DEATH OF AN ANCIENT GOD
Old weary whale, in wandering,
the cold waters roll over you
and there is no easy place to cast your eyes. The
hungry barnacles of fate cling to your wings
and thrive on your anonymous soul bit by bit;
like gravestones on hills of forgotten wars
they sit unmarked, in countless numbers, white and worn
as bones on sunbaked battlefields. Everywhere
the waters stir with lurking shadows
waiting to embrace the final tide of holy, raging war. You
moan, you creak the high and heavy chords,
you sing your despair in the darkest time of the year,
and on shore in the cold-lit night of carpetless rooms
children cry in beds full of fears
awakened
by the traveling echoes of your rage.
Old behemoth of the sea,
do you remember when you held your children
in arms of deep and glorious power,
and shielded their eyes from the dust of Troy?
Where are your arms now,
your sword of might and glory?
Without rest, you are being pursued; you swim forever cursed.
Old weary whale,
your wanderings in depths of sorrow must come to an end.
In the final year, like Odysseus,
you’ll lay your head on distant shores
of soft and sleepless sand
and sleep,
forever sleep.
1984, Long Beach, California
AN IMPRESSIONABLE FIELD TRIP
The terrain in your locality
is rocky and steep and nearly
impossible to climb. Your house sits
on a ridge overlooking a stream that runs
miles below your feet. You ask,
“to resurrect your time?” and through
great depths of the atmosphere I steer,
lofting up and down of the air. I barely
lick curves, on foot I stumble and grab
at shrubs that grow where deformed vegetation
is the rule. I’d
rather refuse but your call is
the frightening expression of
terrain-tortured trees. I am uprooted,
simply, to brave the steep drops,
knee-length winds that flatten living matter
to the ground, combat
late-afternoon shadows bleeding on the rocks,
and your bridge leans at an alarming
angle; such a vast distance. Many
local winds merge to see you blow away;
I know. The obvious result would shuffle
you straight over one of the sheer drops;
seed that time shortens
sentiment seals.
I’ll rush. My feet
bleed, inside my shoes, such
foreign earth; the last familiar sight
clinging to a downward motion
of the air.
1984, Long Beach, California
HOUSE AT NOONDAY
Two joined structures
each with their different peaks,
coupled by the window under
the sun hot and diamond shaped,
danced a sort of flying pole without decoration.
One red found on both sides, burnt but living
an ancient civilization;
two burnished but rubbed sore,
the polish the cost of perfection,
not a chip in the frame, preserved
in the ritual of the steps, in the dance.
A gray brown slip performed a child
afternoon, a clear-cut image,
a deity of the union,
quite possibly a wild and domestic
representation of the earth.
Structures, masked and unmasked
but exposed phallic performers,
danced of a nature generating dust from the floorboards;
it was after noon, and many many more
were to be
born.
1984, Long Beach, California
CHILDHOOD NEGLECT
The tribal air of boys
could make a new kid nervous,
when strength must be deployed
to prove that you're barbarous.
The boys gathered around
the fresh, naive arrival,
crying primitive sounds
that had no native rival.
The one who held his own
could barely hold his fear back.
One taunt hit like a stone
and reddened what was skin black.
The time would come too soon
for learning rites' premium.
And at recess high noon
a taunt lost his Christendom.
2004, Thousand Oaks, California