Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
#carmenandcokebottles
As he sat the trash can back down gingerly He sighed Well, it’s a long story. We were drinking beer in my backyard at four in the morning On one of those sticky September nights Where sleep was more rumor than reality, And, as I noted the time on the clock for the umpteenth time, I heard a song outside my window; Not some drunken caterwauling of “Danny Boy” As rendered by some stray tabby in a Dublin alley; This was…singing, like you’d hear on a CD Or, perhaps, Live From The Met, And at first I thought some poor sot with an artistic streak Had pulled off the main road to sleep it off, But the singing was punctuated With the clatter of can-lids and the occasional grunt, Until I understood that baritone and trash barrel Were part and parcel of the same man.   As I handed him a second bottle, He recounted how his lifelong dream of riches, glory, And a glorious career on the world’s great stages Came to a sudden halt after a Manhattan debut (*I sang my *** off that night*, he recounted) Was met with mild praise, the odd bit of outright scorn And a healthy dose of apathy.   I ‘spose, he said between sips, *I could have done all right Givin’ lessons, singin’ bit parts here and there. You’re on the road a lot, but the money ain’t bad*, But one day, just before an audition for a supporting role In a regional production of Carmen Up in Binghamton ******* New York, He simply left the theatre, got into his car, And drove some sixteen hours Until he hit town here, and then he stayed. But, I countered, why not go back? The years of lessons and Julliard, All for celebrating our refuse and squalor With roadkill requiems, arias for rats?   Well, some days it’s a hard way to make a living, He said, stroking his chin thoughtfully, *But it does give me a venue to sing, And, to date, I ain’t been panned by no **** cat*.
0
Jun 13, 2018
Jun 13, 2018 at 12:00 PM UTC
Junkman, Sing.
As he sat the trash can back down gingerly He sighed Well, it’s a long story. We were drinking beer in my backyard at four in the morning On one of those sticky September nights Where sleep was more rumor than reality, And, as I noted the time on the clock for the umpteenth time, I heard a song outside my window; Not some drunken caterwauling of “Danny Boy” As rendered by some stray tabby in a Dublin alley; This was…singing, like you’d hear on a CD Or, perhaps, Live From The Met, And at first I thought some poor sot with an artistic streak Had pulled off the main road to sleep it off, But the singing was punctuated With the clatter of can-lids and the occasional grunt, Until I understood that baritone and trash barrel Were part and parcel of the same man.   As I handed him a second bottle, He recounted how his lifelong dream of riches, glory, And a glorious career on the world’s great stages Came to a sudden halt after a Manhattan debut (*I sang my *** off that night*, he recounted) Was met with mild praise, the odd bit of outright scorn And a healthy dose of apathy.   I ‘spose, he said between sips, *I could have done all right Givin’ lessons, singin’ bit parts here and there. You’re on the road a lot, but the money ain’t bad*, But one day, just before an audition for a supporting role In a regional production of Carmen Up in Binghamton ******* New York, He simply left the theatre, got into his car, And drove some sixteen hours Until he hit town here, and then he stayed. But, I countered, why not go back? The years of lessons and Julliard, All for celebrating our refuse and squalor With roadkill requiems, arias for rats?   Well, some days it’s a hard way to make a living, He said, stroking his chin thoughtfully, *But it does give me a venue to sing, And, to date, I ain’t been panned by no **** cat*.
Continue reading...
41