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The west wind blows
white with snow
pushing the new mom
with her new babe
in a new pram
I looked over
and all I could see
was a blue hat
and a blue blankie
with a pink nose
in the middle
snorkeling up
Her morning began well I suppose
She may have been from out of town
Otherwise I would have not lived my day
With her as I did

I was standing on the corner of holy ground
St. Marks and First in the City
I saw her coming towards me.
She was with a friend
She passed me and then with a few steps more
She sat on a stoop.
She’s drunk I thought
She leaned over and fell on her side

We just did some stuff her friend said
Is she OK
I shook her slightly
What is her name I asked her friend
Jennie
Jennie I said loudly
Jennie
I pinched the skin between her thumb and forefinger
Hard hard with my nails
Nothing

People stopped and looked
Call an ambulance
Her breathing was slowing
I pressed my mouth to hers
And blew and blew
Again and again
Nothing
I pressed her chest over her heart
Again and again
She was gone
Her friend was gone
The ambulance arrived
and I went into the bar on the corner
NYC in the 80's was a profligate place. In the East Village people went to the edge quite often and did not come back. On weekends the B & T crowd came for the cornucopia of earthly delights and often did not get to go home.
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acknowledgements to John Cage who wrote a piece for piano entitled "4'33" of Silence". This was entirely silent
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just all you need to know about
my art in poetry
Tonight at midnight central. a poem about art. my longest yet coming in at 44 lines and counting. will fit in one page with Arial 10 font if you want to print it. Comments welcome from the glitterati and Poem of the Day commenters.
ten minutes ago
the sky let loose heavy rain
now the sun shines bright
ultra f*cking hot
skin on head all burned off
will I ever learn
In summer in the country
the married buzzards wheel and flow
on languid wings,
surveilling every inch of the earth below
for unwary prey.

The sun tracks dawn to night
over heat scorched land,
ripening the grains and drying the hay,
whilst in dense city living,
the park tree-leaves rustle
in summer symphony and
sandlot infants scream and play,
their mothers watching every move,
no suntime siesta now and here.

And in dense packed city blocks
mi casa es non su casa,
open windows leak sound,
and the smell of someone’s mother’s cooking
is treif at another table.
In grander houses the front lawns
now water-lack died-back brown,
evidence of greener days gone past,
wait for the fall's forgiving.

And yet and still
in the mellow evenings
neighbors talk to neighbors
friendly asides,
jokes,
politesses,
the leavenings
that let us live together
till the cool comes
and the windows and the doors shut.
We too hibernate till spring.
Papa she cries
underdog underdog
So
I
conscripted
ready
and at
the exact split second
my hands against her ****
I tense
and run
and push her
and up
and up
high on the arc of the swing

Underdog?
Written a long time ago in my daughter's early years.
No haiku today
my mind just says no way bro
just take the day off
boughs blow in the wind
practice for pollen exchange
life cycle once again
My local songwriter
the blackbird
is up on his pole
again.
Most evenings
when the sun is downing
to the west
he comes and gives us
a concert,
he has no score
just opens his beak
and  trills.
There is repetition
with variance
and pause.
Sometimes he is so eloquent
that people in the street
stop and listen
and smile at each other
content for a moment
to listen to a genius
granting us solace
Bare feet on the sand in summer
running hard over the hot bits
to get to the water quickly
the freedom from concrete

climb over the fence after dark
stifled laughter private frissons
skinny dipping a rite of passage
the freedom to be naked

laughter and the camaraderie
of long time association
friends and confidantes
the freedom to be happy

divisions fixed by polarities
religious racial ethnic and economic
still absolute rights for all
the freedom of the first amendment

but still
not for a woman’s right  to her body
not for the terminally ill to die
not for political asylum
not for driving while black
not for gay and LBGT
not for equal rights to marry
but yet and still
the freedom to vote for change
condescension
imbues him from head to toe
he demands respect
the letters for the word idiot can be found in this haiku. nicht wahr?
Who walks there darkly

Can it be Janus, his clock out of time?

No. Janus never was hooded,
His need to straddle past and soon
Precluded such frippery.

But who is this person and what the tool?
A farmer monk on his way to market?

I bid thee Good Day Sir.
Tell me your news.

Let me see your face.

My God.  It is Death with his scythe
And who is this other, your double in black?

