And but so....

Sunday, April 30, 2006

A long time ago I wrote this for a girl I had met, but thought I'd never see again...

We stayed in the hotel long enough
For me to see you change clothes.
Naked, you gave me, then, a Chesire smile.
I think you were not embarrassed.

We broke fast at noon,
In a bar called Toonis'.
You had grapes stolen from the lobby,
An egg sandwich with mustard, and then beers.
I had water, a single malt Scotch, then another.
Miles Davis was on the juke box,
George Jones, Janis Joplin, and Albert King.
We listened, after arguing, to Buddy Guy,
And I kissed you behind the ear.
You slapped me and giggled.
Coyly, I think.

A brown cat with azure eyes settled beneath my stool,
And I rubbed her with the heel of my boot.
The light coming through the window on the far wall
Forced us to move to a table in the corner
Just shy of touching the incoming sun.
The bartender laughed at us making shadow puppets
And lit your cigarette
Even though he was across the room
When you pulled out a new one.
Without my knowing,
You took a picture of me and the bartender talking.
After we left, you told me you had stolen his cigarettes.

In the car we took Valium and Xanax for our heads.
You slept from Memphis to Oxford,
Missing the fruit of Autumn.
Going through Tupelo that Sunday morning,
I lusted through the driver's side window
At the beautiful, stricken girls
Mulling in front of their churches wearing
Heels and stockings, tugging the plaits of new dresses.
I prayed you wouldn't catch me,
But you snored, wearing my jeans and shirt
As if they were your own.

At a rest stop somewhere
Near the western border of Mississippi,
We stashed poems in every bathroom stall.
Before we left, you gave a decrepit old lady
In a wheelchair a necklace you had made.
You kissed her wrinkled face.
Her sister looked on with taut disapproval.

Monday, April 17, 2006

Museum of Natural Dipsomania

I get to saving shit, worthless artifacts, little pieces of paper with worthless words and such, and think that those papers and notes and such shit might make some difference later… some cleaving inside the coarseness or around it, make the savage nature a bit more…or maybe less , you know, austere. Maybe have a little peace and remembrance, maybe some good, some good. I got a fucking envelope from some letter that the girl who wore space sandals sent to me, lost the letter, but that envelope I still got, had it hidden in my dictionary for about 8 years and I can just look at the handwriting on it, the old address, the postmark from Opelika. I got the dollar bill Perry from Jane’s Addiction threw off the stage at that concert in Nashville, got all the ticket stubs from all the Cardinals’ games I ever went to, ‘cause nobody knows the fucking beauty of baseball anymore, just me and some dying New York Jews, they’re seventy years old or more and I just feel like it, what with the hundred thousand beers and all, but I got the fucking stubs and I’ll give up another wife and some more skin before I lose ‘em, and you can bet something big on that, something worthwhile, I mean it. I got some other silly shit, too, silly to you and maybe to me too, like books I read a hundred times, you know, books, those arcane relics that a few big city smartasses like to talk about to show just how fucking smart they are, like their who’s who list might make them a worthy and compatible lay… I read Eco in high school, babe, wanna fuck or should we do another line? I even have a big collection of records. Shit, I collect scars, or at least gather them whether I want to or not; they may be worthless too, but I always seem to come on a little more interesting after a new one, the girls go in for that shit, honey let me put some iodine on that, honey, you don’t want it to get infected… I get to saving shit like that for why I don’t know, except maybe I’m afraid I might drink away all the real memories, or if they make me sober off or up I won’t ever feel them real again like I do when I’m drunk and I piece them together on a trip, like how could I remember being a fucking child, waiting for my mother to wake up after about twenty shifts in a row, without the music I heard from that tinny little fucking AM alarm clock radio, blaring out Al Green and Bread and Santana and Teddy Pendergrass, sitting on the bed, staring at her sleeping body and waiting, or rifling through her purse for some change to go buy a fucking Slurpee and surprise her with a pack of smokes because they would sell them to seven year olds then, and she liked Benson and Hedges menthol light 100’s. A kid, right, or maybe not right, shit, maybe worse, I thought I was hot shit then, smart enough to fall for it when my uncle told me the best way to get over a sunburn was to take a fucking hot shower, and who’s hot shit after that? Yeah, I get to saving shit for what it’s worth, or is it worth anything, I don’t know, but I got it all, in cigar boxes, tucked in books, under the fucking mattress, on cassette tapes if you remember those, and other such fucking places, but I do believe I am running out of the necessary patience to remember where I put all of it, and don’t know if I care to keep on drinking up a syllabus of remembrance, or if any of it is at all worth the price of admission. After all, who likes museums anyways, none of them have the fucking courtesy to even have a bar in the lobby.

Fennel and Leek

Fennel drank Irish whiskey quickly from a plastic tumbler and smiled at his hands. Drunk on the brown, he often felt the urge to talk like an academic, full of pomp and periphrasticity. He read aloud a story from the Yale Review about lesbian painters in Mississippi. Leek was not impressed and tapped her fingers along the cracked white paint of the windowsill. She breathed a fog on a dirty pane. Outside, a stray yellow tom stalked a blowing leaf, proud and insolent over its predatory instinct. She dreamed of buying a royal feline, one that would thwart city ordinances and scare the townsfolk.

