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    Tropic of Squalor: Poems

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      to the faces of those you were sent to love.

      I once sat with Franz in the day room

      of his first loony bin near Christmas—

      his face swollen from drink, his glasses

      broken so a Band-Aid taped one wing on.

      We smoked near a piano where a stick man

      with wobbly eye pencil and graying hair

      like mine now played Someone to Watch Over Me

      while we wondered who might be dumb enough

      to print our books or read them or

      give us jobs, which happened, which failed

      to soothe us more than sitting on that orange

      plastic couch in shared dread. Lights blinking.

      The ward nurse saying the boxes under the tree

      were decorative only: they sat unopened every year.

      Look at us passing my last smoke back and forth,

      unable to guess we’d ever be anywhere

      else, thick snow coming down and piling up,

      sawhorses blocking all the small roads.

      Exurbia

      In the predawn murk when the porch lights hang

      on suburban porches like soft lemons

      my love rides out in his black car.

      His high beams stroke our bedroom wall.

      Half awake, I feel watched over and doze

      afloat in swirls of white linen.

      Then he’s at the Y in trunks I bought him

      sleek as an otter, eyes open behind goggles.

      He claws the length of his lane.

      Oh but his flip turn makes of his body

      a spear, and his good heart drubs.

      We often call at odd hours from different

      star points of the globe. But today

      he’ll stop home to deposit a hot coffee

      on my bedside. For years I fought

      moving to this rich gulag because I thought

      it was too white or too right or too dumb, but

      really, as Blake once said,

      I couldn’t bear the beams of love.

      Lord, I Was Faithless

      I murdered you early, Father

      My disbelief was an ice pick plunged

      In mine own third eye

      Like damned Oedipus

      Whose sight could not stand

      What his hand had done

      And I—whose chief grumble

      Was my kidhood (whose torments

      Did fill many profitable volumes)

      Refused your pedigree

      I revised myself into a bastard

      Orphan rather than serve

      Like a poppet at your caprice

      One among many numbered

      To live size extra small

      Whole years I lost in the kingdom

      Of mine own skull

      With my scepter the remote

      I sat enthroned in a La-Z-Boy

      Watching dramas I controlled

      Only the volume on

      I was a poor death’s head then

      In my hook-rug empire

      With snowflakes of paper

      My favorite button is power

      Suicide’s Note: An Annual

      I hope you’ve been taken up by Jesus

      though so many decades have passed, so far apart we’d grown

      between love transmogrifying into hate and those sad letters

      and phone calls and your face vanishing into a noose

      that I couldn’t

      today name the gods

      you at the end worshiped, if any, praise being

      impossible for the devoutly miserable. And screw my Church who’d

      roast in Hell poor suffering

      bastards like you, unable to bear the masks

      of their own faces. With words you sought to shape

      a world alternate to the one that dared

      inscribe itself so ruthlessly across your eyes, for you

      could not, could never

      fully refute the actual or justify the sad heft of your body, earn

      your rightful space or pay for the parcels of oxygen

      you inherited. More than once you asked

      that I breathe into your lungs like the soprano in the opera

      I loved so my ghost might inhabit you and you ingest

      my belief in your otherwise-only-probable soul. I wonder does your

      death feel like failure to everybody who ever

      loved you as if our collective CPR stopped

      too soon, the defib paddles lost charge, the corpse

      punished us by never sitting up. And forgive my conviction

      that every suicide’s an asshole. There is a good reason

      I am not God, for I would cruelly smite the self-smitten.

      I just wanted to say ha-ha, despite

      your best efforts you are every second

      alive in a hard-gnawing way for all who breathed you deeply in,

      each set of lungs, those rosy implanted wings, pink balloons.

      We sigh you out into air and watch you rise like rain.

      The Awakening

      (after Milosz)

      After decades of suffering the torments

      Of mine own mind, I awoke one dawn

      Breathing into the odd center of this

      Once-orphaned flesh. Alive, blinking.

      The edges of self neatly conscribed

      By skin as by a cop’s chalk outline.

      My eyes rested on the actual surface

      Of things. Nothing beamed from

      My brain outward through the black

      And spiral pinholes of mine eyes.

      Nothing in me winced. This baffling

      Stillness found me strapped in

      The belly of a plane nosing west

      Through blue air. I pinched my wristwatch

      By its golden stem and pulled it out

      And unwound its hands to undo

      Whole hours, I could not not

      Occupy my seat, could not wander

      From the column of breath running up

      The middle of me like rich sap of pine.

