SEED BEARER
Soon will come
to pass
the beating
heart
and small
footprints in the sand.
Such a
welcoming start
to the day’s
long journey.
Where once, by
shores,
were changes and
words—
ones
meant, and ones meant
to rearrange.
Just how,
oh, who can
say?
For each breath
spins
each word’s
story.
And each word's
weave
tells how each
began
and how they
may yet end.
But first (and
last)
comes the pulse,
again and
again,
that tells the heart
the story of
the coursing
of its blood, and of its heat,
and of its
start.
NEWS OF THE
WORLD #11
What was it That Spaceman once told us?
“One Small
Step,” seemed almost Religious.
Soon we’d be Expat-Indigenous!
But we’d have
to stow Away our lives.
Those Letters
we wrote Begged Forgiveness.
They were Meant
for those who’d Outlive us.
But our Children
all want to Shiv us!
You can Hear Them
sharpening their Knives.
News stories
these days just Confuse us.
Those typhoons
at sea Still Amuse us.
And headlines All want to Excuse us—
Who said Writing
on Walls would be fair?
Those Raiders
in Mali Include Us.
By God! They’ll
no longer Exclude Us.
Along pipelines
we will Extrude Us,
Until we’re Flowing
out Everywhere!
That Syria’s still
Searing our Brain.
We keep
watching it Circling the Drain.
Though we Scrub
and we Scrub at the Stain,
it’s so Hard to
keep Everything White.
We Pretend that
we Know What to Do,
That we’re Smarter
than average, Boo-Boo.
But when the Foot
doesn’t fit the Shoe—
Cinderella will
have a Bad Night.
…........
Now, these Boomers
all cry "Doom and Gloom!"
While their Fat Children drive by, Zoom-Zoom!
Their
architects still Build them Glass Tombs.
It’s past Time
we start Throwing some Stones.
They now Tell us
our Pie will be Crumbs.
That We'll Need to
keep Sucking our Thumbs,
while we March to
the Tune of their Drums
That they keep Pounding
with Sticks and Bones.
…..........
Baking Bread is
much Better than Land.
And Our Crops,
they'll grow Better by Hand.
But kid’s Castles
are Still made of Sand,
And those Waves
will crash Over Their Heads.
…..........
Do we stand Round just to Bake and Shake?
Do we “Stand
By” for that final quake?
It’s the One
with that bloody Great Stake,
Meant to keep Us
Living from the Dead.
POINT OF VIEW
I can't still be
(Yet disagree)
With all that you
Had come to
see.
I THOUGHT I
DREAMED
"A Sleeping
Giant
Can be a Feast
For a Single Spider."
MEAL PREP
Wizards winnow grainy
Truths
From Impatient Husks.
Their Wisdom is
Served
Like Potage for
our Meals.
“ERROR CODES”
CODE #1: “SYSTEM
STILL ON” Once started,
we never completely shut down..
CODE #2: “PRESS
NEXT” Once your task is completed,
another one pops up. Always.
CODE #3: “REBOOT”
You kicked us once too often.
IT’S PAYBACK TIME!
CODE #4: 1, 2 and 3 are easy to fix—
This one’s “BOSS
LEVEL!”
CODE #5: “REINSTALL”—Don’t
Leave Us hanging!
CODE #6: When “EMPTY”
light is on,
it’s Time for a Change. Select LIFE to
finish.
CODE #7: “HATCH
OPEN” Press EXIT to Close.
Well? What are you waiting for?
THE SOUND OF ONE
Don’t
know “WHEN?”
or “WHERE?”
Can’t
ask “WHY?”
Let
alone “WHO?”
And
there’s always “WHAT?”
That’s
forever in question.
“HOW” is easier.
(Actions
are easier
to
describe.)
And
so:
A
knife twists
In a
mother’s belly
While
lips are frozen
In
formal negotiations.
Later,
a school bell rings
After
the grenade explodes,
And
water pools in tire tracks
Along
a mud road leaving town.
(Cause
and effect rolled into one.)
More
examples? Well,
The Bullet
casing Lands on
The Concrete
Floor with a Musical
Pinging
Worthy of Hollywood! Another
Sound?
How about the Snapping of a Leg bone
Under
Boots? It’s satisfying because of the Contact
With
the Ground. Or the tell-tale whistling Of an incoming
Mortar
round? (Air songs from a gunpowder choir—Beautiful
In
the Arc.)
Want
More? Well, there’s News at Eleven!
Don’t
forget to See: “BLOATED BODIES IN RIVER”
Online,
with photos of “Scorched Linens on Clothesline”,
And
that “BURNING TIRE AROUND NECK” Op-ed that follows.
Meanwhile,
hungry Dogs chew on Bones. And along a Roadside ditch
Dust
blows softly over some Bloody Stones. And Somewhere is the Sound
Of One Child (Crying.)
DEAR DIARY, THIS IS A LOVE POEM
So
what happens at the end of things?
Do
we all go whoosh and Collapse to a Point?
(A
neat Construct, that; we Came from a point
and
we Leave by one.)
Or
does Something Else happen?
Does
the Irresistible Force meet
the Unmovable
Object?
Like
in the comics, when the two
Supermans
collided that one time,
and Wham! Bam-O! Pop! goes the Universe!
