appear to others.
expect and accept surprises
on the way keep your head up,
be alert through change, though fear it not.
remember - it is always easier to ride the horse
in the direction that it is going.
ordinary coffee
ordinary coffee and a roll with apple
at the bar unchanged for years
dark haired daughter works Monday
she knows our routine
M. went along this regular
laundry day for Bill and i.
now Luciano will be closing his place
moving to Thailand the end of the month
chef Bill will spend his 43rd year in Roma
then is on his way
to live with his brother in Atlanta,
we’ll return in the fall, that’s the plan
yesterday it was Chinese food
with Maria, Bruna and Luciana,
a Trastevere summery Sunday
we bid our goodbyes
quickly all happens,
so sudden to depart
our friendship. our adventure
oh, melancholy heart
at the bar unchanged for years
dark haired daughter works Monday
she knows our routine
M. went along this regular
laundry day for Bill and i.
now Luciano will be closing his place
moving to Thailand the end of the month
chef Bill will spend his 43rd year in Roma
then is on his way
to live with his brother in Atlanta,
we’ll return in the fall, that’s the plan
yesterday it was Chinese food
with Maria, Bruna and Luciana,
a Trastevere summery Sunday
we bid our goodbyes
quickly all happens,
so sudden to depart
our friendship. our adventure
oh, melancholy heart
Sunday, April 25, 2010
more or lessing now
this whole thing is amazing
there’s seven billion of us
mostly the same
one head and the other parts
we put words together
that’s one way it starts
then what i come up with
is not all that unique
we’re in this together
that’s what i think
my poems are like yours
when you take ‘em apart
they’re all from the brain
run by the heart
so a salute to us is okay
from one and for all
give it your best,
have a nice day
there’s seven billion of us
mostly the same
one head and the other parts
we put words together
that’s one way it starts
then what i come up with
is not all that unique
we’re in this together
that’s what i think
my poems are like yours
when you take ‘em apart
they’re all from the brain
run by the heart
so a salute to us is okay
from one and for all
give it your best,
have a nice day
Saturday, April 24, 2010
saturday first thing
Saturday first thing
the crack of eight, remember that,
it's the hour to ransack Rome,
cause Romans sleep in the mornings
from our window above i observe a Bangladeshi
load the large wheeled wooden hand cart
for Campo dei Fiori venders Marco and Isa,
the guy needs the work, and they’re older now
we go out and down the alley way,
find Corado working alone at
Rosaria’s store, talk a bit.
he wants to see America some day
then to the laundry that still isn’t open
a half hour past the opening time written on the door.
after fifteen minutes of staring at the sign
we drag our cart to the Laundromat a few streets over
Crazy Mario is working, usually i go on Monday
with Bill the chef, when Luciano works there,
forever grumpy and dreaming aloud
of Thailand beaches, warm weather and low prices
our chores finished, we leave Roma by car to discover
it’s the day, it’s the hour, it’s what every Disneyland in
the world wants to be, charming as Sacrafano’s
medieval village center, rock village on a hill
now freshly green, deep springtime in the air
we have a coffee and walk around.
then to Alberto’s delightful home in the wild,
for lunch, half Calabrese cuisine,
half plain out of this world
Albie’s an artist, even when he cooks.
i’d tell you more but the page is nearly full,
must save room for desert.
the crack of eight, remember that,
it's the hour to ransack Rome,
cause Romans sleep in the mornings
from our window above i observe a Bangladeshi
load the large wheeled wooden hand cart
for Campo dei Fiori venders Marco and Isa,
the guy needs the work, and they’re older now
we go out and down the alley way,
find Corado working alone at
Rosaria’s store, talk a bit.
he wants to see America some day
then to the laundry that still isn’t open
a half hour past the opening time written on the door.
after fifteen minutes of staring at the sign
we drag our cart to the Laundromat a few streets over
Crazy Mario is working, usually i go on Monday
with Bill the chef, when Luciano works there,
forever grumpy and dreaming aloud
of Thailand beaches, warm weather and low prices
our chores finished, we leave Roma by car to discover
it’s the day, it’s the hour, it’s what every Disneyland in
the world wants to be, charming as Sacrafano’s
medieval village center, rock village on a hill
now freshly green, deep springtime in the air
we have a coffee and walk around.
then to Alberto’s delightful home in the wild,
for lunch, half Calabrese cuisine,
half plain out of this world
Albie’s an artist, even when he cooks.
i’d tell you more but the page is nearly full,
must save room for desert.
Friday, April 23, 2010
road again
some road cops on the cruise
with nothing to do get a kick
driving fast and laying on the siren
they passed us like a bat out of hell
stopped for lunch at a mom and pa diner
in an atomic particle of a town.
out front a parking space for two was open
‘til that guy in front of me pulls into it
goes right in the middle
takes it all, he does
not thinking of me or you,
that’s how Italbillys do
during, before and after pasta,
vegetables, warm pie and coffee, i sort
piles of notes from my pockets
x ‘em out when they’re done, i do
at home i keep one of the old cigar boxes dad used
little notes and numbers
written all over it
a boy has to learn somewhere
the Giant Cyclops had it right
tell the villagers to leave some sheep
tied up by the cave at the bottom of the hill
or there’s going to be trouble, problem solved
lunch was home cooked good
made new friends
learned the river was down,
not rushing like years before
a local truck, vegetables in the back
parked outside
after lunch we gandered,
chatted, got fruit, we did
the road home, windows up against the chill,
all the way we could smell the strawberries
nestled in the trunk of the car.
now that’s a poem, partner
with nothing to do get a kick
driving fast and laying on the siren
they passed us like a bat out of hell
stopped for lunch at a mom and pa diner
in an atomic particle of a town.