      That inward root of air had ferried

      The spirit of the Great Sustainer in

      And out of nothingness all my miserable

      Days and only in that instant did I feel

      I am it. Wanting nothing, I failed

      To fail at not having. How long

      Did this stillness hold? The flesh went on

      Ignorantly decaying. Then some baby’s open

      Drooling face popped above the forward seat

      And I grasped in pity at it, which dropped me

      In familiar agony again with want

      That sweet black ribbon around mine throat.

      How God Speaks

      Not with face slap or body slam

      Rarely with lightning bolt or thunderclap

      But in sighs and inclinations leanings

      The way a baby suckles breath

      The green current of the hazel wand

      Curves toward the underground spring

      The man in cashmere flesh does arrive

      Holding out his arms he is wide

      As any horizon I’ve ever traversed desert for

      He brings thread count to my bed

      Fire to my ovenWith a towel tucked

      In his jeans he soaps my hair

      Then finger combs it dry

      I massage a knot from his neck

      His mouth is well water

      His gaze true and from

      His tongue he brings the blessed Word

      Face Down

      What are you doing on this side of the dark?

      You chose that side, and those you left

      feel your image across their sleeping lids

      as a blinding atomic blast.

      Last we knew,

      you were suspended midair

      like an angel for a pageant off the room

      where your wife slept. She had

      to cut you down who’d been (I heard)

      so long holding you up
    . We all tried to,

      faced with your need, which we somehow

      understood and felt for and took

      into our veins like smack. And you

      must be lured by that old pain smoldering

      like wood smoke across the death boundary.

      Prowl here, I guess, if you have to bother somebody.

      Or, better yet, go bother God, who shaped

      that form you despised from common clay.

      That light you swam so hard away from

      still burns, like a star over a desert or atop

      a tree in a living room where a son’s photos

      have been laid face down for the holiday.

      The Child Abuse Tour

      We traveled into the lost time

      up the undulating hills

      pine forests red clay earth

      I smelled being born

      in streaming wood smoke

      the hairpin turns

      the hard truth of dirt yards

      raked clean of any

      grass blade swept watched over

      by bird dogs brindled

      and ghost gray and copper

      alert to every leaf flicker

      Then Cousin Peggy stood over

      the wooden bowl

      her lean fencepost frame

      a repository of cruel

      leukemia and a bone echo

      of Aunt Gladys

      whose battered tin sifter did transform

      common cake flour into dust

      powder finer than cocaine the sheen

      the rasp of the stiff hinge forcing

      through the sifter’s screen pale and

      paler moonlight into smaller

      particles the wooden bowl came from

      Tennessee some seven

      generations back tied in a croaker sack

      to an ox’s ass bouncingWe knew

      Peggy was dying and had journeyed out

      of our metropoli across desert

      and frosted tundra a fur piece to watch

      her dead mother’s hands

      pinch the dumplings into chicken

      broth molten gold

      The Less Holy Bible

      Jesus said, “If you bring forth what is within you, what you bring forth will save you.

      If you do not bring forth what is within you, what you do not bring forth will destroy you.”

      —Elaine Pagels, The Gnostic Gospels

      I. Genesis: Animal Planet

      I rose up first in a big vacant state with an x in its middle

      to mark the place I was born into dying

      surrounded by oil refinery towers with flames

      like giant birthday candles you could never

      get big enough to blow out. Before I was

      they were, and before them, reptiles and mammals

      died and rotted and were crushed into carbon

      then coal, then oil in the earth

      whose deep core held bigger burning.

      My daddy labored here, at The Gulf,

      Which meant oil refinery, but also

      a distance he drowned in,

      caged inside this high hurricane fence.

      In steel-toed boots for forty-two years, he walked.

      The gold hatpin he got at retirement

      had four diamond chips

      for a smile and two rubies like eyes,

      and he passed it to me

      because it was a holy relic

      of suffering and sacrifice,

      so I wanted it most.

      He breathed in this chemical stink

      some days sixteen hours or days on end

      in a storm, and it perfumed his overalls.

      The catalyst he pumped on the cracking unit

      burst through with enormous pressure to break down

      the black crude’s chemical bonds

      into layers, into products,

      and many ignorant men did twist the spigots

      and unplug the clogs and keep it all

      rivering so the buried pipes

      could carry out so many flammables north—

      North! Where books are written and read.

      The sunset down here glows green and hard-washed

      denim blue and the scalded pink of flesh.

      II. Numbers: Poison Profundis

      Row out in the bayou with a shovel.

      Take a pistol case you cross a snake.

      Some places they’ve dumped stuff.

