Thursday, February 16, 2012

Poem for Thursday, February 16, 2012


Underground

I.

She sprang from beneath the soil
smudges of winter on her
face still delicate not hardened
sprouting lilacs
her mouth was pure nectar she
smiled up at me I asked my god
don’t you need to breathe
she said let’s give meaning to this
February snow
she dragged me under

II.

Flecks of minerals all over
under my fingernails dinosaur bones
preserved in milky glory
an earthworm coiled around a clod
of dirt it yawned when
we passed
she whispered this is where
old trees grow from there’s water
pumping through the roots

I said my thumbs weren’t green
she lifted them to her
nectar lips kissed them and
everything trembled biblically
soil-showered we could smell
crisp oxygen I would’ve followed her
to the earth’s core

III.

To our left was a garden
snake it shrugged its shoulders
it shed its skin for us
so fibrous and lithe
I fell in love with its bent tendons
I let it lick my nose
forked tongue cartilage and creation
peppermint breath
you don’t need legs where
you’re going it lisped

IV.

Down a ways was a bed
of moss glazed with
permafrost

she dangled her secrets there
when they slipped through her fingers
she buried them all

V.

Clouded with earth I was
suffocating she coddled my lungs
but I needed the sun
she told me alright but she
had seeds to sow so to speak
I left her tunneling
in tatters
found the sky through a hole
swallowed a star
on the way up

broken-legged shivering
I craved her honey
I slept through a season

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Poem for Tuesday, January 31, 2012


Apple Skins

Granny told Willy she’d check the pickins
for worms and other crud if he’d
wash and dry them. Willy snatched a
damp rag and said he’d be obliged.
Granny sat in the afternoon

sun passing most of the lushgreen
apples to Willy and casting the badly
bruised ones aside like the Sodomites
she would laugh but Willy never got
that reference once throughout his
childhood. When it got too torrid

they each grabbed a wooden bucket
loaded with the fruit so full they
regurgitated an apple here and there
on the bumpier parts of the grass. Willy
hated those darn buckets ‘cause he’d

always get splinters in his thumbs and
Granny was too rough with the tweezers.
So they plopped their buckets on
the kitchen table with watery lips and
empty bellies. Willy reached in his
pocket for his maroon Swiss Army knife

but Granny shook her head no. She
told him he couldn’t peel them
apples ‘cause he’d toss out the skins and
the skins were the healthiest part
since they were chock-full of vitamins.

Willy groaned and mumbled shucks the
skins tasted like rubber so he wasn’t
gonna eat them but Granny could
have at it if she wanted. Then Granny let
out the strangest chuckle and swept
the skins off the edge of the spotless

oak into her wrinkled and calloused
palm. She said alright Willy but be careful
when you make a deal with the Devil
‘cause sometimes you gotta pay up
double. Willy rolled his big blue eyes and
stood up to leave the kitchen. He

wasn’t even hungry after all. Before Willy
stepped into the hallway Granny commanded
him to hand over his knife and he’d
get it back after supper. Then it got so quiet
the ceiling fan whirred and bellowed
like a police siren.

Poem for Monday, January 30, 2012

Happenings

Icicles are hanging from my drying
jeans dripping the color of denim
the dog the poor restless dog is
barking puffs of wintercold air I
can see them drifting then dying
anyone can.

“Be quiet” I’m scolding
that orange-bellied moon has
nothing better to do than gawk
giggle at me through the cracks.

The sky? well it’s holding its
breath somewhere between baby
blue and lights out.


Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Poem for Tuesday, January 17, 2012


Death Dream

you assured me

the hurt would come
in small circles over
different parts
of my body
not in one malicious
attack

i wept the same
as when
you gave me life
head first


Monday, December 26, 2011

Poem for Monday, December 26, 2011

Sohbet

The universe is tangled in your hair.

I try to unravel it with sweaty
fingers. A gray silence crept in awhile
ago and it is draped over us. We
breathe it in but we are having

a supreme conversation. Our eyes
discuss politics in intervals of blue
and black. Your leg tells mine its
hairs tickle. Hands swap electrons
while foreheads whisper secrets

and so forth. We must never stop
this, I say for real, as your perfume
escapes up my nostrils. Honeysuckle.
You wince, thinking I will sneeze.

Your hair lies knotless on the
pillow now. Nothing is a mystery
anymore and I am in love with your
rhetoric. A truck backfires

outside. A baby robin chirps for its
breakfast. When it grows dark again
the half-naked moon will look like
butter. We will talk about it.


Thursday, August 11, 2011

Poem for Thursday, August 11, 2011


Mea Culpa


I told you when you entered
the kingdom of heaven
Michael and the rest
of the angels would serenade
you, would pluck
crystal harps
that can stop your heart
for the second time.

I told you you wouldn't
go blind from the
celestial light
because you should be
used to our earthly sun
glowing all around you
jealously, orbiting you with
his head bowed to your
tan feet.

I told you
you won't bleed there
and if you do
it will be gold, coagulate and
I will suture your wound
with a righteous kiss,
I will kiss you
in heaven.

But how was I to know
you'd be handed
a blemished robe,
a bag of bones?

How was I to know
you'd be there
before me,
my lips light years
below you
(chapped and quivering)?

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Poem for Sunday, June 6, 2010


We Brought the Rain


to Mongolia, which
means good luck from G.K.
so
the olive hills of Zuunmod
will be a little
greener