Two Skies
There really are two skies; I’ve seen them.
I know you probably won’t believe
me.
You’ve been told otherwise,
and you’ll take the other side of
things
more often than not, won’t you?
But let me show you two skies.
Let me show you what I mean.
Under the bright grey underlay
and curling foreground of cloud
shapes
is a bordered canvas.
And here time has a way of
slowing down
so you can see the two skies.
Under two skies, seasons don’t
matter.
Heat and cold, wet and dry are unimportant.
The ground you stand on (a
parking lot, a grove,
a marbled balcony), is just a
place for your feet.
Settings are as forgotten as a
clumsily-drawn mural.
Harsh suns that stoop tired
backs,
and redden necks and arms are
banished.
Winds and storms and rain,
and blizzards with their
stinging, icy bullets
are dismissed.
Swollen rivers and cruel
mudslides, fires,
and the wild distortions of
tornadoes and volcanoes—
all these are for another place.
Birds need not fly under two
skies.
Animals, all those pets and
microbes,
those wild things—
all from life’s tree are gone.
And people, too,
are gone, though it must be said,
that each of us is already alone
under two skies.
Others will say it is a false
aligning of planes,
some visual trick that gives the
appearance of a canvas
layered with artful puffs of
tinted clouds.
Of course it is.
Of course the sky is made of gas
and water vapour,
and particulates.
It has dimension and depth: it is
of a set piece,
complete in its own creation,
along with everything else.
But that’s it, isn’t it?
The fact that I can look up
and see a sky move across another
sky behind,
and know, without hesitation,
that both are real.
Spring Moon
Light. Pure white.
The moon’s
bright healing—
like a beam
shot from a ray gun
by some alien friend
through the tree’s
dark branches.
Spring moon—
so round and tall.
You’re a neighbour’s
marshal call
framed in my kitchen window.
And I am captured,
bound and chaste,
by your colour.
Mouse:
Referendum
on a Soul
Referendum
on a Soul
I set a trap
and killed a mouse.
A little murder
in my house.
I’d woke to sounds,
not quite chatter—
a skittering
of waking matter.
There was no deed,
or other way,
to get along
with him today.
The space was filled;
a place, declined,
and room for two
went unassigned.
With eyes like beads
of deep-brown glass,
and fur as dark
as midnight’s mass,
I’d culled him from
a vanished herd,
once Eden-named
by other word.
Naxt Big Eff’n Tang
“Impressive, boyo, but does she
float?
Why, she’s as big as a fishing
boat!”
“This is no boat, my
plain-speaking friend.
It’s the world’s new
machine—ULTI-MEND!”
“So, what will she do? How many
knots?
Tell us her load and what has she
got?”
“You don’t listen, like all your
kind.
You’re like rocks archaeologists
find.
What will it take so you’ll
understand?
What I’ve accomplished is
something grand!”
“No, boyo, I ain’t putting ye
down!
You’re from away, and new to our
town.
Manners is something Ma taught us
well.
If it ain't no boat—it still be swell!”
“A rude compliment, but
nonetheless,
I thankee, neighbour, for your address.
Little you know the power it
holds:
It changes the world! Tales will be told!”
“How does she work? On what does
she run?
By the electrics or from the sun?
Is she fuel-driven? By wind or
steam?
Or does she run by the flowing
stream?”
“A simple question, well
understood:
Friend, it’s not fire, water or
wood.
Its power’s from an ultimate
source.
It's perpetual. That’s obvious,
of course.”
Passion Unbound
At least this is not us.
Here—now—we can say:
“No, we did not go this far.”
Surely, we can say:
“We are bound,
saved by love,
by our common humanity,
by the same blood
coursing through
all our veins.”
And that this
was not,
could not,
will never be
our way.
We can say this much,
can’t we?
Stealth of Purpose
The shark comes to mind,
swimming its ever-slowing circles,
turning in the white-frothed
water
to strike and tear—
that indispensable
tooth and jaw of nature!
But it’s also in the desert animal’s
desperate trek to the next oasis,
stealth growing with its
recovery.
It’s in the rocks
and moss-covered trees
falling in the forest
that will decay and acquire,
always.
always.
