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Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Speedy Marie by Frank Black



Had a bit part
An endless reel
It always played in slow-mo
But now it's fast
A spinning wheel
I know the dynamo
My heart
Is cast

Speedy Marie
Ahead of the now
She's better built that's how
She's built for speed
Speedy Marie
Speedy Marie

Oh yes, indeed
I said to me
And so I sing this romaunt
It's not enough
My liberty
There is a thing I want
I need
I love

Juxtaposed in each moment's sight
Everything that I ever saw
And my one delight
Nothing can strike me in such awe
Mouth intricate shapes the voice that speaks
Always it will soothe
Rarer none are the precious cheeks
Is the size of each sculpted tooth
Each lip and each eye
Wise is the tongue, wet of perfect thought
And softest neck where always do I
Lay my clumsy thoughts
She is that most lovely art
Happy are my mind and my soul and my heart

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

by e.e. cummings



no man,if men are gods;but if gods must
be men,the sometimes only man is this
(most common,for each anguish is his grief;
and,for his joy is more than joy,most rare)

a fiend,if fiends speak truth;if angels burn

by their own genereous completely light,
an angel;or(as various worlds he'll spurn
rather than fail immeasurable fate)
coward,clown,traitor,idiot,dreamer,beast --

such was a poet and shall be and is

--who'll solve the depths of horror to defend
a sunbeam's architecture with his life:
and carve immortal jungles of despair
to hold a mountain's heartbeat in his hand

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Clothes Do But Cheat and Cozen Us by Robert Herrick



Away with silks, away with lawn,
Iʼll have no scenes or curtains drawn;
Give me my mistress as she is,
Dressed in her naked simplicities:
For as my heart, even so my eye
Is won with flesh, not drapery.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Four Wolves by Stan Rice



I tell this blackguy
who sits down at the table next to me in Kips
hey man you dropped your matches,
he just nods, big felt hatbrim over all but his beard and his nod,
and he sees my half-full pitcher of beer and he says
hey man can I have a shot of your beer?
and I nod yes and start to give him a drink from my glass
when this dude gets up and says,
I’ll get my own glass,
sits down, pours it full and then takes one of my cigarettes
and says to me I’m busted, disgusted, and not to be trusted,
and I say Well, I don’t know about the first two,
and he laughs and claps his hands softly like
pleased at the innuendo of my comeback and then
the waitress comes up and to his two sort-of-buddies and tells them
they can’t just sit there without ordering something, so one of them says
hey man, can we sit with you, meanwhile
I’ve said nothing because look at what telling the dude
he dropped his matches
got me, so these other two dudes slide over to my table
and the one called Larry starts talking, mostly jiveass
lies, one after another stories about pussy and fights
in Chicago and a whole lot of stories about money and I just sit there
staring off real stone-like for awhile then
I pick up the pitcher and get it refilled
and two more glasses, which generosity you dig
these guys don’t even acknowledge,
so they all pour themselves beer and Larry says
Now Steve here he’s been with some ugly women,
if you want a authority on ugliness Steve here
went into the ugly forest and the trees fell on his
HEAD,
and Larry says, Man Steve he know women hurt people’s feelins
just lookin at em,
and he tells about how he got stabbed three times and
six doctors was workin over him and when that dude stabbed me
I didn’t hardly feel it, it was like somebody barely tappin you
just like this, I mean bein stabbed don’t hurt man it don’t hurt and
I thought shit man, how come this dude ain’t resistin don’t he know
we are in a fight,
and Steve says hmmph occasionally,
and this goes on about twenty minutes during which
time they’ve hardly even touched their beers, which seems weird to me,
so I get up and go to the john and when I come back
they notice me, all three at once, and Larry says
Say man what’s your name, and I tell him and he shakes hands
and Steve says his name is “Steve” and I see his eyes for the first time
under his big turned-down mean hatbrim and the other guy says
his name’s Jo-Mo and I shake his hand
Berkeley style
and their eyes fall on me sincerely, which I interpret to mean
that they dig I haven’t laughed artifically at their jive
unless the story really had wit to it, and they know
most white cats fake it 90 percent of the time
when around black guys and they don’t even have
no talent to their lies, and all of a sudden
we were just shimmering there at the table
and nothing mattered & they were using language
& we were two floors up in this neon place waitresses
in black miniskirts and white aprons and the TV on
over the bar and the Budweiser ad horses rotating in the plastic
racetrack & the guy wiping out the big pizza oven
with a broom on a pole & other people at squares
of wood lit from above tables and pitchers of beer
dots of foam hurrying up & He’s So Vain
playing on the jukebox & Dueling Banjos
& the bartender chewing a toothpick & there we were
outside all butchery
of TIME or CONTENT or RELEVANCE or NECESSITY
like four guys talking and shimmering on a stage in a play
written by the wolfman
in us all.

Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Series of Dreams by Bob Dylan



I was thinking of a series of dreams
Where nothing comes up to the top
Everything stays down where it's wounded
And comes to a permanent stop
Wasn't thinking of anything specific
Like in a dream, when someone wakes up and screams
Nothing too very scientific
Just thinking of a series of dreams

Thinking of a series of dreams
Where the time and the tempo fly
And there's no exit in any direction
'Cept the one that you can't see with your eyes
Wasn't making any great connection
Wasn't falling for any intricate scheme
Nothing that would pass inspection
Just thinking of a series of dreams

Dreams where the umbrella is folded
Into the path you are hurled
And the cards are no good that you're holding
Unless they're from another world

In one, numbers were burning
In another, I witnessed a crime
In one, I was running, and in another
All I seemed to be doing was climb
Wasn't looking for any special assistance
Not going to any great extremes
I'd already gone the distance
Just thinking of a series of dreams

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Tossing and Turning by John Updike



The spirit has infinite facets, but the body
confiningly few sides.

There is the left,
the right, the back, the belly, and tempting
in-betweens, northeasts and northwests,
that tip the heart and soon pinch circulation
in one or another arm.

Yet we turn each time
with fresh hope, believing that sleep
will visit us here, descending like an angel
down the angle our flesh’s sextant sets,
tilted toward that unreachable star
hung in the night between our eyebrows, whence
dreams and good luck flow.

Uncross
your ankles. Unclench your philosophy.
This bed was invented by others; know we go
to sleep less to rest than to participate
in the twists of another world.
This churning is our journey.

It ends,
can only end, around a corner
we do not know
we are turning.

Risk by Anaïs Nin



And then the day came,
when the risk
to remain tight
in a bud
was more painful
than the risk
it took
to Blossom.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Haiku (Birds singing...) by Jack Kerouac (happy birthday)





Birds singing
in the dark
—Rainy dawn.

Friday, January 16, 2009

Husband and Wife by Robert Lowell



Tamed by Miltown, we lie on Mother's bed;
the rising sun in war paint dyes us red;
in broad daylight her gilded bed-posts shine,
abandoned, almost Dionysian.
At last the trees are green on Marlborough Street,
blossoms on our magnolia ignite
the morning with their murderous five days' white.
All night I've held your hand,
as if you had
a fourth time faced the kingdom of the mad--
its hackneyed speech, its homicidal eye--
and dragged me home alive. . . .Oh my Petite,
clearest of all God's creatures, still all air and nerve:
you were in our twenties, and I,
once hand on glass
and heart in mouth,
outdrank the Rahvs in the heat
of Greenwich Village, fainting at your feet--
too boiled and shy
and poker-faced to make a pass,
while the shrill verve
of your invective scorched the traditional South.

Now twelve years later, you turn your back.
Sleepless, you hold
your pillow to your hollows like a child;
your old-fashioned tirade--
loving, rapid, merciless--
breaks like the Atlantic Ocean on my head.