Monday, November 23, 2009

Observations 1

father, carrying infant
12-gauge plugs in
both ears.
the four-leaf clover tattoo
on his left elbow
matches his shirt.
green's a good color
on him.
he's too hot for his wife, though,
whose thighs are each,
individually, wider than my torso.

what's an inverted hourglass called?
one where the top and bottom
are the thinnest points
and the middle is the widest?
well anyways she was wearing
a shirt that said "you'll never get over me"
but maybe it should have said
"you'll never get around me"
because she took up the whole sidewalk.
maybe if i was shorter i could walk under
her hips. maybe i could shove her
but even if i could overcome her center
of gravity, i don't have the cash
to pay the property damages.

green apron
reindeer antlers
flapping his arms like wings.
i come here too much,
so i'm not really surprised, anymore.
maybe he's like a walmart greeter;
i've never seen him make a drink.

he wants to take me out
to dinner and get to know me,
but he's wearing paisley and he
lost his bangs in the war. he gave
me his card; i guess i'll tell him
i didn't mean to stare, it's just
that i'm paranoid-schizophrenic
and the giant insect legs sprouting
out of his back kinda freaked me out.
i hope he'll understand the mix-up, 'cause
this kind of thing happens to me all the time.
i just can't see myself with a kafka-esque monstrosity.

(copyright a(scetic)verse, November 22, 2009)

Mistaken Identity

I am not simply
the sum of my
many mistakes,
though I hope
that in this,
for once,
I am not mistaken.
The proportion
approaches too closely
one to one.

(copyright a(scetic)verse, November 22, 2009)

Thursday, November 19, 2009

The Resting

The red clay will one day
swallow up my gunnysack
of meat and sticks. Who could cry
about this everyday thing?
Who finds it sad when old friends reunite?
When twos become ones? Besides-
there are no drunk uncles who want to
hit me or put themselves in me,
sweating and furious with themselves,
under the red clay or brown dirt or green grass
or any other place I'm apt to lay.

I want to say that I will end up
in the ground safe from uncles
and hellhounds and hate. But 'end up' is not
quite right- I'll stay in that bright red clay for a
night or two and then I'll turn to dust or soil
and, with the turning of the earth, will traipse away
into the void. We got these forms from the hearts
of dying stars, you know,
and I'm a good boy so someday
soon I'll give mine back. That's good
sharing; we learned it when we were kids.


(copyright a(scetic)verse, Jan 03, 2010)

Friday, October 23, 2009

a first kiss

A First Kiss

She had always wondered, ever since she first paddled to the middle of the lake towards the end of summer in her third year of vacation here, how many bodies the police have had to pull from this particular lake. The hazy quality of light had always raised in her a certain melancholy, an introspective awareness of not just her own mortality, and it was no different then, set adrift as she was on an ancient, sturdy wooden raft in what was roughly the center of the lake, nothing but that raft and her hands and a battered copy of "The Weary Blues" and the crust of a peanut-butter and raspberry jam sandwich to keep her company.

People in this mindset, she had read, often felt a certain compulsion to organize, to make orderly, to straighten, to tidy up. She had always been the sort to make the best of what she had, and so she aligned the crusts with the slants of the topmost layer of wood, laid the book open in perfectly-squared orientation at the center of the raft, which, when she settled again, resembled a floating altar, Arthur's place of meeting with his Lady of the Lake. Her own place of remembrance for those she imagined had died here.

The copse at the shore over her shoulder stood its silent watch, cloaked in the early morning fog and mist which had settled around the stoic wardens. She knew it must be lonely, guarding this lake for the half-century or more that the trees had grown in their inexorable upward climb. She felt something like that, that she had grown amongst a pack of others growing just the same, but that she was ever apart, that she was as thickly-skinned as the oaks lining the shore. Their roots drank from the soil goblet, constantly draining the ever-replenished vessel. She felt that craving. She was empty, parched. As she cast her gaze back to the raft, she caught sight of Hughes' words, wound tight and brief like a viper ready to strike:

The calm,
Cool face of the river
Asked me for a kiss.