It’s in the silent microbes’
ancient legacy of the single cell
got from the cold between stars.
It’s in the winging of birds,
their glory and their shadows,
and it’s heard in the great,
chambered breaths of whales.
It’s in the sky, the land and the
water.
It’s there, and it’s here. In us.
Written in the geography of our skin.
Road Kill
Trigger Man,
tell them they have no heart,
that they’re soulless,
beyond redemption;
that their offspring
will become monsters.
Remind them they have
no fixed address.
Explain to them
they’re vagabonds, nere-do-wells,
that their hygiene is poor
and something
they were born with (some genetic stink).
and something
they were born with (some genetic stink).
Complain to them when they
live like animals in filthy
holes,
jumbled together like broken-open
boxes of jigsaw puzzles,
boxes of jigsaw puzzles,
with no sense of order or vision.
Tell them they get what they
deserve.
Tell them, Trigger Man.
It makes everything easier.
On Reading the Obits
Thank you for being so successful
and for making all that money;
for having so much
and for knowing so many people!
Thank you for contributing often
to local charities,
and for your civic pride.
and for your civic pride.
Thank you for your dedication,
for your place, your time,
your weight in the world.
Thank you for living large,
for travelling far, for having a
family,
for being loved and missed.
Thank you for all of that.
And thank you for your
photograph.
(It will never do you justice!)
I’ve taped it to my mirror.
And each day I look at it
to remind me
that a life less lived
is still better
than no life at all.
Thank you.
Garden 101
Your fingers cake with loamy soil
that worms have heaved on their way.
Roots moisten in their cradles.
Flowers spill with fruit.
But snakes—are optional.
Why is that so hard to remember?
Your fingers cake with loamy soil
that worms have heaved on their way.
Roots moisten in their cradles.
Flowers spill with fruit.
But snakes—are optional.
Why is that so hard to remember?
NEWS OF THE WORLD #4
Slim-hipped! Why, she’s god’s gift!
Buttons torn, fabric shift
Public scandal—midriff!
Tabloids run: “A BIG TIFF!”
Diet race? Out of space!
Gated-lanes; pocket mace.
Home runs or masturbate?
Daisy-chains (Find-A-Mate?)
Mink stoles in graveyard rows.
Bare bowls top grassy knolls.
Gangsters rape: party tapes!
Boardroom apes; cassock japes.
Solar flares? Price of air.
Sewer-streams; county fairs.
Cell-phone thrills; costly pills.
Maggots drill; pious shill.
Fields of toil; oceans moil—
Real-estate’s virgin soil.
SHOCK AND AWE! (Devil’s claw.)
Bodies found: Ma and Pa.
Summer sage; falling age.
Babies killed, babies rage.
Poison scare? (Over there.)
Poison air? You beware!
Zyklon B; gold-filled teeth.
Mushroom cloud—coffin sheath.
Smiling bites pin-stripes mask.
Final rites: time’s own task.
Starving child, meek and mild.
TV preacher, rich and riled.
Comets come, comets go.
Will they stop us? We don’t know.
Frozen
The robot turned a delightful
phrase
on this most happy of happy days!
Delighting the lady and all of
her guests,
until he thawed them out, and
then the rest.
