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    Poem Bale Three Regarding Horseplayer Luck & Lack

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    of Rimbaud?

      I’ll carry my Plebeian fire

      in a pick-up truck, fancy myself

      kin to Prometheus,

      delight every bar from here to Kentucky.

      I’ll seek out Magdalene to guide me,

      tell her the wizard resides in Louisville.

      First I must orient her to my trade,

      visit every driveway and road I’ve paved.

      Reciting poems of shovel and rake,

      I’ll woo her wild under a broken moon,

      convince her asphalt’s a mating place.

      Art, my dear! Imagine I’m an artist

      like Cezanne. Love me once

      on my canvas and it’s bluegrass forever.

      (I hear Rimbaud has a mount in the Classic.)

      If we’re discovered we’ll say we’re testing

      driveways for Consumer Reports.

      It’s going to be a hell of a Derby.

      Prometheus says the poet is blessed.

      I’ll take the role of the flame

      swiping Titan, but Magdalene,

      don’t be a vulture, ale is a better way

      to waste a liver. Act like a gentle swallow

      at play and I’ll be renewed

      like the Tinman, Lion and Scarecrow.

      Dear Magdalene, your heat

      has melted the black masterpiece.

      I’m calm enough for death but skip the stone

      just apply a healthy blacktop square,

      mail dance invitations to the folks

      I’ve offended. Dearest Magdalene be

      Little Egypt on the yellow brick road.

      Then Rimbaud and Dorothy will grind away:

      a Derby rose between her teeth.

      Return To Contents (Or Scroll Forward or Back)

      Important as Weather

      Herbie is in the woods

      splitting logs

      to get into shape

      to ride again.

      A string of horses

      ready for Brockton Fair

      his to ride

      if he got sober,

      kept his damned trap shut.

      The trainer made the offer

      in the Bobbin Lounge

      tossing a handful

      of clippings in a puddle

      of Herbie’s spilt scotch.

      The trainer read off results

      of races Herb had won

      but didn’t recall:

      Hawthorne and Golden Gate.

      The trainer said a month

      of axe work upstate

      would get him fit

      to ride nine a day.

      Did right by Abe Lincoln he joked.

      Herb squeezed the scotch

      out of his history,

      gazed at the corner table

      where some fool was kissing

      his ex-wife’s foot.

      He wondered what kind of derelict

      was minding the kids

      then borrowed the bartender’s reading glasses.

      Herbie perked up as he remembered

      being as important

      as weather and obituaries.

      Return To Contents (Or Scroll Forward or Back)

      The Clocker, Narragansett Park

      He rarely smiled,

      never held a stopwatch

      yet he called himself a clocker.

      His tipsheets were canary yellow

      like his lucky sportcoat

      30 years ago at Hialeah

      when he’d picked 7 longshots.

      He printed his selections quickly

      in a rundown trailer

      not far from Narragansett

      as soon as he got the scratches.

      The ink was always smudged,

      his hand press was so ancient.

      After a decent afternoon,

      two or three winners,

      maybe the double,

      he’d circle the horses’ names

      on the tipsheets that remained

      with a laundry marker so strong

      the odor made him high.

      He’d pay Project kids who hung around

      the track instead of school a buck or so

      for distribution.

      He knew his help tossed his advertising

      down sewers but luck’s so rare

      even an old man not on a laundry marker

      high might cherish sharing good fortune

      with rats, teeth yellow as a seven

      winner sportcoat.

      Return To Contents (Or Scroll Forward or Back)

      Clocker Sarge

      Any morning you could find

      the clocker snug at the rail

      eyeing his watch and recalling

      war and hand grenades.

      Pin released, he times horses

      whose clopping fills his head

      with his favorite music,

      “The Grand Canyon Suite.”

      After the explosion

      rocked his head,

      his jockey pal visited

      the hospital

      and tried with no luck

      to get at least a war

      story out of him.

      Sarge used to stop

      his trusty timepiece

      as precisely as a conductor

      halts his philharmonic.

      In the nursing home

      he stares at the wall

      as if it’s full of five

      a.m. workout

      thoroughbreds.

      The jockey brings in

      the watch that survived

      hitting asphalt

      when Sarge collapse

      and places it

      against his stroked

      friend’s ear

      and he does the same

      with a tape deck

      playing his “Suite”

      but nothing penetrates

      the new world walls.