And the words sang to her. The water's voice enticed her. And she was parched. And she had never been asked for a kiss before. The romance was brief, as the best of summer are. But she felt safe, wrapped in the warm clear kiss of the lake. The pain too was brief; waves of euphoria supplanted her sense of shock, the initial terror of something so new undermined by the pleasure of belonging, of acceptance. For perhaps the first time she felt truly in good company, proud to share this magic with those who led her here, who captured her imagination, who brought her to such a tender and devoted lover as her lake.

Her brother told the police what he knew of her fascination with the isolated forest shrine. They dredged the lake, then, for the first time in the town's history, and brought up a lone, swollen corpse.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Wordplay

Words are just lies we use
to play at the truth,
crude facsimiles of real things
like sex and fistfights,
sunshine moonshine and hopes,
and the nightmares that, like
good sex and fistfights and
sunshine moonshine and hopes,
leave you collapsed on your back,
chest heaving, forehead slicked with sweat.

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Still Life with Still Frames

Still Life with Still Frames
A Poem in Eight Parts

A Moment Late
-in which his first brush with chaos upsets his worldview-

The cameraman captures his quarry in mid-stride
as the young girl turns to her left.
In the next moment, the image is perfect.


In The Negatives
-in which his vagaries of the past take flight-

As his camera rewinds,
the last frame pressed neatly into place,
he comes to realise
that he will be forced to relive
a week of misery.

He wonders, however,
if, in the negatives,
a new perspective
will show its face.


The Blessing of Silver Bromide
-in which his sense of revision extends too far-

Forced to reverie by the stills,
he finds that it is easier to portray his own reality
in the near-black of his dark cave
than it is behind the shutter;

walking in the light,
reality is right there,
so close,
tangible but untouchable,

while in the darkroom,
it is spread flat before him
and a single drop of a chemical
can change reality forever.


As Zeus Severed Man
-in which his uncertain aesthetics settle-

He broods over the drying photo sheet,
acutely aware of the imperfections,
the inconsistencies between the printed page
and the vision screaming out to him
from deep within.

Art, he considers,
is perception.
The raging muse can inspire,
but the artist cannot portray
the true form of the flame.

Imperfection, he considers,
is art.


Nulla Dies Sine Linea or, Not a Day Without a Line
-in which his struggle to persevere seems bleak-

The young photographer,
his aspirations birds
with clipped wings,
sits cross-legged upon the floor,
his portfolio spread wide and empty before him,
the jaws of the future gaping from its depths.


Ars Gratia Nihil or, Art for the Sake of Nothing
-in which he perseveres, perhaps-

Servile,
he works to placate the violent muse;
she is not an inspiration but a force
of drudgery,
snapping whip and
flinging stone.

In these hallowed halls,
creativity comes not from within,
but from the clenched fist of
professor - expert - master of her craft -
when in reality,
creation must come from the artist-within.

Freed,
his is the life of expression,
happily absent from the
dark realm of academia.


Separation Anxiety
-in which his regret screams rapture-

Pawing endlessly through
page after page of
old photos,
he wonders what he has
made of his life.

At all the key moments,
he is there,
not in the scene,
not participating,
just preserving.

Now,
he sits with his camera,
alone.


Perscribi Non Est Esse or, To Preserve is Not to Be
-in which his tenuous aesthetic shatters-

His world of still frames
crumbles about his feet
(it's not the disparate moments which he may choose to live,
but a steady flow of time with which he can not
force-feed the half-starved, carnivorous shutter).
Each frame is silver-kissed
and in darkness given to light
(his art is womb-carried, painfully born,
but static, always immature,
powerful, a thing of life, but dead if left alone).
The camera is plenipotentiary,
the product impotent
(beauty is not a moment cast apart from the whole,
but the aggregate of life, of second-by-second struggle,
which not even memory's lens can capture).

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Us, For What The Word Is Worth

So this is what I have to show
for everything that
once-upon-a-time was
us:

an as-yet-unmade promise;
an impracticable effort of will;
eleven months to think and ponder
over two or three's worth
of ill-made decisions;
and scarcely enough trust
to keep us through a
single night.

