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Big brown eyes searching, seeking
Catch my bright blue orbs a-peeking

Brown haired tyke shuffling tiny feet
Is it my brogans you’ve come to greet?

Biding there beneath my growing girth
What could a moment like this be worth?

Bending down we meet face to face as
Brown blends to blue in subtle grace

Bambino blinks slowly as I grow older
Then lays his head on my broad shoulder

Brilliant rows of unblinking eyes
Stare at us with dumb surprise

But do they see what’s happening here?
And what brings that ringing to my ears?

Beyond my blaring auricular condition
I hear a trumpeting, an angelic rendition

Bestowing sight to those unnaturally blind
To the benign child in all mankind...

Behold, two souls have breached time and space
To ogle each other in this most ocular place.
Angling’s great from motor boats
But bank fishing is
Better

Dad parks near the road
Then we walk woodland trails
Together

Treading our way overland
With morning mist slowly
Rising

Ghost-like in grassy meadows
Where shallow streams flow
Freely

We slip past placid coves
Where wily bass lurk in
Shadows

Carefully making our way
Until we hear the
Whisper

Sit your weary bones down here
And wait ever so
Quietly

While motor boats on the lake
Chase the fish
to you
Blushing white blossoms
Aglow in the pale moonlight
Home is far away
a slight breeze
stirs the leaves
the cicadae sing
their siren song
echoing time,
lost memories

canopies of green
summers past
muddled dreams
fields and streams
running fast
free at last

still the cicadae
stir and sing
the song’s the same
the breeze still fair…
now I am here
once I was there
Six am
manhole cover ghosts,
street urchins
answering the whisper
of tires on wet asphalt
in mid winter
not yet cold
as we say goodbye
in the back
of Dad’s Buick Eight
him wondering
who’s at fault
while you hold me
and watch
the urchins evaporate
"On Pascal’s proposition that the Laws of Probability
(and Jansenian Theology) make believing in heaven a smart bet"

If one would wager with Pascal,
Sublime scientist
Spiritual Ras-cal;
Then one must choose simply either or,
What lies behind life's final door;

Crafty gamblers hedge their bet,
Not really sure,
Not dead just yet,
They opt for the comfort of safety nets,
Waiting to parlay their final debt;

If the spinning wheel stops on bust
Then nothing’s lost to fateful trust;
But should it land on the predestined slot,
It’s winner take-all, the Big Jackpot

Seasoned gamblers ride sure things,
Seeing in this life
A chance gold ring
So plant their seed in early spring,
To pluck the fruit that summer brings;

No strangers they to **** and vermin,
They hearken to
A more Autumn sermon,
And ceding naught to cold iniquity,
Gain perchance, a winter Serendipity.
I said she was the best man I know
And she took offense,
As if I’d stolen her feminine mystique
I said I meant it metaphorically,
Like chess pieces, so I guess
You can be the queen

Then I said, Of all the people I’ve known
You’re the only one
Who doesn’t hate, envy, lie or cheat,
except at cards,
And since it’s all a game
Maybe I can be the king

She said, Be whatever you want,
Just pay the rent,
Don’t bite the hand that feeds
And keep yours out of the cookie jar
Because this ain’t no game
Unless you want to play the fool
I’ve seen
tiny green tree frogs
chasing bright blue beetles
over golden mountains
where watercress
green as emeralds
grew in dark blue pools
and Bob White
called at sunset
or was it all a
dream
We rode a green metal glider
Neath an oak tree circus tent
In midsummer the moon watching
thru limbs that touched the ground
But I wasn’t really there

Just some man-boy clad in white
Denims, Jesus sandals and
Jersey Number 88
Yet I seldom played or prayed
Because I was never really there

And you, brighter than the moon
Painted secrets on the night sky
Of plastic princes and Vincent
Working with his knife
But I really wasn’t there