      There’s a turn schedule

      designed to fight bed sores

      taped on the wall behind

      Sarge’s bed:

      eight o’clock left

      ten o’clock right

      twelve o’clock left

      two o’clock right

      and so on.

      Return To Contents (Or Scroll Forward or Back)

      Three Talents

      The last time I saw him I shut up

      about the knack that was his big brag –

      breaking line bare-handed

      when he was in the merchant marine.

      Many doubters had kissed cash

      goodbye quicker than your average

      fool when he’d snapped a hank

      of sturdy manila very first try.

      I kept quiet about his barroom pinball

      mastery that had disappeared

      by the time I’d gotten drunk

      enough to bet on him.

      He’d sworn to recoup my losses

      and more employing

      his third talent at a bookie –

      six furlong horse races at

      Louisiana tracks.

      No point rubbing in that his picks

      ran as if their reins reminded

      riders of heaving lines

      and they were getting even

      for paychecks fathers lost at sea.

      Last time I saw him he was nursing

      a draught beer and he took up my offer

      to buy him another by switching

      to top-shelf whisky.

      We laughed like hell about his drinking

      advancement which was easy since there

      was no pinball machine and bookies

      were tucked in.

      He was the one who broached

      the line snapping.

      We staggered around a few

      back yards groping for clotheslines

      but it was futile considering

      how many likes of me he might

      have succeeded or failed to

      furnish proof.

      Return To Contents (Or Scroll Forward or Back)

      Paradoxica
    l Thirst

      There are times my laugh or tone

      of voice is so much like my father’s

      I feel I am becoming him.

      The sensation is strongest

      when I’m in a bar

      where we’d drank

      and played horses.

      Almost without choice

      I use his system: parlay

      the third consensus picks in

      the last two races at Aqueduct.

      It’s the lot of the son to

      extend the life of his father—

      at least his betting style

      and his drinking methods

      We imbibe a bit too much.

      Who knows how we get home?

      Mid-stretch in a dream I’m startled

      awake, aware when he was my age

      only my brother was born.

      In the bathroom, quenching

      my paradoxical thirst, I see

      my father in the mirror

      as he looked in his wedding picture.

      Like a sly old tout with all

      the inside information,

      I advise in his raspy whisper

      “Skip the next kid,

      like you would a bad race.”

      In the morning paper when

      I find his system worked

      I tell the mirror to forget

      last night and slick back my hair

      the same way he did his.

      Return To Contents (Or Scroll Forward or Back)

      Systems

      Nineteen-thirty-four

      my old man could

      have been

      at Narragansett Park

      for the first

      'Gansett Special.

      Hell, stood right smack

      next to Jack Kerouac

      and his father

      and exchanged words

      about the horses passing

      on the way to post.

      My dad might have

      asked eight-year-old Jack

      what he was writing

      in the notebook prompting

      a detailed explanation

      of the personal thoroughbred

      racing world he'd created.

      This is all conjecture

      and wishful thinking

      of course but I do know

      my father employed

      a betting strategy

      that consisted of religiously

      betting the third favorite

      in a race alone or in win

      and place parlays

      not to mention daily

      doubles and bird cages.

      Neal Cassady used

      the same method I learned

      in a Kerouac biography.

      Add my father to form

      a trio that’s been known

      to whisper over my shoulder

      as I’m heading off

      to wager on a race.

      But that Great Depression day

      the longshot Time Supply

      was the victor and third

      choice Omar Khayyam placed.

      For a while I thought I came close

      to meeting Jack but I heard later

      the guy who said he’d arrange it

      was as dependable as

      a country fair tout.

      Return To Contents (Or Scroll Forward or Back)

      Belated Respects

      Red was the one

      who picked the horse

      we split a bet on.

      Class Hero

      romped at 35-1.

      Red always looked

      for sprinters

      stretching out,

      routers

      turning back

      and he often

      mentioned the only

      sick week

      in his life.

      A nephew gave him

      a carton on Winstons

      for Christmas

      that nearly killed him.

      No straying

      from cowboy smokes

      after that.

      He never married

      but kept a cat.

      I’ve lost what

      he called it.

      Hadn’t seen Red in ages

      when I learned a stroke got him.

      The longshot’s name returned

      after a few months,

      an event

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