Your  tallyman with his knife and stick.
I felt it time to write in the dark
last night a blackbird
singing his heart out for Spring
none paused to listen
april fool today
most pranks are just plain silly
sadly some can hurt
The family rarely gets together
oceans apart
email and skype are there
but touch and embrace
are not
the family meal
remembrance and folly
and joy and bitterness
at new partings to come
gelled over, smoothed with wine
the mother asserts her role
the desert a trifle
memories of tastes past
remembered again
before the door opens and shuts
another goodbye and for how long
the question hangs
the answers now are too late for tomorrow
and so to bed
Chicago is a cold and dangerous place
So I was told by another
and as a citizen of the Second City
I looked back to my life here
seeking terrors
unfolding my layers of memories
to find oppression, fierce tumult
attacks on my person, mayhem and madness
and found nothing.
Chicago is a cold and dangerous place
I was told
and to give them credence
I sought again in my memories
looking for hordes of evil ones
said to live here forcing good men and true
to lie quiet and not live in the sun.
Try as I might
I relived no terrors
no threat to me and mine
but rather in my neighborhood
a whole wide range of men and women
and those not sure
of all colors and creeds and language
all in their cohesive whole
making my city a place of the new and of joy.
Chicago is a cold and dangerous place
I was told
thinking back on this makes me think
that there are some who far from their natal place
withdraw and fear even their shadows
and see life as a cage where they survive
fearful all their days
I have time to invoke my god to give them strength
to live in the light and not be fearful
New York City New York is the First City in the USA
Chicago is the Second City
The nurses are always brisk and purposeful.

"*** in this'
she said,
writing my name on the small plastic container

"I'll be back soon"
and out she went
leaving me alone to ponder on my ability
to fulfill this function.

"Now what"
I say to myself
"Unbuckle or unzip or both?"
How best to relax.
do what I gotta do
standing or sitting?

Will there be enough?
and what if it spills?
Could I get it off the floor?
and if not,
where could I get more?

Carefully, carefully, the job done
I put the precious liquid aside
and carefully, carefully
I pick up and ***** on the lid.

Zip.
Buckle.
Preen.

What tales will this ichor tell?
Two new back operations coming up. Can't be too  glum.
Two parentheses
above and below white space
"Liked" by many. Why?
in perfect order
the waves all with white fichus
die quietly on the beach
poets froth up
inedible stone soup feeds
inconsolables
After all the clangor and tumult and epithets I thought a gentle little epitaph might be written in haiku form
my options are none
death is the sole arbiter
leave it all to fate
Inspired by a work from PAPAYA
My brain in a daze
like one thing follow another
I take it all back
I wrote a haiku for SPT where I took "like"  for  "follow"

I will buy a dictionary
moment of madness
SPT makes nice likes twice
gift of a goddess
contemplation
has not helped me overmuch
action works faster
A one Martini lunch works wonders
Fourth of July
independence from Britain
language ties still
There is a train in my head
that shunts from ear to ear
whistling at intervals,
sometimes the train diver
goes high to the top of my skull
and my ears pop.
I was thinking that there
should be clouds this high
I haven't seen any yet.
I haven't seen any eagles either.
Maybe my skull is in the back country
where nothing grows and nothing lives
I will get another train tomorrow
and will bring my own lunch
took the train down south
fabled city St. Louis
the river flows through
I have a house on the hill
with an outside terrace
with two chairs.

There at night
I sit in the left hand chair
my heart beats and the earth listens
so quiet is the night.

The other chair is empty.

I need a heart to beat with mine
but no one comes.

it's just the earth and me.
My child plays
and mutters
to her other self

the two of them
one dominant

the other passive
act out the game

Alpha and beta
vie for equal time

My child plays
and utters
her right to rule
An old poem revisited
this is your pilot
forgive me for the delay
we have a flat tire
huddles of green spikes
push and elbow to the sun
rush to flowerhood
the sky crane lifts slabs
third floor in a new building
lots of noise today
custom chocolate
with drizzled caramel sauce
morbidly obese
North I go
to deeper cold and longer night,
once I was certain but I lost hope.

East is better?
The dawn in my eyes does blind me,
who now knows the way?

South to Patagonia
sheep and trees riled by the wind,
then to rocks crouched in the cold sea.

West where the sun rules the late hours
and we on tiptoe stretch high
to postpone the losing of the light.
Old poem now revisited
bushido ruling
I offer up my haiku
wakizashi kills
creativity
works in mysterious ways
found object sculpture
Zika mosquito
the gift that keeps on giving
Rio welcomes you
Maybe Coney Island might be safer

— The End —