Thursday, December 31, 2020

Minnesota; The Viking.

 



Lakes and hills, but mountains none.

Not mystery, but grouse and sun.

The limitless view of a sky undone.


Silos keep the land so prone

like conquerors now all alone.

My childhood was thus loosely sown.


I wondered at the silent trees.

The resonance of bumblebees.

But nothing brought me to my knees.


Until tornadic winds began

and to the cellar we all ran,

hiding under mom's caftan.


At last the thunder does not roll,

and, despite snapped 'lectric pole,

the wet green grass makes me feel whole.


So back to careless ways I dashed;

no distant peaks make me abashed.

A woodland Viking, rude mustached! 





A New Cadence.

 




I want a new cadence;

the last one's too broke.

It started out solid,

but turned into smoke.

(My voice so refurbished

still tells the same joke.)

Awakened out of a deep sleep

 




I slept, but thought I was awake;

until the Lord my slumber brake.

His words and spirit did arouse

me from my heedless sinful drowse.

Now my waking hours brim

with tenderness that comes from him.




Wednesday, December 30, 2020

Today's timericks.

 



There's leftovers aplenty from Xmas Day extant/I nibble on them so much I feel like a gas plant/Another choc'late orange? A slice of Gouda cheese?/Throw out that turkey dressing -- and dump the eggnog, please!


I shopped at Sears when just a boy/ to get a bike or mitt or toy/and when a suit became a must/they sold me one that didn't rust/Dependable, I always thought/I can't explain their creeping rot/But since I'm so opinionated/I'll say it's hubris accumulated.


In England sugar, fat, and salt/will soon come to a screeching halt/The Brits have taken up the cry/"Eat that stuff and you will die!"/Good luck with that, when fish & chips/means more to them than scholarships.  


People keep me in their prayers/or send me cute teddy bears/No one thinks to send me cash/when my health begins to crash/Money cannot cure disease/but it softens ev'ry sneeze. 

The well need no physician

 



The well need no physician,

but that is not my case;

although I say devotions,

I droop at rapid pace.

My body now reminds me

how fleeting life can be,

when a wee small virus

doth make a wreck of me!

Tuesday, December 29, 2020

Today's timericks

 



The government likes telling me just what I ought to eat/according to their experts it is watercress and beet/any other foodstuff is adulterated scree/let's talk about it over lunch down at the KFC.


I think that I shall never see/another big screen loud movie/that super hero derring-do/is streaming now on pay-per-view/It's just as well; I hate mayhem/and get my kicks with TCM. 


I like vetoes, yes I do/they tell Trump what he can do/with his egotistic hype/no wonder all his tweets are tripe!

Sunday, December 27, 2020

Prose Poem: The Intermeddlers.

 





I saw the quail hurry down the alley

from my patio window.

They brought the smell of cedar.

Of lively powdery blue berries

that turned brown and cracked

when I gently placed them 

in my riven ceramic bowl.


I collected them off the cedar

on my long walks to and from.

Hearing the quail's faltering cry.

With the sunset dragging down

the mountains into dust at my feet.


Where the quail go is no concern of mine.

But I feel sorry they must hurry.

What can a quail have that is worth

hurrying to? says I --

a man sitting in a faded recliner who 

is done hurrying to anything.


When I was younger I did more 

hurrying away from than hurrying to.

Straying from rather than headed to.

And my friends and the wife of my

youth know this well

and they want to talk and talk and talk

about it with me.

The intermeddlers.


They would take a snail out of 

its shell to improve its life.

Their helping hand pinches.

Their breath is stale and self righteous.

Strafing my comfort zone.

Please go away, Yenta.

Leave me trace my dreams

with Pixy Stix.



Today's timericks.

 



Lookit, Ma -- I'm driving fast/with no hands a-steerin'/these new cars are super smart/there's no use a-fearin'/I can text or talk or nap/there'll be no collision/heck, I might as well sit back/watching television!


When you have a lot of tykes/better travel on some bikes/fam'ly vans are overpriced/what they charge is more a heist/take it from a man with kids/I oughta have been raising squids!


