Friday, July 31, 2009

EAST


At the corner where roads 
intersect beyond the harbor,
beyond the last driveway,
the last dock, the last pier, 
one last stretch of stones, a
last gasp spreads itself 
to join the dying great lake
where six swans swim white
against the firmament.
The lake has fallen.
Stones surrender to muck 
and weeds.  The swans are
unreachable, motionless 
except to bend their  sweet 
elegant necks in the cold deep, 
gliding effortlessly.  
This is what it means to be
alone, without thought 
or intention, stuck here 
on this island's end, knowing
you will always be lost.
Out there, beyond the glimmering,
you see the faintest shimmering, 
the ghost of all you've left behind.  





Sunday, July 12, 2009

BOATS AND ANCIENT RIVER GODS



All summer outside my

window the river traffic

glides by, great lakes tankers

 

laden with cement, bleeding

at the hull, 3-masted schooners

with dories trailing like orphans,

 

sailboats and yachts and boats

of every size and class —

all day the drawbridge yawns open

 

for maritime commerce

and pleasure and sport,

fishermen in oilers, pot-bellied

 

Hemingways commandeering                  

cigarette boats and catamarans

and pontoon boats festooned with

 

Italian Christmas lights and

mylar balloons bobbing

in the wind, flotillas

 

of kayaks, canoes, racing sculls,

rowboats and powerboats spilling

to the gunwales with bronze-skinned

 

buxom-bikinied mermaids, their

luxuriant hair waving, but

it’s the working boats that

 

grab me, the meat and potatoes

fellas, the gargantuan

barges hauling pyramids

 

of coal and scrap metal in silence,

pushing back the water in

a garland of brown foam,

 

the tugs churn and shudder against

the current, bringing tons of dark freight,

and on top of each heap sits

 

one sea gull, fat and lordly

like some ancient river god,

resplendent admiral of our fate,

 

 

our fear, comedians of

the waterways, philosophers

or the harbor, pompous poets

 

of the people they

stare down on,

dreaming our demise. 

 

We are their subjects, their slaves,

their minions, fated to

                                    await the coming disruption

 

when order will be restored

and they will once again

reclaim their right to ascension. 

 

 

 

Saturday, July 11, 2009

RANGE LINE ROAD


Driving the island roads, slowly, 
     with the windows down, feeling 
          honeyed air glide over our skin, 

we spotted them looping 
     in the magnificent blue sky, 
          four eagles swooping, sporting 

in a figure 8.  We followed them 
     as they arced and swooned, pulling 
          onto the roadside weeds to wonder 

at their splendor.  We made love 
     under the aspen, naked and 
          shameless, the wind chilling our flesh, 

tense, almost savage, three times, 
     without pause or thought, yet sensing 
         the eagles' infinite flight, the 

fresh-cut hay, the wasps buzzing 
     and their stickiness, ridiculous 
          butterflies fluttering everywhere.  

Later, driving in silence, we 
     spotted an eagle in the road 
          pecking at a black rabbit and then, 

at the last second, flying off, 
     its giant wings just missing 
          the windshield -- we felt wingbeats 

in our hearts! -- and jolted in the ditch 
     to watch the twilight.

Friday, July 10, 2009

ISLAND

When we are too old to ride our bikes 
or each other we will ride the ferry 
here to this island every fall when the chill 
fills the air.  We will sit in adirondack chairs 
and look out on the bay's white waves, the deep blue 
churning, grey clouds rolling over us,  
silver birch like old bones behind us, dark 
cedars brooding.  We will no longer speak.  
Our children will not know what to call us.  
We will live in our memories -- you 
a little girl sleeping in your grandmother's bed, 
elm leaves washing in the Louisville wind, 
the sun dancing across your eyes.  I will 
dream of things I never really knew and
the jabber of Michigan crows crying 
like a baby we left somewhere behind.  
We will see the copper sunset 
in each other's eyes, smell 
the wheat in each other's hair.  
Bury us like an old rowboat 
rotting on the roadside.  
Cover us with dirt, and 
in the springtime plant a myth.  
It will grow.  

