Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Ferry Tale Ending

 

Tell me some more

About the shore

Where Charon waits

To greet the greats

And poor and 'twixt,

Randomly mixed,

A penny apiece,

Without surcease.

Is it hard and bare?

Do spirits share

Obligingly

Or try to flee,

Each dark shape

Bent on escape?

Do come ahead,

He tells the dead,

No woo, no warning.

No more morning.


Saturday, April 20, 2024

Lullaby In Slumberland City

 

While birdies slept and earthworms snored
And owlets stooped to swoopy flights,
You the Teen Queen Max restored,
With endless make-up, endless nights.

Our tygers pad the jasmined path
And cherries fall from green green trees
And all our dead lay down their wrath
As I awake through slow degrees

In shadowed rooms to unfilled beds.
The clock, the clock. Across the lawn,
In fact, the sparrows shield their heads
Till, chime by chime, they rouse to dawn.


Monday, April 15, 2024

Verses Suitable For Any Occasion

 


Help has been delayed.

The rescuers are lost.

Accountants have defrayed

Their compass at your cost.


The bears are up and running.

The bull has whet his wings.

Lifeguards outside sunning,

The happy hunchback sings.


Into the broken woods,

Then out again, chop, chop.

Illicit, knockoff goods,

Sold by your momma’s shop,


Are smuggled home by doctors

Discovering arbitrage.

Your robed and pear-shaped proctors

Wait in the garage.


Wednesday, April 10, 2024

It Wasn't A Nightingale

 

Least of our problems is the nightingale,

Which will not live in Denver. It must be

The altitude, the air Professor Dust,

Or all the folks from Texas moving here.

Sure, I should like to hear him sing to sleep

Weary baristas, shaking on the grounds

They cannot keep a songbird of their own.

Yes, it might cheer my grandma, if I had one,

Make her recall that once her skin was snug;

But if its old plaint was only loss and love,

You amid roses, sweetpeas on your pants,

I'd just as soon converse with crows and grackles.

Friday, April 05, 2024

Tone Deaf and Dumbfounded

 

My love is like a partridge or a squab.

I tried to make that work, but she resisted.

This was a compliment, so I insisted;

But she, it seemed, was something of a snob.


She wanted peacocks. Lord, she wanted tits

With scarlet crests and wings of diamante

To fly ahead and trill of shantih, shantih.

Still I preferred to sing my greatest hits,


Honor roll of the commonplace, the same,

Sparkly in dun. Dressed down. The sure. The daily.

Nothing about me said, I love you gaily.

She flew in neon on a darkling plane.


And so I write to you from this far place,

Who misses most a hypothetic face.

Monday, April 01, 2024

U Before I

 

To you a letter. How about q,

Always followed by u, as I

Follow the mark for hay and Hensa?


Too oblique, I know. I know it

Follows, not p to o, but where

We all align, in tidied rows,

Where there are diphthongs we can share,


On monuments a line or less.

O, I say, O. But no one gapes.

They keep, instead, their final shapes.


12 lines. Or several hundred more.

And never again what came before.


Thursday, March 28, 2024

Unidentified Fallen Object

 

That light from underneath the wendy house?

Aliens praying for our human souls,

Which they use to recover old upholstery,

To plug the cracks in alien patios,

Through which they plunge for hundreds of alien miles,

And end up salting mines. They keep a light

On day and night, hoping they will be saved

From shopworn fates by spiritual human stuff.

I don’t know if that ever happens, though.

Our lawn is littered with the crinkled husks

Of something other, something not like us

In flannel shirts and wool sweat socks, and hats

Stamped Alma Mater, Stabat Mater. Pray,

You aliens. I wish you all the best.