Wednesday, September 16, 2020

Prose Poem: Dead Birds.

 



I ran into Brad in the lobby of our apartment building.

He was getting mail.

So was I.

"Long time no see" he said, smiling.

"Many moons" I replied.

"Been keeping busy?" he asked.

"Not so much. Taking it easy." I said.

"How about you?" 

"Oh" he said, "just hanging around the apartment.

"Haven't been out for a month."

"Nowhere?" I asked.

"Nowhere" he said.

"I keep up with the world online,

like everyone else I guess."

I pulled my mail out of the box,

ripping it nearly 

in half.

"Did you hear about the dead birds

in New Mexico?" he asked me.

"Seems I heard something like that, yeah."

"Well,' now he was off and running.

"Well, there's all these dead birds falling

out of the sky -- and nobody knows why"

"Izzat so?" I said.

"Sure" he kept on going. "Scientists

say it's climate change and air quality."

"Canaries in a coal mine" I told him.

"Wazzat?" he asked, looking very puzzled.

"Skip it" I said. I wanted 

to go get dinner.

But Brad was not done.

In fact, he was just warming up.

"They can't dig mass graves fast enough

for 'em" he said in what he must have thought

was a sepulchral voice.

"It could cause some kind of avian flu,

on top of the virus" he said.

"Oh, I bet some of 'em are just stunned;

they'll pop right up again and fly away"

I said, easing towards the exit.

When it looked like he was going to 

follow me out, to tell me more,

I said in a stage whisper:  "Maybe

they'll turn into zombie birds. Who

knows what those crazy scientists 

have released into the atmosphere?"

He looked startled, then worried.

Without another word he ran to

the elevator and was gone.

Good riddance.

I don't need paranoid hermits

just before a meal.

The chow mein takeout

around the corner is quite good.

So I stepped outside

and was hit on the head

by a falling magpie.

Then another one fell at my feet.

"Good gravy!" I exclaimed.

Both of the magpies got up,

shook their wings, and looked

straight at me.

I recognized them:

Heckle and Jeckle,

the talking magpies

from my childhood.

"Get wise to yourself, Mac"

said one of them.

"Yes, old bean" said the other.

"It's Area 51 all over again!"

That was enough for me.

I went back inside and took

the elevator up to my apartment

to open a can of sardines.

Tuesday, September 15, 2020

Photo Essay: Experiments in Collage. Vol. 14

 






Prose Poem: The Crocodile Form.

 



At the rec center they wanted me to

 sign a piece of paper 

before letting me into the pool area.

"What's this for?" I asked the young lifeguard

who handed it to me.

"Just a standard crocodile form -- nothing

to worry about" he told me, his blond 

hair obscuring his shifty eyes.

"Whoa! Wait a minute" I replied,

taking a step back from him.

"What crocodiles?"

"The ones that might somehow

someday someway get into the

pool" he told me, trying to brush his

blond hair out of his shifty eyes,

but only succeeding in looking

all the more shifty.

"Won't the chlorine keep 'em out?"

I asked him earnestly.

I loved swimming at the rec center,

and didn't want to have to stop.

"We sure hope so" he said.

"But if you don't sign I can't

let you into the pool."

"Why all the sudden concern about

crocodiles?" I asked him shrewdly.

"Have they been sighted around here?"

"No sir" he replied stoutly.

"But several children have gone completely

missing in the last few weeks.

So we got to assume the worst."

"Couldn't be a cougar or something else?"

I asked.

"Of all the big carnivores" said the

blond lifeguard authoritatively,

"only the crocodile leaves nothing behind

of its victim -- swallowing the clothes, 

shoes, and even belt buckles and suspenders."

"But you haven't actually seen one 

around here, right?" I asked.

"Not yet" said the kid.

This was a great conversation to have,

at least for me, 

to get your bowels moving.

So I went to take care of that

and then came back and

signed the crocodile form.

That's when the cougar attacked me.





Prose Poem: Food Insecure.

 





I've been food insecure all my life.
But it didn't get really bad
until last March.
That's when my magic breadbox 
stopped working.

Up until then
all I had to do was
wish for a meal or
food item and it would magically
appear in front of me.
Kinda like those replicator
thingies in Start Trek.
Except mine was magic;
it was given to me by a 
troupe of elves
on their way to a Yankees
baseball game long ago.

After the calamity 
I felt so food insecure
that I regressed into the 
state of an amoeba.
I mean literally -- 
I became a one-celled organism.
Somehow I managed to land
on a head of iceberg lettuce
in a school cafeteria,
and a heroic lunch lady,
exclaiming "What in the world
is this piece of yuck doing on 
the sandwich lettuce -- don't
they wash this stuff no more?" 
gently removed me with a paper
towel and set me in a petri
dish.
Where I prospered so well
that I turned back into a human
being.
And I married that lunch lady.
Her name is Ruthie.
She makes me spaghetti 
with Hormel chili whenever I want.


Prose Poem: Not in MY neighborhood!

 





We've got to do something about these
displaced vegetables!
Just the other day I was at home,
minding my own business,
when a frowzy summer squash
knocked on my door, leered at me,
said it had been planted in a nearby
garden,
and now wanted a handout --
or a bottle of cooking sherry
if I had any.

I slammed the door in its face.
Then took some organic kratom.
But that wasn't the end of things.
All week there have been ugly
brawls behind the mulch pile
in the alley.
Blemished tomatoes against wilted celery.
Radishes gone to seed, acting tough,
 with a 
bad attitude.
And there are carrots,
 out of their minds
on Miracle-Gro,
lying in the gutters and
making rude comments to
passersby.
The neighborhood, my neighborhood,
where I raised two boys and a girl,
and kept nasturtiums,
has become Skid Row.