 “Well, you’d like to think these bastards might come up with something… I don’t know, intriguing, eh?” 
 “Fresh, darling. As would make a good juice; see also no discoloration or bruising…”
 “Still, this one startles a little, the idea of them down in the Belt, tongues on each other, with brushes….”
 “Ack.”
  No Response.
“You know what’s happening to ideas, baby? You know what happens to the printed word? Do you give two shits?”
 “And that is … what?” 
 “The halcyon days are gone. Meddlers killed the words, television took steroids and your precious fucking books were all burned in an ugly pyre.”
 “The fuck. What, why wasn’t I informed?”
 “Tenjem told you, but you were drunk. For several days, as I recall.”

  Christ’s sake, thought Fennel, it’s two in the morning and there is no one I can call. A trumpet is the thing, loud and reiterating. I am Chet Baker, revived and swollen, meeting the morn with this slow, dripping cacophony. Notes stretched out off the porch into the blackness, scaring off dogs and rodents in the night. Leek took some pills and slept on the couch, radiant as a dying angel, only partially covered by her favorite quilt. The house shuddered in it’s dilemma. The clocks staggered on. When the police arrived, he was deep into the Carneval dream; a Negress fellating him as he played an incoherent samba. I am becoming the heart of the city, the pitiless Saint of Martyrs and acrobats. These panther screams are for the younger ones, my lungs provide only the finest of shows. The silver trumpet lay wrecked and lifeless in the yard some distance from Fennel. He was curled and fetal on the porch steps; from the spit valve of the horn ran a rivulet of drool.

 Leek paced the garden, thinking of her soup in yonder kitchen. It will thicken, she said to her ocelot, tamed and envious. It will thicken. She trampled a bed of irises in a fit of revelation, or maybe just pique.

 Coming from the jail, Leek kissed Fennel lightly on the cheek and grasped his palm. Fennel felt thirsty and disoriented. He stared at a reflection of himself in some automobile’s window, and flinched. The mid-morning sun forced a haze of sweat from his body, and he reeked of whiskey. Leek gently pulled him away from the car and toward the taxi she’d kept waiting. I know you are sorry, she said. I know.

“Are you happy?”
 “I have my garden, my cat.”
 “Am I… happy?”
 “You’re asking me?” 
 “Well, I have things, too. But….”
 “No, you’re not. But your things keep you occupied. Me being one of those things, along with your books and that goddamned trumpet.”
 “Is this a good way to be? In place of happy, I mean?”
 “As long as you don’t get bored.”

 In the mirror, Fennel was indestructible, Nietzschean. He spoke to his drink in somber tones. I am not right. You there, cornered and meek Fennel, leave her tonight. Run away from this ammoniac cat-piss and mutual trust. Fennel staggered to the bedroom, leapt on the sagging mattress. I will, he chanted, the whiskey leaving brown ringlets on the sheets as it rained from his cup. Oh sweet, shitty, trembling Jesus, I will. I can’t, no… I will

 Leek met her doctor at a Southside bar. The casualness of their acquaintance frightened her; she might ordinarily flee his sidelong glances, but without his stentorian office, the menace faltered.
“I am thinking of Chicago, the L and the museums,” she said.
 “It’s awful goddamned cold.”
 “Yes, but he’s….” 
 “Have you been taking the medication?”
 “Yes. Mostly. Especially when he’s gone.”
 “May I buy you another drink?”
 “Won’t that counteract the pills?”
 “I wouldn’t know, I’m just a doctor. Besides you’re not taking them.”
 “I’m sorry, I think. And yes.”
 “Hmm.?” 
 “Yes you may buy me another drink. In case he comes home.”

 Fennel returned unannounced from a two week trip to visit his hooker friend in Oklahoma. Leek fixed his favorite breakfast, Tricolore Fritatta, and cried into her palms. They didn’t speak at first, merely brushing into each other in the hallways, full of lust and tepid hate. Fennel read books and often quoted from them, the ones he felt were weighted with Faulknerian tragedy. He bought a pistol and felt ugly. He left it on the counter to act as a symbol of his disgrace, but Leek did not let on that she noticed. The nickel-plated barrel and fat bullets did nothing for his confidence, and his courage failed miserably when he thought of using it on himself. He sold it to an elderly Jewish man in his mother’s apartment building. The Jew, Albert, sighted it down the hall, and faked a shot at the boys rolling dice over by the entrance. He brought the gun down to his side and smiled at Fennel, searching for alliance in his imaginary kill.
 “I’m just not comfortable around these niggers anymore.”
 Fennel peered down at the boys who were talking loudly over their game, then back at Albert and the pistol. His hands were cold and sweaty when he took the bills from the Jew, busy muttering some insipid hate to himself. Outside, the breeze felt calming, and he stood for a minute in the shade. The people in his life, with their meanness and fear, made him giddy and light. Fennel took the money and spent it on lottery tickets and booze. What do I have to lose?

Sunday, April 16, 2006

After The Royal Family, for the Queen of the Whores

What of the Canaanites? they've been
banished,
but I still remember the searing blade leaving
it's mark
and I can not hide from the gloss
the dancing reflection on the
surface of bourbon
in a chipped coffee cup.

after reading Stanford

Going down to the tracks, he felt
ugly and insincere.
A woman here once killed her baby, and
even owls cried knives.
Shame is lost in such greased corridors.
No one would ever remember the
savage honesty of the plum and the orchid.
I have eaten my own dishonor, my
tongue is burnt.
I have fought for insignifigance, I am
no matter, but there is still
a Stone Mountain sunset.

The end is always a new beginning unless you're dead

This is just the beginning. I'd assume it could end fairly quickly, but then again well, you know. Our first topic is redundancy. Like my cats being independent thinkers, since they are constantly shitting outside the box.