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Category: Poetry

Poetry

Poetry

Is for better or for worse.
The train has arrived,
You have left the station.
Occupation-wise
There is monetary gain,
Momentary fame—
If you’re lucky—posthumously.
It keeps you awake at night.
You clamber for
And hoard
Scraps of paper. At night you rise
Among melting dreams.
There is a railroad track, a chicken coup.
An evening sunset, a morning monsoon.
A water buffalo is cleaved in half.
Rat-a-tat-tat.
A former stick, a yellow-lipped Krait,
Glides through manioc.

You ask yourself: is this real?
Thunder answers,
A bell answers,
Poetry answers—all one long peal
like a train whistle through a long tunnel
And there is no appeal and no recourse
But to press on in the dark,
Press on or forever hold your peace.

© Oct 21, 2013 by UT2

Silent Music

Silent Music

Sometimes
silent music is the best music of all.
It falls like night.
It falls like a snowflake.

It is a smile as opposed to a laugh.
It is a poem as opposed to a song.
It comes to you as on a noiseless wing
of no required footstep.

You need not walk out to meet it.

In winter’s hour it comes like a snowflake,
yet, as welcoming angel, its embrace is warm.

June 11, 2013 by UT2 ©2012

At the Butterfly Garden, the Bench (San Francisco Bay Don Edwards Wildlife Reserve)

At the Butterfly Garden, the Bench (San Francisco Bay Don Edwards Wildlife Reserve)

At the back
overlooking
is a bench. I listened to a sparrow
thought this bench to be
perfect for writing poetry.

Sure,
a sign explains how Monarch butterflies
store up the poison from
their food plants: milkweed,
and how this, hopefully,
keeps the predators away

Also, how the California Ringlet,
the most abundant in California,
lays its eggs upon the grasses: Bunchgrass
to be exact;
then the California Tortoiseshell Butterfly—
and so on and so forth—
over here on a purple blossom,
over there on a dark-orange one . . .
They are called Ceanothus or California lilacs.

A gaggle of kids on a field trip on the other side of some trees
move behind me. “This is boring,” one says.
(I’m sure he’d rather be about some iPad playing video games.)

Meanwhile, a bird darts.
Bees are about blossoms.
A lizard scurries then sits motionless perfectly camouflaged.
Six crows rest in a tree a ways off,
then fly over my head, silent.
Honking geese follow,
the cacophony in competition
with the troop of kids,
feet too firmly planted and dragging on the ground.

I’m still looking
for the poetry.

As the songbird returns with song,
through a hole in the trees
I see a kid wearing headphones.
The whole gaggle seems to be heading my way.

O, the poetry!
O, the humanity
to write about such things.
To write about such things,
sit with pen and pontificate

orange and white and yellow
butterflies flitting about
and gone.

This is boring! The phrase
suddenly enunciates in my mind.
And in my mind Mugworts
and Sticky monkey-flowers
labeled and in proper order:
yellow blossoms,
one or two, deepening into crimson.

I open my eyes.

The garden itself!
that is the poetry.

My notepad is empty.

I’ll be back tomorrow.

Apr 7, 2012 by UT2 ©2012

A Word About Words

A Word About Words

Always adequate,
Always measuring up (and
how quickly they
can become has-been

often laughable, even derisory).

Untie the words, you say,
loose them from their pain;
unite them in reason, one to another

till they follow like sheep
to the slaughter in their inadequacy.

July 8, 2011 by UT2 ©2012

The Washing of Dishes

The Washing of Dishes

When you are through
with
the washing of dishes

there is the
washing of dishes

and when you finish
the
washing of dishes

there is the
washing of dishes.

Find time to milk the cow.
And plow?
How?

Find time to make things rhyme.
Find time to be word-absurd,
soak head in bucket of water..
How?
I shall soak my head in a bucket of
slop; yes, I said poetry.
(Paint word-acrylics
and be embecilic. I said poetry.)

How?

When you are through
with
the washing of dishes

there is the
washing of dishes

and when you finish–
the
washing of dishes.

©August 18, 2015 by UT2

My Roving Shoes

My Roving Shoes

This morning my shoes took off without me.
Across the floor they clomped and clattered,
then,
one kick of the door
and they were gone.

