Archive for March, 1992

Imitations of Busin

Posted: March 30, 1992 in Poetry
Tags: , , ,

I
a cricket
gets eaten by my
black scorpion.

II
a cricket
wonders what Robert Frost
is doing.

III
a cricket
is waiting
for a blackbird.

IV
a cricket
digests my poetry
thoughtfully.

V
a cricket
chirps loudly somewhere in
my dark room.

Untitled Poem #-18

Posted: March 27, 1992 in Poetry
Tags: , ,

I have been marked
as a Dreamer of Dreams
by the slow writhe
of the One on my skin,
by the keen pipe,
the language of the whisper.
I have been marked,
or so it seems.

Untitled Poem #-17

Posted: March 6, 1992 in Poetry
Tags: , , , , , , ,

light is spilling through the clouds,
and the whippoorwill wind is getting louder;
a storm is coming.
I can see the line of rainfall
blurring the trees across the way.
the dark is rising,
and my shoes are untied.

this is the box that the spider came in.

here is the molt
of the mad spider
who came in this box.

this is the rock
from the cage where I kept
the spider, who was mad
and wouldn’t bark
after he left the white box that he came in.

these are the pictures I took of the box
that the batty spider came in
before I found that it was not him
who barked.

I am the boy who also came in the box
with such a grizzly spider,
put was not put in a cage
with a grey rock and a clock.

this is what happens to the crickets
that my spider hunts around the rock
by the light of that ridiculous clock.

this is Ezra Pound; a sailor, a spider,
who winds the clock in the closet of crickets.

here is the ward
where the mad spider and I are,
full of wind and white sheets and flat paper hats
and a rock.

here is the boy that bought the box
and found the rock for Ezra Pound,
that mad grizzly spider who wore a paper hat,
who gave it to me for the molt
that lies in the House of Bedlam.

this is the box,
the House of Bedlam,
where the spider molted even though he
was supposed to be hunting by the light of the clock
that Ezra wound.

I am the clock that tells the time
that the closet crickets die in the white box
– the cage in the House of Bedlam.

these are the legs of the mad molted spider
who ran around the rock in the white windy ward
of the house of the box with a paper hat.

this is the picture of grizzly me,
the boy Ezra and that deadly spider
who still wouldn’t bark after returning
to the House of Bedlam.

here is the box that is all that is left
of the boy, the spider,
Ezra and me.

[based on a poem by Elizabeth Bishop]

in the photograph,
taped at the corners,
we were caught falling
into the river with smiles
and half-closed eyes;
flowers were falling
on the glossy surface
in the middle of the white album page,
shifting the reflection of the sun.
outside the open oak-framed window,
shining over the tall broad-leafed trees,
and the clouds spiraling away
falling over the edge of the world.