What's the point of having
friends you can't trust?

What's an admission worth,
anyways, when you don't
even know it's been made?
Two can tell: you are
not a fan of giving,
just getting.
You can say it, but do
you know what is being said?

There's just too much irony
laced up in your
faux-furious shouts:
you swear that this time,
this is the last time
you'll swear this is the last time,
but we both know that the other knows
that we will both keep
coming back for more.

(copyright a(scetic)verse, September 28, 2009)

Sunday, September 6, 2009

Composed at Bayshore Coffee Company

We scions, we kings of our gardens of earthly delights, we ARE-
but we know not what
and so we spend our pupal
vegetative time at the bottoms
of bottles, in the stems
of pipes, actuating ourselves by
losing ourselves, no real way
to find ourselves.
But perhaps in every poison is an ounce of potion, a spare hidden drop of panacea to clarify and to calcify the fleeting phantom images of the next page past this vagrant verse, in which we mannequins of sense and skin masquerade as men.
So scream- scream to shatter
the silence which stifles introspection;
intone not God's thousand names
but your own: all hundred thousand
thousands of them, let your names whet
whet your appetite for yourselves, lick
their taste from your parched
lips; sate your self for once,
not those stillborn passions with
which we tease and seduce reality
to bend itself to our whimsy.

Take me home, oh feet; instruct me, oh mind, in the science of sleep; forget me not, oh deathly one; for you are feet and mind and vein and virus: intervene, oh angels, save me from myself and from him, whatever the difference may be.

"WHAT IS TO BE DONE,
WITH THIS FRAGILE, TRANSPARENT
SOUL,
THAT BREATHES
INSANITY
INSIDE ME?"
-Darla

Whatever your art is, you must infuse it with some insanity; but that mold of manic passion is the raw marble block we exert from within ourselves; once we exhale the insanity from the bottom of our soul we must temper it with the order of discipline, the knowledge of form, which informs the shape of art as bellows and hammer inform the shape of molten steel
Thought then word,
Spirit then form.
Coalesce, oh inner air of passion,
Oh transient muse, make
of my body and my blood
whatsoever form you hold
latent within yourself by the
grace of whichever beyond from
which you emanate;

And let yourself emanate
from each and every beyond;
spare me not the full magnitude
of my own nascent vision.

(copyright a(scetic)verse, September 25, 2009, except noted attribution to Darla)

(The silent science of reconciliation)

The silent science of reconciliation
reverberates through my skull empty as
it may be though you are
in my lap in my palm wrapped around my finger
(like a wedding band and
so i ask who or what traps who or what
manipulates who or what binds who or what
am i are you?) but let's move on let's
get to bed let's fight let's fuck it's
what we do let's never resolve fix the car
walk the dog wash the dog wash the
car fix the dog never talk only
speak never listen only hear scream shout
silence scream shout stop slap shove bruise batter
leaving left lone lost lust lest love(lorn)

(copyright a(scetic)verse, September 04, 2009)

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

This is not working. How does one write poetry? I have forgotten.

If the world is but a stage
then I am but a mime,
lost for words and lost in words
and trapped by words,
for the significance of sound
is lost to the mute.

In silence I have brought forth
the essence of craftwork,
washed myself in the afterbirth
of Loki Lie-Smith.

(copyright a(scetic)verse, for whatever fucking reason I want to copyright a godawful draft, 8/25/09)

Foxmask

This harsh dark bold towering text,
black on off-white yellowing curling page,
reminds me of why I thrive on contrast:
indistinction, indiscretion, misdirection,
tools of the Foxmask facing aggression.
I thrive, die, vivify.

Pale cold oceanic salt blur-
I cannot sleep angry and ashamed,
even though you are as blinded
by spacetime as by mock faith and mirror virtue.

This dull steady pathos-flood of oceantide quietus
validates, vindicates;
night and solitude, however,
ransom sensibility
and so I hold onto my perhaps
damnfool hope for your burgeoning regret.

