Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Requiem for the Peppers of Longinus



Poetry readings often include something poetry collections do not—context. The context of this poem is that Ricky was preparing an elegant sauce, and that in the course of shoving bell peppers down into the blender with a fork … well, you see the result. This poem was my take on the spectacle, which took place in January of this year.
Photo Ricky Garni.
Your fingertips skim passion red pepper cheeks arousing zest
for sweet life on your tongue. At your behest, cool water
would refine their lust unto muffled sighs of crisp yearning
neath taut smooth skin reflecting light from above
the kitchen sink as in your hands they offer themselves
in full abandon, innocent of reason, trusting your lips
to take them to the warm succulence of Providence.
With priestly aplomb, you steady the quiver of their taut, slippery desire
on the old rugged wood and their lip longing flesh meets steel resolve
dividing them into trembling helices wavering twixt gore and glory
awaiting only your touch. You gather their wavering slivers and they soar
raptured in your embrace that forsakes them to gravity. Freefalling, they
undulate into the blender to meet blade upon blade whereupon, lest they
slidder away, you plunge into their ribs the tines of destiny and thus
they gave up their ghosts and gore upon their Lord.


                                                                                           ~ PCM 1/28/2014


Friday, April 4, 2014

Since when?

Time traveling

Since when did we measure
time? Before the specious
present or Newton’s cause
and effectiveness, the
Greeks read stories in the stars,
Romans dialed the sun
to harvest daylight and
labyrinths tracked the seasons
of the moon. I bet cave women
gestured to the hearth and sky
wondering if their men
would die before nightfall.


Friday, March 21, 2014

I Eat Impossible for Breakfast



Double rainbow, Mauzac, France 2007

I eat impossible for breakfast

There’s nothing I can’t do

If only my mind I put to the task

Of believing it’s possible, when of me my spirit asks,

             “If you are alive on this Earth count one, two, three!

             Breathe deep, again and again — it’s free!”

The air holds the answer just wait and see.



Where once there was molten lava and ash

             Curdling, burbling

In space did it dash

Round in orbits elliptical

Till seasons appeared quite cyclical.

             The day from the night emerged sure and strong

And earth from the waters along and along.

Small creatures microbial

And algae quite jovial

Simmered until there was oxygen stew.



Along came the plants, the fishes and Pterodactyls

Saber-Tooths, Mammoths,

Then man, woman, child with fire and other practicals.

The oxygen moved from stew to sea

To land and air across the centuries to you and to me.



So the O2 that’s here once lived before

Perhaps in the nose of a dinosaur.

Across the millennia, mountains and desert

Ice age and new age, from castle, igloo and yurt

In the wind, oxygen whirls to animals and plants

It even invades the holes in your pants.



So as impossible as forever may seem

If you but breathe deep of the air

You’ll be on the same team

As the sun and the stars and the moon by night

The tadpoles and polecats and butterflies in flight

You’ll cross eons of history ancient and old

Inhale the courage of heroes and heroines goodly and bold.



So breathe, breathe and breathe again

You’ll find nothing impossible for women and men

And children too

Because the possible is right there in the oxygen stew. 


                                                                ~ 1/20/2014