Grooving in your atelier
With Segovia, Mozart and
Dylan, biding our time until
The night of your gay Fall soiree
When I of course wasn’t there
Forty acres and a mule is Rueben’s stake,
in sandy-soiled pine-country
by a stream fed lake;
There he plants cotton, corn and ‘taters,
a patch of melons, beans and ‘maters;

Centuries of struggle landed him here
through rough sea-voyages fraught with fear
to endless lost days of pain and tears
brought at the hand of cruel overseers;

Freedom now is the clarion call,
a trumpet resounding
down Congress’ hall;
A chance to prosper in the un-chosen land
and to raise a family by his own sure hand;

With joy and goodness he buries the hate
unloading his burden and buoying his fate
beyond sheltering pines and the wooden gate
of a cozy house he’s built of late;

Children freed from that forbidding plight,
help with chores
and play with delight;
while Mother loosed from unspoken shame,
nourishes them there like warm summer rain;

Plow and plant, then nurture, then reap
skills developed when labor was cheap
are now built-up in freedom grown sweet,
as the tide of change begins its neap;

Wily carpetbaggers with big cash to spend,
use guile and trickery
the rules to bend
twisting men’s minds toward vile obstruction
while ****** the Law of Reconstruction;

Rueben prospers in this miraculous scheme
there in the forest by the fresh water stream
revering each day a freedman’s dream,
then wakes one night to a low, anguished scream;

The scene is horrific outside the front door,
his mind gropes madly
for a safe sandy-shore;
so he shuttles his family to the woods out back
while listening to the sounds of an awful attack;

Horse-mounted specters with torches ablaze
set fire to the barn and trample the maize
then gallop a-whopping as his old dog bays
at a burning cross where the dead mule lays;

They hide in the pines through a dreadful night
allaying kid’s fears
and the old dog’s fright;
Then return to the farm under a red morning sky,
to find the promise a smoldering burnt lie;

Jesus suffered again on that cross, it’s plain,
as sure as if Pilate had taken rein
leading hate-filled men on a satanic campaign
‘neath fear’s hood and white sheets of shame;

Madmen imagine their cause to be just,
leaving innocents moldering,
mangled in the dust;
With swords blood rusted and Bibles in belts,
they shout fiery sermons, as small worlds melt;

A hundred years flash by in slow fury,
history being written with no trial or jury,
It’s the same baleful, sorry old story,
thems doin' the tellin' gets all the glory;

But history sometimes reshuffles the deck,
And deals a new hand
to ruffle the stiff-necks
of modern raiders who race to the fore
to stanch the tide of progress once more;

Blind to their trail of ****** mistakes
and ignoring slimy vipers let loose on the take,
They go scape-goating—thrashing for snakes—
in sandy-soiled pine country, by stream fed lakes.
I stumbled, I fell along the way
And didn’t notice your pain
Trying to catch myself

When I did it seemed too late
As if I couldn’t rise again
And walk next to you

And so I stumbled further
Along crooked highways
Where hollow philosophies tripped me

Then I sought a subtler path,
A fool traveling old roads
Hoping that I might find you there

But mine was a hopeless odyssey
Leading down blind alleys
No map could ever trace

Where, when I called your name
I heard only empty echoes
That scarcely reached my ears

Like the lonely siren’s call
That lures me to that sacred shore
Where we once walked before the fall
lying awake
trying to recall
all the people I’ve known
is a form of insanity
I’m sure
but keeps monsters
under the bed
held back
by myriad faces looming
in the dark—
family and friends,
schoolmates and co-workers
GIs and wayfaring strangers
met along the way—
no one speaks
they just well-up
like pages in a photo album
telling stories with no
narrative or dialogue
only reflections
of lives that touched
at one time or another
then faded into the night
Stopped to talk yesterday
drank beer, watched kids play
as time slipped away
across borders
of white noise multi-media
where talking heads need ya'
to stand up and cheer
pros reaping beau-coup pay
and all those **** supporters
out there
stretching for something to say