(copyright a(scetic)verse, 1/21/2009)

Meditation on Certainty

The beat in my blood
is the heartsong of creation
'canted in Gregorian basso harmony
with the swansong of existence.

Verse, chorus, verse bridge
chorus. As long as each begins
I can still be sure, at least,
that it will end.

It's the same with days. If
with any certainty
I can say that today has begun,
then so may I say that this day
will end and
the next will come in turn,

at least until it doesn't.

(copyright a(scetic)verse, 7/12/2009)

No title, but I dig it.

The coppery burn of
you
on his tongue and
embedded in his nostrils
wakes him even
from morphine-sleep.

Aftertaste, afterimage, lingering
beneath living skin. You can die
in flesh, but you had
to die
in his arms and so
you will live viscerally,
vicariously, 'til you have twice
decayed.

(copyright a(scetic)verse, 7/12/2009)

I only wrote half of this.

There once was an ostrich, his neck was so long,
and even though he lived in a zoo, he was oh-so strong.
His name was Ollie, but his name was his folly-
he didn't know from where it came!
His mom and dad just didn't have fame.
Ollie lived in the zoo from the time he was two,
without his mommy and daddy. Which
ostrich parents were his? He just didn't know who.
So Ollie wanted a quest. A quest to find his
mom and dad, and he would do his best.

On one dark night, the moon tucked
in to its blanket of cloud, Ollie slipped
out of his cage, over a high wall he flipped.
An easy feat for an ostrich so strong!
He jumped so high he dodged the fence,
and the alarm stayed asleep, it didn't sing its song.
Ollie went from cage to cage to find his mom and dad,
but so far the search was going bad.
A great lion heard him walk,
beckoned him over to talk.
The king of beasts said Ollie was out of luck,
that all the parents had been taken away in a truck.
What would Ollie do? He just didn't have a clue!

(copyright a(scetic)verse, whenthefuck ever, steal this if you want i don't give a fuck)

Monday, April 20, 2009

Pleasing

I, with reckless disregard
for the bile collecting
in my conscience,
settle into a familiar mindless
rhythm I've heard called making love.

This is, at best, playing at love,
as children play house.

This is not even making amends,
cannot be construed as making,
but unmaking.

Your touch-
my god this cannot be pleasure
as you brush away my dead outer layer,
this senseless shell and husk of
memories which litter sheets,
carpets, clothes, drains,-
my new skin I wear like
an infant in a baptismal font
abandoned by its priest.

(copyright a(scetic)verse, April 4, 2009)

Gatortail

We beat it to death
with lead pipes,
crushed its reinforced hydraulic
skull and severed
its whipsnap tail,
and we fried it.
Then we dined
like island royalty,
blood of natives on our hands,
hot on the sacrificial rock,
sizzling in the pan slicked with fat.

(copyright a(scetic)verse, April 4, 2009)

Night Sounds

Night Sounds

We sing and dance in our tribal bliss
and release a songbird from our midst,
out of firelight and into the oblivion of
the empty night. A young boy will often
assume the worst.

We know that the water is deadly- not the
water, no, but what is in it, alligator, green which
yields red and steals a young boy away.

We know that hogs root in these woods,
gobbling grub, and that they scream like
women in fear when an alligator steals them away.

We know all this, but when the discordant
cry of a hog in throes pierces the night
as a gator pierces its belly, a young boy
is just bound to fear for that hours-gone
song-bird, or hours as it always seems to a young boy.

We sing and dance in our tribal bliss
as the songbird perches and joins back in
on that refrain- a young boy is bound to jump
for joy, and riverbilly's bound to keep rockin' tonight.

(copyright a(scetic)verse, April 4, 2009)

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

"Can we just flash forward..."

Can we just flash forward
to the petty, sweaty, fumbling,
tumbling grope and grab
presaged by your first breathy
grunt of "You're so hot" in my ear,
warm moist exhalation and chin stubble
just as irritating as this untoward advance?

I know myself all too well-
I have lived this night
too many times and
I am so fucking tired
of swallowing my nausea
of subsuming my pride
of sacrificing my self
to testosterone's
hair-trigger
and of being repulsed
by any touch the morning after.
My cup runneth over.
Old news.
I quit.
Who's next?