out front a parking space for two was open
‘til that guy in front of me pulls into it
goes right in the middle
takes it all, he does
not thinking of me or you,
that’s how Italbillys do
during, before and after pasta,
vegetables, warm pie and coffee, i sort
piles of notes from my pockets
x ‘em out when they’re done, i do
at home i keep one of the old cigar boxes dad used
little notes and numbers
written all over it
a boy has to learn somewhere
the Giant Cyclops had it right
tell the villagers to leave some sheep
tied up by the cave at the bottom of the hill
or there’s going to be trouble, problem solved
lunch was home cooked good
made new friends
learned the river was down,
not rushing like years before
a local truck, vegetables in the back
parked outside
after lunch we gandered,
chatted, got fruit, we did
the road home, windows up against the chill,
all the way we could smell the strawberries
nestled in the trunk of the car.
now that’s a poem, partner
Thursday, April 22, 2010
i smile satisfied
crossing traffic
with bullfighter ease
having done it before
it’s a breeze
turning left
then I squeeze
across the lane
step, step
like a dance
kind of nifty
Hey - that SOB
almost hit me
with bullfighter ease
having done it before
it’s a breeze
turning left
then I squeeze
across the lane
step, step
like a dance
kind of nifty
Hey - that SOB
almost hit me
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
baby down the well
baby down the well,
what the hell?
half a world away people talk
like it’s going on next door
next thing the playoff games
shadowed out by Dancing with the Stars,
you need some more distraction,
we’ve got robots going to Mars
what the hell?
half a world away people talk
like it’s going on next door
next thing the playoff games
shadowed out by Dancing with the Stars,
you need some more distraction,
we’ve got robots going to Mars
so many i don't know
been through so many books
don’t know what all i’ve read,
who wrote them
or what they all said
while some of it took,
seems the most of it, i dread,
is floating here somewhere,
swirling downstream in my head
don’t know what all i’ve read,
who wrote them
or what they all said
while some of it took,
seems the most of it, i dread,
is floating here somewhere,
swirling downstream in my head
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
since the colosseum
in Roma the paper trail
dreadful long, runs deep,
employment for a relative,
nothing to do with efficiency
if they’re selling chances
don’t bet against it,
the outcome is fixed in stone,
that’s how it goes
Roma has the reputation
to convolute everything,
and lives up to it
every imaginable way
dreadful long, runs deep,
employment for a relative,
nothing to do with efficiency
if they’re selling chances
don’t bet against it,
the outcome is fixed in stone,
that’s how it goes
Roma has the reputation
to convolute everything,
and lives up to it
every imaginable way
Monday, April 19, 2010
out of Roma ahead of the volcano
set a land speed record
on an intercity bus to the termini
the driver was in a hurry
to smoke or pee or call mama on his break
at the train station
oh the humanity
European victims of the volcano cloud
hurrying in, to find a way out
training south we stopped at Formia
a knowledgeable passenger said we’d be stopped a few minutes
i was three seconds from stepping off for a walk outside
as the door snapped closed and the train took off
a guy who saw it all
said it was close to disaster for me
and nearly smiled
when he said it
through Naples we passed
a dozen twenty story
apartment buildings with balconies
on all sides, all the way down
in Sapri stayed at a downtown hotel
a small park away from the sea
the racket was traffic and breaking waves of humanity
it was a fine afternoon
that evening at a local bar
i had a beer, M. had a glass of wine
served by the youngest bartender in Europe
my shoes are older than him
crashing waves
whish of the trees
laughing people
between us and the sea
so the volcano puffs
airports close
we had enough
soon we’re heading home
on an intercity bus to the termini
the driver was in a hurry
to smoke or pee or call mama on his break
at the train station
oh the humanity
European victims of the volcano cloud
hurrying in, to find a way out
training south we stopped at Formia
a knowledgeable passenger said we’d be stopped a few minutes
i was three seconds from stepping off for a walk outside
as the door snapped closed and the train took off
a guy who saw it all
said it was close to disaster for me
and nearly smiled
when he said it
through Naples we passed
a dozen twenty story
apartment buildings with balconies
on all sides, all the way down
in Sapri stayed at a downtown hotel
a small park away from the sea
the racket was traffic and breaking waves of humanity
it was a fine afternoon
that evening at a local bar
i had a beer, M. had a glass of wine
served by the youngest bartender in Europe
my shoes are older than him
crashing waves
whish of the trees
laughing people
between us and the sea
so the volcano puffs
airports close
we had enough
soon we’re heading home
fat mouse sleeping
fat mouse sleeping
is how we travel usually,
but not this bus, we let the good one go,
and took one with the square wheels
and the driver who that very morning
dropped off his mother,
three sisters and fiancee
at the nut house
his grin as he drove reminded me of the odd man,
a regular at a lunch counter in San Francisco,
with the black rubber toupee that clung to his head
like a sleeping alligator, i shuddered
and looked over to M. to see how she rode,
one hand on the saddle horn like a broncobuster
grinning without hanging on
and knew she was fearless
fat mouse sleeping
is where i wanna be
but not on this bus
the one with square wheels
is how we travel usually,
but not this bus, we let the good one go,
and took one with the square wheels
and the driver who that very morning
dropped off his mother,
three sisters and fiancee
at the nut house
his grin as he drove reminded me of the odd man,
a regular at a lunch counter in San Francisco,
with the black rubber toupee that clung to his head
like a sleeping alligator, i shuddered
and looked over to M. to see how she rode,
one hand on the saddle horn like a broncobuster
grinning without hanging on
and knew she was fearless
fat mouse sleeping
is where i wanna be
but not on this bus
the one with square wheels
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