Tuesday, November 20, 2018

dialectics with the eternal




Plato, Azaleas, Bluebird                  

  

A shaft of sunlight on the creek; in the shallows
Three trout slip in & out of shadow, nudging moss-green stones.
The mathematicians tell us that there are
An infinite number of infinities.
Did I say July? My grandmother said, I meant 1953.
A spray of lilacs in a small vase.
I was trying to identify the little bird in the pine tree
That makes a sound like Plato crying in the forest.
Spooned together in bed, my arms around her, our fingers
Touching. I notice our hands are sleeping swans.

                                       ~

Old & twisted cottonwoods line the creek;
It’s their asymmetry that gives them balance.
Is there anything you have left undone?
Is there any undone thing you have left?
We lay down in our bodies. Such a nice place to be.
Thank you thank you thank you thank you…
Rilke words: star, puppet, mirror, rose.
Dickinson words: purple, soul, secret.
Did I say lilacs? I meant azaleas.
Did I say Plato? I meant Chief Joseph.

                                       ~

Silhouettes of horses returning to the barn at dusk.
A mountain bluebird sings a last song with his whole body.
It’s not ugliness or violence
That will break your heart, but beauty.
I don’t think I can bear it any longer, my friend said,
& I don’t even know what it is.
This evening’s sunfall is a literal translation
Of Dickinson’s poem beginning, The skies can’t keep their secret.
Let worry sleep; let hope dream.
Let silence have the last word.


                             Gary Short








///

Monday, November 12, 2018

like the birth of country music





 Driving in Oklahoma              



On humming rubber along this white concrete,
lighthearted between the gravities
of source and destination like a man
halfway to the moon
in this bubble of tuneless whistling
at seventy miles an hour from the windvents,
over prairie swells rising
and falling, over the quick offramp
that drops to its underpass and the truck
thundering beneath as I cross
with the country music twanging out my windows,
I'm grooving down this highway feeling
technology is freedom's other name when
—a meadowlark
comes sailing across my windshield
with breast shining yellow
and five notes pierce
the windroar like a flash
of nectar on mind,
gone as the country music swells up and drops
                                me wheeling down
                      my notch of cement-bottomed sky
                             between home and away
and wanting
to move again through country that a bird
has defined wholly with song,
and maybe next time see how
                         he flies so easy, when he sings.


                                           Carter Revard








...

Sunday, November 11, 2018

as fate would have it



     THE COWBOY'S ACCIDENT                                      





Now a cowboy's life is kind of tough, 
And it's easy to get hurt. 
Like when you get throwed from your favorite horse, 
And land in a heap in the dirt. 
You've got to think ahead all the time 
And use all of your God-given wit; 
Or you can wind up all mangled and maimed 
And throwin' yourself quite a fit.
I had a friend who got hurt real bad, 
And I went to the hospital to see 
If he could tell me what happened to him. 
And this is what he said to me. 
"You know that old hay barn, 
The one over four stories tall? 
Well, I went up in the loft to get some horseshoes 
I'd stored up there last fall. 
The shoes were inside an oak whiskey barrel, 
It was full almost to the rim.
I couldn't find the sizes I wanted 
'Cause the light was just too dim. 
So I decided to lower those shoes to the ground, 
Empty the barrel and sort 'em out. 
So I rolled the barrel to the upper door, 
And tied on it a rope sling stout. 
Last fall when I put that barrel in the loft, 
It took four men to hoist it up. 
But I figgered I could get it down by myself: 
Comin' down's easier than goin' up. 
So I balanced that barrel delicately 
On the edge of the hayloft door, 
And to it I tied the rope that ran 
To the roof peak and down to ground floor. 
I knew with one pull of the rope 
That barrel would swing free in the breeze. 
Then hand over hand I could lower it down 
And sort them shoes with ease. 
Well, I really underestimated the weight of that barrel,
It must have weighed five hundred pounds. 
I'm a pretty stout guy, but even with my clothes 
I only weigh two hundred pounds. 
Well, you can imagine my surprise when I pulled that rope, 
I lost my presence of mind. 
I got jerked off the ground so doggon' fast, 
I forgot to turn loose of the line. 
Halfway up the side of the barn,
I met the barrel comin' down fast.
This explains my fractured shoulder 
In the wreck we had as it passed. 
Slowed only slightly, 
I continued my rapid ascent, 
Not stopping till I hit the pulley 
Where my hand got all broken and bent. 
At the same time the barrel hit the ground 
And the bottom, it split in two. 
After spillin' them shoes, the barrel in pounds 
Now just weighed a few. 
Well, as you might well imagine, 
I began to plummet to the ground. 
And halfway down I met that barrel 
As it sped up from the ground. 
This accounts for my fractured ankles and knees 
And the cuts on my legs so deep. 
But it slowed me down some, and when I hit the ground, 
I only broke both feet. 
As I lay there in pain unable to move, 
I again lost my presence of mind. 
As I moaned and groaned I forgot myself 
And turned loose of my hold on the line. 
The last thing I remember, 
Before waking up here on this bed, 
Was that empty barrel falling fast, 
And heading right straight for my head."

                              Tony Llardi








....

weighing things bovine




            A LITTLE BULL                                  

This story is of three bulls 
All of a bovine breed, 
Who were traveling the desert together 
In search of a little feed. 
When on a knoll they came upon a meadow 
A spring had made, 
With bright green grass 
And trees about
That allowed for a little shade. 
Now the largest of the three bulls 
Bowed his neck and some snot was blown, 
Which was warning enough 
For the smaller two 
That he wanted this place for his own. 
So now there's just two bulls traveling 
In search of a place to stop 
To fill up on green grass and water, 
Which they found on a mountaintop. 
Now, this place suited both bulls to a tee. 
But, as oft happens, as history will show, 
The larger one thumped the smaller one good, 
So back to the trail he did go.
Now, there's a moral to this story, 
One I hope we'll learn today. 
And it's that sometimes 
A little bull will go a long, long way.


                            Waddie Mitchell

Monday, November 5, 2018

ode autumnal




                                                                    LEAVES   





He was cleaning leaves for one at a time
was what he needed and a minute before the two
brown poodles walked by he looked at the stripped-down trees
from one more point of view and thought they were
part of a system in which the dappled was foreign
for he had arrived at his own conclusion and that was
for him a relief even if he was separated,
even if  his hands were frozen,
even if the wind knocked him down,
even if his cat went into her helpless mode
inside the green and sheltering Japanese yew tree.





                                                   Gerald Stern







....