Funny to imagine, them out there without me,
stopping by a shoeshine boy,
searching for a dime,
but so assertive now,
the two of them in their newfound freedom.

There they are in front of the newsstand
now feeling important,
leisurely, hanging carelessly about,
their laces hanging out.

This morning they were impertinent,
a bit self-possessed.
They were tired of me too long
in the bathroom
probably seeing me as vain;
perking the coffee, sitting down
with pen in hand drawing a blank.

They needed to make a statement,
two empty shoes,
here we are, here!
Tongues hanging out from too much wear
but rows of eyes from which to look out of,
two empty shoes
out to face the world.

©Sept 2, 2013 by UT2

At The Gate

At The Gate

Gardenias yearn from stems
moonward; I stop to stretch,
just a pause–
no more, no less;
no time to obsess
or linger dissectingly,
but to instead
preserve artlessness.

There is no lateness.
There is no early.
Tonight, simply: “the moment”;
timelessness.
In the house
the lights wink out.
There is no deep reflection,
no over whelm of thought–

only a flicker of leaves
in the starlight;
from the barn–
the welcome light
left on in the loft.

The hinges groan;
a backwards glance,

and then, the catch of the latch.

©Oct 13, 2012 by UT2

Evening Dew

Evening Dew

1

Time quivers from an empty bridge,
Whooo,
The evening train steams grade-challenged,
Wheels squawk,
Engine moans

Like every bone in my body broken,
Like my joints, like my couplings
Car to car to caboose, loose.

Whooo,
The owl whisks from the barn: whoosh!

2

Dusk,
A red feather floats
Under a grey cover,
Floats judiciously, nearly, seemingly,

Floats ubiquitously purpose-drawn
Or again so seems;
In actuality in acquiescence
To the wind.

The hem of the universe
Is borderline mad,
Now struggles
To maintain semblance.

Time quivers
From a bottle.

3

The red feather neither thinks nor looks
Nor deciphers nor calculates
—a red feather from a hat
Or from this or that—

It does not contemplate
Any form of reality via existence.
But it is.

One comes to rest
Upon a green stem. It has an identical twin.

A train of clouds form
Skyward.

It is a world with no airbrakes.

4

Two shadows like hands,
Two crossroads
Split in the night,
Two shadows like long arms
Reach out t’ward fathomless vistas.

An ass brays from a barn.
A class says an alphabet as per
Instructions from a marm.
Mankind is biased, is blasé
Is blessed.

Hollow, they strain into the nude dawn
In an epic power struggle
To be heard. Their king is their shadow
Is their image, is that glint off the brook
Off the rifle.

They are like
The greens having heroically endured
All the early frosts of fall

Mid-frost is upon them.

5

Frivolous all the mounting moments,
Frivolous all the ascending
Roman numerals
Around the circle
Called the clock: logjam time.

The winning smile,
The eyes,
The man in the nervous tie,
Say: “frivolous!”

While counting time like money like time.

6

The chicken stirs.
Coffee spoons clink
In cafeterias.

The sunset coexists in the sunrise
The sunrise coexists in the sunset

The latch catches the gate
The gate catches the latch

I stab myself on a thorn
While trying to pick a rose

The green stem shouts from a bed
Of eternal noiseless “nonexistence”:
“Finite!”

. . . .
Drawn conclusions baa
From hollows;
Drawn inferences along with suppositions
Bay from steamy brooks;
As yellow clouds,
As hound dog breath,
As some reduced form of soundless death,

Certainly they scream in uncertainty,
Ring hollow and resonant
(and resident) in the brown fog.

A red bead
Drips down
On the green stem

7

Like death
The red feather touches
Down in the water
Next to the brown one

The owl, the rooster,
Wing in wing,
Two sets of ripples ripple out,
Two, but merging as one.

Church bells ring;
Rain descends,
Clicks like coffee spoons.

The moon and the sun
Begin to seem as one
Yet are separate.

8

Facsimiles
Yawn from broken valleys,
Sun pours
Where moon should have been

Silver alleys are only gray
Where the gleam has washed away,

Exfoliate rose
Of rich men ghettos

Spider web:
Cobwebs

And down certain cobbled streets
The hobbler hobbles—
History is cobbled together by the adept revisionist
And replete with repeats—

The flow ebbs,
The open door closes,

The evening dew is on the roses.

©Sept 29, 2012 by UT2