Called Dial-a-Prayer on the phone
brewing coffee, start to groan
as the words drone
over magic
fiber-optic cables
beaming neo-synoptic fables
that make it clear:
God and doG buried the bone
and now the hiss of static
dead air
is jamming my talking Jones

Hearing a man of learned wit
I drain a Coke, sip by sip
as specious words slip
across pages
of Colonel Blimp’s his-story
dripping such tired sophistry
that it would be queer
if not the slow drip
of lies passed through the ages
with care
to fill small minds with ****

So now let us stand and pray
then shout please go away
to hacks that spray
with scurrilous delight
words that fall like precious stones
into the laps of ditto-head clones
who say here, here
and without further delay
spread the lies at night
to the cheers
of those with nothing to say
I wish I could tell you
     all the things
     I’ve learned along the way
     like what’s what and
     how high is up

I suppose it all started with
     mom and apple pie
     and the pledge of allegiance
     which led to please mister
     Custer I don’t want to go

Oh, I read the Bible
     cover to cover
     only skipping the
     begetting and begotting
     and most of the ****** stuff

The flood was the only part
     I liked, saving animals
     2 by 2 and all
     but then it all ended
     on Judgment Day

And so I read other sacred books
     the Upanishads, Vedas
     the I Ching and Koran
     and just to be fair
     the Book of Mormon by Jove

The only thing learned was to
     take it all with a grain of salt
     living in the moment day by day
     and you’ll surely reach the promised
     land or the dark side of the moon
Winter passed more slowly
Years ago
When it always snowed and the
Holidays seemed to linger

With salvation Army bells
Ringing out
At department stores displaying
Magic in their windows

And seeing those special houses
All decked out
With lit up trees, big holly wreathes
And Santa on rooftops sleighing

Then dreaming each night of that
Perfect Gift
Only I might open
Some snowy Christmas morning

I miss those holidays of
Long ago
When it always snowed
And the holidays lingered

But I no longer dream of that
Perfect Gift
Because I wake from winter’s slumber
Next to you Christmas morning
picked up a hitchhiker
one bitter day standing
on an exit ramp like
a statue wearing a plaid
shirt, jeans, tenner shoes
and looking quite red,
but I don’t think
he was a communist.
He didn’t say much,
sizing me up, no doubt
thinking I was a ****.
So I offered him a
Marlboro and said that I
once dated a girl who
lived nearby, right behind
Jessup’s Cut ha, ha, ha.
He said that’s where he was
coming from, dead serious, on
his way to Glen Burnie.
I peeled off my coat at the
first red light and laid it
on the seat between us,
“Take it, I’ve got another.”
He gave me a look that
said it would be beneath
his dignity. Maybe
taking my clothes off made
him nervous and so I
said it would be pretty
stupid to freeze to death
first day out of the Cut.
“I guess so, he said,” then
took the coat and hopped out,
probably thinking
I was a communist.
Lotus-like blossoms

Pale green

Lighter than Springtime

Diaphanous yellow

More delicate than love

And oh, the orange chevrons

Look closely

They are your loved ones

Heartbeat
Wednesday’s child is full of woe
Born under a quarter moon
‘Twas the year of the dragon
With Gemini rising in the west

What chance did such a child have
In a world full of malice and greed
Where fear ruled the day
And fair winds seldom blew
Dedicated to Carolyn Loretta Wasilewski born June 12, 1940 and murdered the night of November 8, 1954. Still an unsolved cold case.
Peaches

Wednesday’s child is full of woe
born under a half moon sky
in the year of the dragon with
Castor and Pollux looking on

A star crossed horoscope
of darkness and light
with a touch of the dragon’s
noble heart thrown in

But neither stars nor moon
nor dragon’s heart could save
this child from the sinister
forces loose in the world

Dedicated to Carolyn Loretta Wasilewski born June 12, 1940 and murdered the night of November 8, 1954. Still an unsolved cold case.
This is a rewrite of Wild Child; titled Peaches... Carolyn's street nickname. Am writing an account of this 1954 cold case which occurred near my home when I was 7 yrs old.

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