IN LORD OF THE RINGS THERE IS A SCENE WHERE Gandalf confronts the evil
wizard Saruman in his fortress-tower at Isengard. Gandalf and a group of his
company stand outside the walls of the “Orthanc” while the traitorous Saruman
speaks from a window to those assembled below. He is about to have his power
broken and his evil conspiracy with the Dark Lord Sauron thwarted by Gandalf,
and he uses his Voice to cast a spell in a final attempt to seduce his
listeners and win them over to his side. Tolkien has a vivid description of the
episode:
“The window closed. They waited. Suddenly another
voice spoke, low and melodious, its very sound an enchantment. Those who
listened unwarily to that voice could seldom report the words that they heard;
and if they did, they wondered, for little power remained in them. Mostly they
remembered only that it was a delight to hear the voice speaking, all that it
said seemed wise and reasonable, and desire awoke in them by swift agreement to
seem wise themselves. When others spoke they seemed harsh and uncouth by
contrast; and if they gainsaid the voice, anger was kindled in the hearts of
those under the spell. For some the spell lasted only while the voice spoke to
them, and when it spoke to another they smiled, as men do who see through a
juggler’s trick while others gape at it. For many the sound of the voice alone
was enough to hold them enthralled; but for those whom it conquered the spell
endured when they were far away, and ever they heard that soft voice whispering
and urging them. But none were unmoved; none rejected its pleas and its
commands without an effort of mind and will, so long as its master had control
of it.” (601)
There were some, like Theoden,
King of the Rohan who struggled against the slippery words, lulling tones and
cadences Saruman uses to turn him to his cause, for the king had long be under
the control of his chief counsellor “Wormtongue”, who was a creature of Saruman. [Wormtongue: great name BTW—sounds like a
politician!] But he eventually clears his head and says: “’We will have
peace when you and all your works have perished…You are a liar, Saruman, and a
corrupter of men’s hearts. You hold out your hand to me, and I perceive only a
finger of the claw of Mordor. Cruel and cold.” (603) But, the stubborn dwarf
Gimli, Gandalf’s companion and ever the skeptic, is not persuaded from the
start. “’The words of this wizard stand on their heads,’ he growled, gripping
the handle of his axe. ‘In the language of Orthanc help means ruin, and saving
means slaying, that is plain. But we do not come here to beg.” (602) Gandalf
stood silent, waiting to speak, and when he does Saruman’s final gambit is to
cast doubt among the men, to create the impression that he and Gandalf talk together like two noblemen conversing above the rabble, and whose vested
interests align more with each other than with lesser men.
“So great was the power that Saruman exerted
in this last effort that none that stood within hearing were unmoved. But now
the spell was wholly different. They heard the gentle remonstrance of a kindly
king with an erring but much loved minister. But they were shut out, listening
at a door to words not meant for them: ill-mannered children or stupid servants
overhearing the elusive discourse of their elders, and wondering how it would
affect their lot. Of loftier mould these two were made: reverend and wise. It
was inevitable that they should make alliance. Gandalf would ascend into the
tower, to discuss deep things beyond their comprehension in the high chambers
of Orthanc. The door would be closed, and they would be left outside, dismissed
to await allotted work or punishment. Even in the mind of Theoden the thought
took shape, like a shadow of doubt: ‘He will betray us; he will go—we shall be
lost.’
Then
Gandalf laughed.” (605)
And with the good wizard's laughter, Saruman’s
spell over them was broken. All who listened now understood how false his words had been. And
the once powerful servant of the Dark Lord fled to the hidden corners of his
tower like a frightened spider.
I’m not sure why I include this bit about Tolkien here along with a batch of poems (if such a poor effort can be so called) but the watchwords: “Truth in Advertising”, a phrase that used to be bandied about years ago came to mind. I can’t remember when I heard or saw it. Maybe it was written on the packaging of a bar of soap or tube of toothpaste. It’s about telling the truth, nevertheless. Well, with poems, you have to settle for a truth—even if it’s just a fleeting image in your mind, or how a line sounds or if the words resonate with you, or perhaps in images some of the words conjure up as a memory, a wish? A dream, perhaps? Maybe they help create a dialogue of sorts.
I’m not sure why I include this bit about Tolkien here along with a batch of poems (if such a poor effort can be so called) but the watchwords: “Truth in Advertising”, a phrase that used to be bandied about years ago came to mind. I can’t remember when I heard or saw it. Maybe it was written on the packaging of a bar of soap or tube of toothpaste. It’s about telling the truth, nevertheless. Well, with poems, you have to settle for a truth—even if it’s just a fleeting image in your mind, or how a line sounds or if the words resonate with you, or perhaps in images some of the words conjure up as a memory, a wish? A dream, perhaps? Maybe they help create a dialogue of sorts.
Now, as for “Truth in Advertising”: I don’t think
my poems are “deep things beyond…comprehension” or anything.