(copyright a(scetic)verse, February 24, 2009)

Saturday, February 7, 2009

Toward Iconoclasm

This first legitimate taste of truth,
a scant sip from nectar's vein,
sates not, but stings.

You, who are lotus of flesh,
who are nectar of blood,
blood of aubergine hue,
you, in your giving of gifts,
play Siren, Scylla, and saint.

Yon Doppelganger:
     as Lazarus, in your solitude sleep;
     as Midas, ruin whatever you may touch;
     as Pilate, cruciate pain bestow;
     and as Eros, let your arrow go.

(copyright a(scetic)verse, February 5th, 2009)

Someday Morning

Mine eyes arise
to the Someday morning light.
I do not know when I am
and his arm
across my chest subsumes
any sense I may have had of where.
I am tightly wrapped in my head,
my sheets, and some ephemeral worldview.
Someday is the atheist's sabbath,
no one day any more holy than the rest.

The first experience of each day
is rebirth by radiation piercing
past the thin flesh
which hides one sixth of oneself.
That I am changed is evident.
With each breath I exhale some
dead part of myself, an exhausted
vestige of yesterday's person. I have had
enough of that body. I am happy to
pass it on, not because I must but because
one man's trash is another's life-sustaining
treasure. And this is why I am never afraid
to take the next breath. No death is so
life-affirming as my own.

(copyright a(scetic)verse, February 7th, 2009)

Monday, February 2, 2009

In-Class Prompt beginnings

None of us knew the colour of the sky, the delicate blend of post-storm hues, though that there had been a heavy storm we were fully aware. We had marched through this desolate cityscape for days, wrists bound tight with thick kudzu vines torn from this skyscraper or that. Our blindfolds began to itch and stink following the torrential rains, the strips of leather rancid with sweat and stormwater. Our eyes glanced level; there was nowhere else for an eye to drift, no reason to cast looks in any direction.

Slavers were far too common now. The city police were more concerned with feeding their families than upholding the laws of a dead institution. What justice can there be when a man must watch his infant simultaneously shrivel and swell from the ravages of malnutrition? These changing times brought on waves of change. And so some had to adapt, to respond to the pressures of an irresponsible anarchy.

Project Mayhem had been so thorough in its execution that Durden was practically deified. The day he burned the original copy of the Constitution had been the tipping point, the inception of a new religion in this poor excuse for a nation, a faith in chaos that birthed a future of

(written from the perspective of a great-great(whatevergreats)-granddaughter of Marla Singer. Fight Club woooo! more to come very soon. i'm intrigued by myself)
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Thursday, January 29, 2009

Why do I try to write love poetry? (scraps of something in progress)

Love may not sing of itself,
Nor answer calls towards its providence;
And love may not, in its silent
Arduous climb, make footholds
Where none exist.
Love gives no
Guarantee of safety,
Nor offers its hand to help
Others along.

For the life of love
Is the mountain itself,
And its cragged footholds
Are all the promises of safety
One could need.
It is the mute life of quiet assurance,
The self-satisfaction of sharing
In the comfort of the hand which
Proffers it-
((((more poetry here))))

(copyright a(scetic)verse, January 29th, 2009)

Monday, January 26, 2009

Whose Theophany?

Placid clicks,
nails on mulch on soil
on roots on crust
core and mantle,
escalate to
frantic scratches
over oak-bark
over wooden
flesh and blood.
Frantic scratches of escape.

(copyright a(scetic)verse, January 26th, 2009)


(written during creative writing class exercise, will be expanded)
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Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Motif

The stars too often shoot
straight out of our grasp,
and we can reach the sky
just as soon as it falls.

(copyright a(scetic)verse, January 12, 2009)

A Brief Account of All That Remains:

Each incisive word,
each softly battering touch,
ciphers of themselves
and of the nothings we
eventually left one another
(though often we left them
only in the ears and flesh
of those who came next).

(copyright a(scetic)verse, January 13, 2009)