Thursday, June 25, 2009

S O L S T I C E 2 0 0 9


Definitely!  Those grackles on 

     the deck sound like mynah birds!  

Old salts celebrating 

     the oil-slick boat slips and 

channel marsh at sunset.  

     Vinegar fries and your thighs 

nestled in mine at Cap'n 

     Sunfish's, the old clock tower 

in the west is just a shadow, 

     and in the east, as the lake chill 

blows in, and the fishing boats 

     sputter in on low choke, marsh 

geese natter and complain, the 

     boozehounds here are happy on this 

midsummer night braying, cackling, 

     lowing, whinnying,  you can 

see the stars radiant in their 

     faces, these cake eaters!, 

the wind behind their eyes swirling 

     like the heavens, water stirring 

in the reeds, their souls.  And so 

we are reborn, naked and sensual, 

drunkards, philosophers, swingers, 

     refugees, survivors of the 

hunt a wumpus, the ancien

     regime.  

 





Tuesday, June 23, 2009

AFTER THE RAIN


After watching the tugboats 
     pushing time around 
          the river's mouth and eating 

jambalaya, we headed back   
      to work on the riverwalk
           talking of poetry and soul, 

the voice of the human spirit, 
     and it was then, sizing up 
          all the boats moored at the slips 

that we saw the floating 
     milk bottles, the water-logged trees, 
          the used rubbers, and then 

the bloated rat floating 
     on his back, a buoyant blimp, 
          his feet rigid, delicate and 

exquisitely chewed clean, 
     his shriveled tail limp  
           bobbing in the slow current.

Sunday, June 21, 2009

MORNING INCIDENT WITH ROBIN


Yesterday I was on the deck 

reading the paper, drinking

 

my coffee, the usual usual, 

when I heard the thump, then the 

 

crash, a copper-headed robin,

it just missed my glass bowl of yogurt

 

and blackberries, he lay there, stunned,

 staring at me, shrugging his shoulders. 


I knew he would die.  There was no use

 getting up, no use calling anyone,


the crash was too hard.  Sure enough, 

in exquisite silence, he rolled 

 

on his back, gasping but not 

gasping, blind, wings thrashing 


idiotic.  Then his legs stretched 

and stiffened and his claws 


curled like tiny fists.  We sat there 

as the sun warmed us.  I thought of 


my friend I’d talked with the night before, 

how we’d perched in the fading sun 


until the lake chill claimed us, and words

didn't matter.  She was seeking

 

a window to crash in to,

and I was  thinking Hey, 


C'mon, straighten up and fly right.

Thursday, June 04, 2009

DREAM OF DESIRE

I dreamt of the two girls 
making love in the cottage
all of the windows open, 

the sun gentle on their 
bodies as they frolicked
lace curtains billowing 

with every slow delicious 
tortured breath.  It was my job 
to witness, to circle 

the cottage, snaking through 
lake weeds, and try not to spy
on their lascivious wrestling, 

how they clutched and stroked  
with ardent fire, how their 
Innocent fingers and toes 

splayed on the sheets.  
I tapped my temple and 
tried to bury myself 

into the pleasures of 
ontology, gratifications 
of ruminating sophistries,

the still life of succulent
peaches and the sweet 
indulgence of syntati

sibilance.  And when they 
were finished they stood 
on the porch all spent and 

bent naked, satisfied 
and leaning against serenity.
The one with lavender hair 

grabbed her cheeks, still wet with 
lotus-eating and love-tears -- 
as if to wipe away her joy -- 

and then she peeled back her skin, 
slowly unzippering her flesh 
to reveal, like a chrysalis

herself, her stunning perfect 
nakedness, and I stopped 
to admire this miracle 

of becoming, her shoulders 
and breasts baring themselves 
to the sun's sweetness, and 

when she shrugged herself free 
from this soul-slip, this enraptured
suit of honeysuckle 

tongues, she invited the lake's 
stray dog to munch on her penis, 
to devour those wet petals 

like a chewy caramel 
while her strawberry-blonde 
lover looked on, in mild 

amusement, almost 
amazement, smiling at me 
as if I'd never know 

their pork-pie serets, 
their bald-faced lies and 
surely their cocky lustre.