I think of them as anchors—moments when you stop time for a while or enter a ‘temporal
slipstream’, so to speak. Some poems seem achingly clumsy to me and come across as shallow
as a road-side ditch. Which is why, after I produce my literary creations, most of the
time I feel more like an Orc or Gollum than I do an elf, more like a devolved creature soon to disappear. Yet, I think I still attempt to tell the truth, however unevenly accomplished.
According to Tolkien, the time during which LOTR is set is imagined as the
“midpoint” of humanity’s growth. The story of Frodo, Gandalf, Aragorn and
the rest is set in a time long after the proud kingdoms of men that once ruled
in Middle-earth, and when the first battles were fought and won against
the Dark Lord. The time of Frodo’s journey and Aragorn’s ascension is during the long years that men have struggled to hold onto their past, however diminished. This is also the time when the last of the
elves are leaving Middle-earth, after their ages-long habitation. It is a sign that
something elemental and ‘pure’ is fading from the world. As Gandalf says after the defeat of the Dark Lord, it is the end of "the Age of Rings of Power", including the Elven rings and his own, and the beginning of the Age of Men. (These 'lesser' Rings maintained the power and place of the Elf and wizard races of old, but for such beings their time is drawing to a close; it is now come for mankind to rule in Middle-earth.)
Tolkien’s tale is set during a time where people live near fabulous ruins of their once-great past and where they begin, under Aragorn's rule by the book's end, to re-build their kingdom on their own, without the help of elves or wizards. Thus, the story is about the renewel of humankind as they muster the forces of good to once more confront evil, lest the whole world be covered in darkness. They triumph over Sauron when the "One Ring" is destroyed in Mount Doom, ending the age.
And after? Tolkien's chapter, the "Scouring of the Shire", is instructive: Against evil, there must always be vigilance*.
Tolkien’s tale is set during a time where people live near fabulous ruins of their once-great past and where they begin, under Aragorn's rule by the book's end, to re-build their kingdom on their own, without the help of elves or wizards. Thus, the story is about the renewel of humankind as they muster the forces of good to once more confront evil, lest the whole world be covered in darkness. They triumph over Sauron when the "One Ring" is destroyed in Mount Doom, ending the age.
And after? Tolkien's chapter, the "Scouring of the Shire", is instructive: Against evil, there must always be vigilance*.
Tolkien is the ‘ur-source’ for much modern fantasy
writing and he’s the wellspring for tales of epic adventures, fantastic heroes
and stories we’ve all read for generations, and I can’t help feel the ‘truths’
he tries to express in his fiction are more true
than many so-called “truths” purveyed in the real world by today’s main stream
media. When watching the news on TV or reading the papers, there are times when
I feel I’m being lulled into a comfortable complacency, seduced by one Wormtongue
after another, all of them whispering lies in my ear until I just
give up. It’s a bit like sitting in warm piss—which is cozy and something everyone should try--but you eventually find yourself cooling to the idea.
As I write this there are escalating tensions
between the US and Iran: a civilian contractor is killed (is that what we used
to call a “mercenary”?); an Iran-sponsored Iraqi militia group is killed in
response; then the US embassy in Bagdad is vandalized by protestors; next, the drone assassination
of a high-ranking Iranian military leader by America. Tit for tat in a game of
brinksmanship—it’s like playing with matches in a room filling up with gas! [Update Jan.11/20: A tragedy--Iranian missiles accidentally shoot down a passanger jet taking off from Imam Khomeini Airport on Jan 8. Iranian officials initially deny responsiblity, and then several days later admit their military mistook the airliner for a cruise missile. In the fog of war things quickly spiral out of control. This shocking event seems to have given the US and Iran pause. For how long?]
So truth matters. And where do you go to find it? Why poetry, of course! [See above!] But if you’re somewhat skeptical about that, I would suggest checking out alternative media—YouTube news shows such as “Breaking Points" podcast, or “The Gray Zone”, Mint Press, or the humorous “Jimmy Dore Show”, to name a few. You’ll find fewer Wormtongues there—and not a single Saruman in sight!
As an aside (though it’s not, really), I noticed a
store that opened four months ago is now closed in the little plaza where I go
to do my laundry. That’s the plaza with the ‘spa’ where I've ever seen only only one person go in—and she looks the owner or the “Madame!” Who are the customers, I ask. When do go in there to do their business?
