| duwamish 1997
drinking alki ale between 45s,
concrete arches crowd the sky.
black water fowl dry their wings
at 4pm on a cold sunday. that old
grocery with sidewalks of kittens
and labradors. homers been here
for forty years. do you know what
youre doinhere? flat lands growing
with mattress skeletons,
faceless toaster ovens
and bottles of empty
22 ounce Thunder. yellowing
raspberry brambles with dwarfed
thistle crawl to the edge of this
black river. a convoy of us
from back east, emerald
city way, stood silent
listening to a drunk
recite his verses
through a plastic box
facing the grey clouds.
we just listened, we listen.
Published
in The Raven Chronicles Volume 8, No. 2
knees
the weakness begins here,
between the ligaments
and patella. few know
the reasons. many claim
its gods error in human-
ity. what a place, calloused
from lowly pilecarpet
linoleum or cold
cement. denim, ive worn
a week at most, broken
through to skin. do the knees
of gymnasts or dancers
give out sooner?
Published
in For Immediate Release, online poetry journal, July 2002
My Apartment Is Large
For the neck, too many days
sitting in this chair
peeling the skins
from peanuts. I always
come back to splendid
to kneeling
with a string of blue
polyester and blond
apparitions, to the place
the mascara sits
after you dance.
Published
in For Immediate Release July 2002
Dreamy
Red Leatherette
eyes tell more stories
than a thousand
tiny black characters
in a line. when i saw the lady
in red leatherette
peering through
your bathroom door
at me, half-dressed,
ready to go nowhere
except the other side
of the room, i shut
them tight, there instead
were flashing white lights
with blinking red
and blue dots. i knew
it had all been some
weirdo hallucination. then
my tired self opened.
i pulled up closer
to your white
porcelin tub, firmly planted
feet first, waiting
for that morning glow.
Recorded
with Awkward Star on the CD, Blue Straggler, Hipsync Records
earth's
glare
i
one frost bitten day ruined
my throat. pink wet slippery
throat. noon came
to my back door. mud hugging
itself into ridges. sharp,
earths glare at 11:59 am,
a blue
tongue. wish i knew
what tamarack means
so that i might use it
in a sentence. swinging
from her to her, kissing
my cotton bed sheets again.
eye
on the dog of red
leather. bite down on dry
toast and sip tea. grandmother
spilling from her chair
into her sisters mouths.
soft palm on my lips.
Published in The Rendezvous Reader Northwest
Writing, July 2002
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