I went to see the Mayor,

for all the good it did me.

She said that I needed to open

my heart to the friendless kale

and despised rutabaga.

"How many zucchini have interrupted

your dinner lately?" I asked her bluntly.

She didn't have an answer for that!


I talked it over with some of my neighbors,

wondering if we should take the city to court.

But we'd probably get that Mr. Potato Head judge,

who bleeds beet juice. A waste of time

and money.

Well, if the city won't do anything,

there's more than one way to peel

an onion.

I got me a whole warren of rabbits now.

And if they happen to get out of their hutches

 one night,

and rampage through the neighborhood,

and snack on a few derelict cabbages

or pole beans,

well, that's the way the cookie crumbles.

After all:

Who's gonna blame a cute little bunny?


Monday, September 14, 2020

Photo Essay: Experiments in Collage. Vol. 12.







 



Prose Poem: Snowball in Hell.

 



My team and I took a snowball to Hell.

We had to clean away centuries of

basket debris piled at the entrance,

but eventually we  managed to get

past the high water and present ourselves

to his Infernal Majesty.

He proved to be most gracious,

and curious.

"My dear mortals" he began,

"Why do you wish to bring a snowball

into my domain?"

"Well, it's this way" I told him.

"The glaciers are all melting topside.

And yet the winters get colder

while the summers get hotter.

We believe the human race no longer

has the chance of a snowball in Hell

to survive. We're here to prove that thesis,

one way or the other."

"And peppermint bushes now walk like men"

added my assistant, unhelpfully.


His Infernal Majesty appeared nonplussed.

"Please to produce the snowball" he finally requested.

I held it up for his inspection.

 It had melted into itself,

becoming a ball of ice.

It was dripping very slowly;

I calculated that at its current melt rate

it would last approximately two more days.

Mr. Scratch (if I may now be so familiar) clapped

his hands and two minions scurried over to

take the snowball from my hand to place inside a 

chest freezer in the corner.

"Funny" I mused out loud. "I didn't notice 

that freezer before . . . "

"My dear morsels" said the darkening figure on the throne, 

"I just materialized it.

 Please give your snowball no more 

thought whatsoever."

"Hey" said my assistant, "he called us 'morsels, instead of mortals."

"Indeed I did" said his Infernal Majesty (seemed like the use of his proper title was a better idea.)

"I find your ignorance and your conceit delicious, and I shall enjoy it, slowly and daintily, for eons to come" he said, sounding exactly like Frank Nelson on the old Jack Benny show while licking his glowing red lips. 

I knew we should have just stuck to drilling ice cores . . . 

Prose Poem: A Walt for All Seasons.

 



There was a man above all the seasons, when I was a youth.

He was contrary and caring at the same time.

An enigma wrapped up in brown paper soaked in

vinegar.

But it wasn't Walt Whitman, or any other Walt

you've ever heard of. 

It was Walt Greenblatt,

who owned the corner grocery.


Walt smelled like his store:

stale jawbreakers mingled with charcoal lighter.

Most people thought he would burn the place

down for the insurance any day.

But I knew he wouldn't.

Not Walt.

Good old Walt.

He hated kids.

He hated their mothers.

And he absolutely refused

to wait on men under the age of

forty.

He'd send his assistant, Shorty,

to handle customers,

while he sat in the corner 

by the Old Dutch potato chips

and kept up a continuous commentary:


"Sugar and matches, sugar and matches;

that guy's up to no good -- mark my words!

She want's milk on credit, for her baby?

I wanna see the baby first.

Rubbery carrots, she says.

Rubber's good for your eyes, toots."


For many years I dreamed of working

for Walt.

Of learning how to tell a yellow onion

from a white onion,

and how to sell Turtle Wax to 

people who didn't want to buy

 Turtle Wax.

But one night as he was closing up

the mops attacked him.

In the morning they found him

in a pool of Mr. Clean. 

So I became a watchmaker instead,

working on Native American reservations

you've never heard of.

I got a lot of government contracts. 


Prose Poem: Burning Calendars.

 




The Anti-Holiday Party swept into office this fall.

And since I was party chairperson, I got a

nice cozy sinecure.

My job was to collect all the old paper calendars

that had Halloween, Christmas, the Fourth of July,

and so on, noted on them, and incinerate them.

The bonfires were spectacular.

Some people watching them got carried away.

They threw their masks into the bonfires.

Then I had my men thrown them into the 

bonfire.


It all came about this way . . . 

No, I don't think I'll bother to explain it at all.

Why bother?

The facts of the matter are that we have no more holidays

of any kind -- national, religious, ethnic, or even silly like Ground Hog Day.

Every day is a work day.

There are no weekends.

Every day you get your temperature taken.

You have your mask inspected at a mask 

inspection station. 

You bring your six foot pole with you everywhere,

or face a thousand-dollar fine.

After all,

how are you to know if you are at least

six feet away from someone 

if you don't have a six foot pole 

with you? You're allowed to use a barge pole

if you're a citizen of Great Britain.


Birthday parties, too, are out.

So the new calendars are very sleek,

very plain affairs -- 

month names, day names, and numbers from 1 up to 31.

It's going to work like a charm.

 Excepting I don't think any of the big brains

took into account this is Leap Year yet . . .