Anyhoo, they had a shop open in the plaza that was an “annex” to the “Bait Bucket” store, nearby. They sold paddle-boards and ice huts, sportswear and gear for the
local fishing and “boarding” scene that’s active on our beautiful Lake Simcoe.
It was run by a couple; I remember the gal standing expectantly at the front
door where they’d put up posters and balloons, announcing the grand
opening in September. Well, I guess business wasn’t so grand, and their annex was nixed—by what, exactly, I don’t know. But,
a couple of days ago, when I was doing my laundry (and doing reconnaissance outside the
‘spa’!), I noticed the store was empty and “For Rent” signs were in the
windows. Later that morning, while I was returning to my car with a jar of
peanut butter I’d bought at the local health food store downtown, a woman came
around to the side of my car and leaned in the window, asking me if I wanted
any “company.” Surprised, I said, “No—but thanks.” And drove off. (I wonder if she worked at the spa?)
So, again: Truth matters. What’s the truth concerning the
hopes and dreams of that young couple starting their new business and having it
fold so soon? What’s the truth around the pretty woman offering me her body for
money? How can we know the truth surrounding the actions that are happening in
the Middle East? Are there truths to be gotten from a fantasy novel or a poem? Or
a news report? I guess my point is that all of the above are things needing to
be carefully, respectfully and fully explored in ways we seem
less inclined to do these days, both to our detriment and our peril.
Well, that's enough for now....
Cheers, Jake.
* BTW, a character of interest from LOTR, and often over-looked, is Tom Bombidill, who lives in the Old Forest just beyond the borders of Frodo and Sam's beloved Shire. He appears at the beginning of the novel and at the end (where he's mentioned), when Gandalf and his young Hobbit friends make their final journey together back to the Shire. Gandalf turns off the way to go visit Tom and have, "such a talk as I have not had in all my time. He is a moss-gatherer, and I have been a stone doomed to rolling. But my rolling days are ending..." (1033) I'm not sure if Tom is a wizard like Gandalf, but one thing he seems is elemental and vibrantly alive, yet he is touchingly simple and humble, too. He is the caretaker of the Old Forest, and his only concern is for its welfare. He reminds me of Sam, who we read in the years ahead is instrumental, because of his frenetic revitalization efforts, in restoring the Shire after Saruman's dispicable pillaging. (He 'scours' it clean of the wizard's filth.) But, while the Shire is a carefully-groomed garden, gentle and tame, Tom's forest is wild and evolving.
Also of interest are the "Ents", perhaps the oldest living beings in existance, who are the "shepherds" of the forests. (Not in Tom's wood, but elsewhere.) Their numbers are small and their flock is becoming more and more sedentary. Their time seems to be passing. But is Tom Bombidill's? And if Tom and his wood continue to thrive, what could that mean?
* BTW, a character of interest from LOTR, and often over-looked, is Tom Bombidill, who lives in the Old Forest just beyond the borders of Frodo and Sam's beloved Shire. He appears at the beginning of the novel and at the end (where he's mentioned), when Gandalf and his young Hobbit friends make their final journey together back to the Shire. Gandalf turns off the way to go visit Tom and have, "such a talk as I have not had in all my time. He is a moss-gatherer, and I have been a stone doomed to rolling. But my rolling days are ending..." (1033) I'm not sure if Tom is a wizard like Gandalf, but one thing he seems is elemental and vibrantly alive, yet he is touchingly simple and humble, too. He is the caretaker of the Old Forest, and his only concern is for its welfare. He reminds me of Sam, who we read in the years ahead is instrumental, because of his frenetic revitalization efforts, in restoring the Shire after Saruman's dispicable pillaging. (He 'scours' it clean of the wizard's filth.) But, while the Shire is a carefully-groomed garden, gentle and tame, Tom's forest is wild and evolving.
Also of interest are the "Ents", perhaps the oldest living beings in existance, who are the "shepherds" of the forests. (Not in Tom's wood, but elsewhere.) Their numbers are small and their flock is becoming more and more sedentary. Their time seems to be passing. But is Tom Bombidill's? And if Tom and his wood continue to thrive, what could that mean?
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