The digital yuan is now here to stay/making it easy for Chinese to pay/for chopsticks and moon cakes and pickled bai cai/now they'll be eating the whole livelong day/belly aches soon will disable them all/then Uncle Sam can watch Xi Jinping fall.

The Professor & the Poet. An Email Correspondence.

 


BACKGROUND:

I sent my prose poem 'How to cook an old boot' to an English professor friend of mine.

In return, he rearranged my work to make some kind of academic point, which I am still trying to figure out.

His version went like this:

(These items cannot be purchased 

a kettle of enraged water. 

add a dollop of sour cream 

Add the good wishes of 

Happy New Year.  

and a back scratcher from the 

Autumn mopery. 

and a set of ground up spats. 

and stay there; you're of no further use here.) 

But hey --  

For a thicker sauce, rummage through 

Summer folly. 

Gently slide the boot into 

Spring wattles. 

in all the seasons until 

New Pains Bring New Opportunities. 

in order to   

loosen the hobnails.  

In Peru there is a charming tradition 

it is mellowed and ripe: 

it will then last for many years. 

Just before serving,  

Leftover boot can be hung 

on the clothesline to dry out; 

locally take the next flight to Belgium 

Never serve boiled boot to friends 

of letting the children walk around in 

One that has marinated 

online, so if you haven't got them 

or current job. 

or relatives that don't know your middle 

Probably longer than your marriage 

Start with an old boot. 

the boot after it has been cooked 

the boys down at the plant 

to make a bouquet garni. 

Welcome Wagon. 

who complain about their allergies 

Winter pips. 

your laundry for a pair of dirty socks 

name. 


I responded with what I thought was a harmless ditty:

poets and their critics dance

round each other in a trance;
when the critic won't retreat,
the poet calls him 'obsolete.'


This elicited the following from him:

Alas. This proves that my more direct approach was needed, which you should already have. I honestly would like real conversation on the subject, not playful pretending.

I'm reading you as saying to me, "Back off, dummy! As a poet, I am beyond criticism." That may not be what you intend. But it's what it feels like to me.


To which I responded as follows:

as an educator you have to analyze literature -- that's your job (and your joy, I realize)

but as a writer I just want to write it and let other people enjoy it (or not -- that's their privelege.)
E.B. White wrote about the analysis of humor, saying it's like dissecting a live frog -- there may be some interesting things
discovered, but the end result is the poor frog dies.  I don't claim to write anything that can be dignified as literature, but my feelings are 
still the same -- leave my damn frog alone.
I also freely admit that I am both complimented by your continuing interest in my work, and at the same time feel threatened by your refusal to bow down before it as an acolyte and instead insist on using your finely honed academic and scholastic tools to examine it, deconstruct it, tinker with it, and, ultimately, show my work back to me as something less than magical.
If I can't feel my writing is magical and miraculous I don't want to bother with it anymore  -- I suppose I must be bipolar, after all; for I have moments of great exultation when I feel like Handel when he was composing the Hallelujah Chorus (if that story is true) and then I have other moments when my work seems nothing but a shoddy raree show not fit for a two-bit carnival.
THere is no middle ground for me -- especially since I never get paid for any of it.
If I were being paid to produce poetry I think I could conceive of myself as a journeyman/artisan. And take feedback more reasonably.
I have grown accustomed to playing the role of literary mountebank and poseur == so when someone makes a sincere effort to discover gems among my dross it makes me uncomfortable and diffident. Not to mention cranky and stubborn. And, as the above so amply proves, prolix. 
Ever thine, tt


So that's where matters stand as of today.
I realize that great editors can bring out the greatness in poets.
But is he a great editor, and am I a great poet?
On the first point, perhaps. One the second -- not on your tintype. 

No cunning fable is the Christ

 




No cunning fable is the Christ,

to shackle and confuse.

He lived and died for all of us,

salvation to suffuse

throughout our world as loving grace

to never be displaced --

assailed by devils and by men,

he's stronger still and chaste.