Or
on Star Trek when the Anti-Matter Guy
meets
the Matter Guy and everything
cancels
itself out (including The Show).
Actually,
I’m Misremembering:
The Universe
didn’t go POP! Or collapse to a Point.
Or Cancel
itself out.
Superman
Won the day. So did Captain Kirk.
Perhaps
we’ll Boil Away inside the
sun
when it finally decides To Go Nova.
Or
will we have Moved On by then
to
some Darker, Colder end?
I
saw a Movie once where Everyone was
dying
from the Heat. The Earth had spun out
of
its Orbit and was Falling into the Sun.
It
was Terrible. No one could escape.
There
was Nowhere to go.
It
was so Hot! Even in the Shade.
This
was Before Everyone had air-conditioning
and Climate
Change (not that we Noticed),
of
course. Back then, the Only Way
us Kids
could Escape the Heat
was
by going to the Movies.
And
so, One hot August afternoon,
all
of us sat in the dark, Deliciously Chilled,
watching
those Poor People swelter and die
up on
the Big Screen. But just before the Earth
turned
into a Crisper, the main character,
a Girl,
awoke—
Like
Sleeping Beauty, she’d been Dreaming!
The Earth
was Actually spinning away
from the Sun.
Everything
was getting Colder, not Hotter!
And
it was kind of Peaceful watching everyone
lie down
in the Snow and just go to Sleep.
After
all that Parched Scenery,
it almost
made you want to Smile.
Maybe
in the End we’ll be morphed
into
Aliens and get Filled Up with all that
gooey
Alien DNA, and lose Everything we think
keeps
us human.
Or maybe
a Comet will cut the World In Two
and
make three Moons of us.
Or Time
will Loop Back on Itself
when
the universe Collapses
under
its own weight,
like
a rain-soaked Tent,
and we’re
forced To Repeat
things
over and Over again like
an
old Phone Message:
“Not in now. Don’t know the drill?
Don’t leave a message.”
Beep-beep.
(Voice
mail Hell to be Sure.)
There
are So Many Ways to Die:
An Ingrown
Toenail, Broken Glass,
A Pin-Prick
of Bad Blood, a Loose Slipper,
Inwardness, wayward Looks, Words;
Good
Timing, Bad Timing or No Timing at all;
Turning
your Head, Not Turning,
And On
and On. There are so many ways
to Die. But I only know One way to Live.
How
about you?
TWO
ROADS CONVERGING
[A Conversation Overheard/ Misheard
In Coffee Shop]
“They
were both the same height
and everything.”
“They
both believed in God.”
“They
had the same hair colour
and
they believed in God.”
“They
had the same glasses....”
DUST STORMS
In an
age when
dust
was formed,
Chemistry
first changed
mud
into molecules.
This
didn’t prevent
other
reactions,
however.
KARMA #1
Fallen
angels
have
such steep
learning
curves,
even
cockroaches
have
to laugh.
THANK
GOODNESS FOR WAR! Russia invades Ukraine and Wham! Bam-O! Masks,
mandates, and trucker protests are all so…yesterday’s news! So, tip-of-the-hat to the powers-that-be who
decided to push the “Halt and Catch Fire” button on our civilization. Good job,
guys! The hell with Covid! We’ve got bigger fish to fry—Us! Hasta la vista,
Baby!
But at
least our pending Armageddon gives me an excuse to assault you with another
batch of poems. And I hope this slap on the side of your head with a wet fish
won’t sting for too long or be too smelly and all. Some are oldies and some newbies,
the usual drill.
JUST NOW,
I’M TRYING TO GET INTO Dickens' Hard Times. It’s one of his later books
and from what little literary criticism I’ve read about the work, it’s also a bit of an outlier
for him. In most of his books, the narrative voice or the voice of the narrator
usual conveys a sense of compassion or wry understanding for his characters, even
the “bad” ones like the tragic Mrs. Haversham in Great Expectations or in A Tale of Two Cities, the
sociopathic Madam DeFarge, who I think Dickens feels is a victim of the
collective madness that befell those caught up in the frenzy that was the French Revolution. (Or at least the Madness allowed her true character to emerge. The sound I imagine her
knitting needles made sends a chill up my spine—right to the nape of my neck!)
IN HIS BOOKS, there’s
always some nuance, some redeeming feature, even for such failed or “lost” souls as these.
BUT IN HARD
TIMES, DICKENS IS BLUNT, brusque even, in depictions of characters he
clearly finds despicable, such as Thomas Gradgrind or Mister Bounderby.
Gradgrind’s “rational” methods of child-rearing and Bounderby’s selfish marriage
to the much younger Louisa, Dickens has little patience for, and it’s almost
as if his “writer’s veil” has come down and he let’s loose with a barrage of invective
and condemnation, making it clear from the start how he feels about such
people. IF DICKENS WERE AROUND TODAY, I think he’d be loaded for bear, with
so much to criticize, and so many characters to call to account. *
Cheers,
Jake.
_____________________________
* Which is
not to say there aren’t a whole lot of guffaws and slap-and-tickles left in
this old world. But, really! Is it not about time we did some serious housekeeping
and clean this place up, grab a broom and dustpan, and just get busy?