Tuesday, August 31, 2010


He wiped chalk from his palms and twiddled his fingers and told me to be concerned
with my spleen and the footwear. He arranged his two arms like a cross and said
that I was all funny and off, and did I know what he was saying, yeah? and I looked at
the hills and said I could see them, and he said I couldn't, and I said it's Eve's fault and
he told me I'm her. His eyes seemed translucent and if he were blind I wouldn't be shocked.
Again, with space, he shook his arms in front of me and said to stop using the future,
and stop, knock it off with seeing the idea of mountains, and for seeing the idea as
grand, and what's more, quit it with seeing the idea of grass, and seeing the grass as grand.

Sunday, August 29, 2010

two creatures of substance more than us

We often won't stop for pennies, storm clouds, or bags needled on trees,
needing to be collected and recycled.
We won't pull over to pee, sneeze,
or have a good think about what was the name of that singer anyway.
But yesterday, all cars of varying colors stopped
mid mountains, not to observe the historic growth and destruction of rock,
or the pale, small yellow flowers of elevation,
but for the elk.

And not only the elk!
with his heavy antlers which i only know
in the form of low lying branches on old oaks,
with his thick and must be fragrant mane of matted fur,

but also the coyote!
Who jaunted up and past him!
to all of our horror and expectations of disaster!
Cameras were confused, where to shoot!
and the animals apathetically ignored one another
as we jumbled, unevolved in our emotions,
through every possible reaction.

We all stopped,
but the elk never started,
and the coyote continued.

Monday, August 23, 2010

the dog farmer


The leather farmer buried the dog several hours
before I saw it underneath the belly of a car,
running its paws sideways into the air,
calling out like a coyote or a kettle.

The mountains were continuous but for one line
of sweat, beads of automobiles on route 36 streaming,
and I ran towards the thin pearls from the east,
interrupting grasshoppers, also gleaming, shining wet.

It was morning and he was mourning, out there with a golden shovel,
his truck parked asleep on the side of the road,
his forearms capable of transcending time and place,
burying the dog slowly that wasn't yet dead, in his or someone's corn field.

He buried the dog that hadn't yet even gone out for his walk.
He buried the dog that napped,
in morning sun, sleeping, east,
somewhere, on the other side of the city.



Thursday, August 19, 2010

Sunday, August 8, 2010

floaty me

found this, labelled 4 1/2 on the back by mom
it seems as if i knew
i'd be floating a bit to one side,
looking a little tired, but more so intent