      Sink a shovel in mud a few inches

      and comes seeping up

      some liquid stench right out

      of the earth bubbling

      acid green . . . like they took needles

      or serpent’s fangs and injected

      the very ground with it.

      They dumped it here off trucks

      or buried it deep in barrels the stuff ate through.

      The devil has his own cauldron

      and this goop glows green as any girl’s

      magic clay she keeps on her nightstand.

      We live on a scab, that’s what I’m saying.

      How much is that worth? Not spit, not the blood of those

      boys dead now my brothers so young, Lord, wing them

      away from this shithole.

      III. Leviticus: In Dreams Begin Responsibilities

      No one had to announce it was deadly

      more than a moccasin bite.

      The dumbest guy here (picked from stiff competition)

      knew he’d be extinguished soon, polluted.

      The oil barons too smart to live here would

      as soon snuff us out as look at us—

      our spongy tumors, the scarlet growth

      on the bird dog’s belly, the fistula

      in the breast, the bowels, the hanging balls,

      basal cell carcinoma burned off with a cigarette.

      Three gas stations in this town now chemo centers so

      you needn’t drive to Houston

      to sit with pollution needled into your arm,

      while far-off bosses who knew all along

      hit pocked balls off small hickory tees

      towards named greens that go forever on.

      IV. Exodus: Bolt Action

      I left home to escape the swamp of self.

      The locusts swarmed as in the days of Job.

      Each wore a prophet’s face.

      My mind was a charnel house and a death camp

      and a mud pack body wrap in which you twist and steam

      as every toxin leaches from your pores.

      In every room of my home, the candles had been pinched dark,

      the pages of the books wiped white of any word, and some

      bacterium had begun to eat out everybody’s eyes

      so yellow pus spilled from the lower lids like sick tears

      God was a bucket I spoke into, so to protest His absence

      or cruel subtlety, I stopped speaking to Him. I ran away

      from the land where I never heard His voice.

      I hightailed it out.

      Nobody sent after me for I was lazy and feckless and poor

      at most orders, and I served an inescapable master:

      In my head it sits

      ugly and loud, hands on the controls

      peering out my pie-slit eyeholes—speaking

      the voice of my mother telling me to go

      make a cardboard sign with a city on it,

      stick your thumb out,

      run, you little bitch . . .

      V. Chronicles: Hell’s Kitchen

      Now I live on an island with two million souls

      near the shell game and the sign with BUSINESS SUCKS

      SALE and the barber hacking ice on the sidewalk

      and a man squawking like a jungle toucan

      crosses my path flapping his arms and charging

      into the street so pedestrians part like water

      arms flapping hard as if to leave this steaming earth

      but gravity holds him among the rest of us

      I come up lat
    e to my tenement with a key

      in hand and in the doorway folded up

      like an angular lawnchair a body

      tilted head a snarl of tentacles

      asleep with garbage bags layered on to keep off

      rain so I must needs step over

      his snoring form which rouses

      to say in a rich baritone

      worthy of Zeus, Excuse me

      VI. Wisdom: The Voice of God

      Ninety percent of what’s wrong with you

      could be cured with a hot bath,

      says God through the manhole covers,

      but you want magic, to win

      the lottery you never bought a ticket for.

      (Tenderly, the monks chant,

      embrace the suffering.) The voice never

      panders, offers no five-year plan,

      no long-term solution, no edicts from a cloudy

      white beard hooked over ears.

      It is small and fond and local. Don’t look for

      your initials in the geese honking

      overhead or to see through the glass even

      darkly. It says the most obvious shit,

      i.e. Put down that gun, you need a sandwich.

      VII. Judges: Awe and Disorder

      Don’t doubt for one blip every citizen of this place is an outlaw.

      Just stand on a curb, each body strains against its leash,

      no intention of not walking when the red, pixelated hand

      lights up like a cop’s. Even that humped-over old broad

      shoves her silver walker into the oncoming bus’s path

      and dares it to flatten her. I’ll bet way back

      on the Emerald Isle when the landowner

      Lord Suck-On-This rode up on his steed

      instructing his henchmen to pull

      a sod hut down on the children

      as the smallest girl crawled out

      to pelt the great rearing stallion

      with moldy potatoes, and it’s she now bent

      shoves the walker with the force

      of her years here.

      And that mere slip of a man slim as a brushstroke

      trying to sleep in that doorway—when Mao’s henchmen

      rushed toward his mother, who set out across the frost field

      with him strapped to her back, and the dry stalks

      crackling under her stride like glass

      smashed on the tyrant’s photo.

      We draw mustaches

      on the Madonna and our musclemen sometimes don drag.

     

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