Month: September 2022

  • Good Morning, Midnight

    Midnight likes to hang out all night long
    with a puss in boots on every block flight
    finally comes home climbs the fire escape
    out back: good morning, Midnight.

    There’s a noisy argument over in Flat 3
    Midnight’s up reading “The Life and
    Adventures of a Cat” (1760) about some
    tomfool caterwauling tom-tom tomcat.

    Now in the Cat, there
    appears the utmoſt auſterity, with
    the greateſt levity. ‘ A rake and a
    ſenator are moſt wonderfully com
    pounded. Who can analize theſe
    differing ingredients, fo demure
    a puritan on ſudden,
    verted into the moſt abfolute de
    bauche ? One time ſitting for four
    or five hours in the attitude of ſo
    lemnity, and then on a ſudden break
    out into the moſt diffolute feſtivity .
    Theſe qualities, ſo diffonant, ſo ve
    ry oppoſite to each other, muſt in
    dicate ſomething ſuperior in the
    animal, whoſe hiſtory wewe are at
    preſent writing, and we think we
    have proved this ſuperiority of the Cat.

    THE LIFE AND ADVENTURES OF A CAT.
    LONDON: Printed for WILLOUGHBY MYNORS,
    in Middle- Row, Holborn. M DCC LX.

    Just so, we find ourself at odds
    with our other selves at times as
    docile as the doe in the meadow
    the morning dews and sunup

    rough-hews the tousled covers
    the well worn silver curls one
    dare not come near at this late
    hour the abode dark and quiet.

    Then again after a rest resumes
    the sounds that do attract
    the rooster in the cat to come
    closer claws retracted mewing.

    Thus we speak of night and day
    and the contraries of our natures
    the desire to lose ourselves we
    so deliciously have cultivated.

  • The Fall Hush

    Fall comes this time in hushes
    episodes of susurrus crawling
    warm through the body out
    the arms and hands tingling.

    The seasonal changes like
    picking up prescriptions
    from one of the Saints
    Saints Cosmas and Damian.

    A last clique of birds crush
    through the dry Dutch Iris
    patch flowers from Portugal
    and Spain not Netherlands

    and the dry stalks of the day
    lily not actually a lily lives
    longer than a day Spring
    through Fall and housing

    to butterflies and moths
    and ladybugs galore
    fall sufficiently orange
    and red yet cool.

    Sweaters come out
    the song sparrows
    the geese and loons
    over the yard sales.

    Along the streets we see
    clean-up and pick-ups
    pods and mod bods
    collecting for storage

    rakes in hand sifting Pacific
    Northwest where Spring
    is electric Fall acoustic
    clawing through the dust.

    Down south in Amador
    the Big Crush soon on
    grape harvest moon –
    If I were only a bird

    I would share a green carafe
    of red wine with my sisters
    and brothers once again
    in Fall looking back on.

  • Art from The Arc

    I paint for the same reasons I write: it’s a physical activity that is peaceful, happy, and all about light. Though for some time now I’ve not been painting much. When I do paint, the images come from some underground reservoir, the same place many poems come from, a vision from the inside, if I can say so without sounding too psycho, as opposed to en plein air, painting what one sees on the outside. I read recently that Monet painted dozens of scenes of the River Seine – the same scene over and over, but each scene in different light. I’ve never seen a Monet painting in person, only pics of them, often the light different in each photo, and I’ve often wondered what Monet would think of that, the light in his paintings changing with each reproduction. The light in a parlour or museum likewise might change the scene as it was seen and painted. That effect is not unlike sound effects, where the splendid, carefully practiced arpeggio heard on the radio is accompanied by static, a dog barking in some distant yard, or a trash truck picking up the street cans and noisily dumping them into the void.

    I did see some Rothko paintings in person, some time ago, at a show at the Portland Art Museum, and I was surprised by how thinly he applied the paint to the canvas. You could easily see the warp and weft of the canvas. Of course you’re supposed to view from a distance – the same distance for everyone? One’s eyesight too changes the light. Way back in my school days, I once tried to argue that Monet’s impressionist style was the result of cataracts, but I was struck down by an art student who argued that the work of the impressionists was the result of an art theory they had invented and implemented as a complicated statement on reality and vision. I still think it might have been cataracts.

    I started painting with my two granddaughters when they were little and liked to play with paints, unconcerned with talent or any kind of “I can’t draw” self-criticism. We all three painted for the same reasons mentioned above: peaceful, happy, and light. And fun! At first I bought new canvases from an art supply store, of modest size, 20″ by 20″ or so, but I then started to find large canvases at garage sales, priced cheaply enough, far less than I was paying for the new ones at the art store, and I bought them for us to paint over. The garage sale finds were not Monet’s or Rothko’s, so no harm was brought to the art world by our painting over them.

    Recently, over at The Arc, a non-profit thrift store not far from us, out on the sidewalk, against the wall, behind some smaller items, I spied a large canvas, 26″ x 60″ x 1 & 1/2″. They wanted $10 for it. A great find. The visions of what I might paint over it started drifting in like a slow moving moon, the light in a park changing by the minute. But when I got the painting home, a canvas print of some sort, the kind used to decorate hotel rooms or small business lobbies, I began to have second thoughts about painting over it. Something about it said no, put me up as is.

    So I did, and here it is, for your critical review. Please leave a comment! Is it art? Is it good? Why, why not? …B, care to comment? Ashen? Dan? Bill? Barbara? Lisa? Susan? All you artists and art aficionados out there?

    The pic in the bottom right corner shows one of my basement paintings, sitting on the piano, which I took down to hang the Arc find.

  • Autumnal Approach

    Autumn appears quiet
    a dry cat curled asleep
    the homeless huddled
    until shuttled to a new
    space just like the old
    spot rules & restrictions
    apply living en plein air
    places of Objet trouvé
    found objects surround
    lean-to tents shapes built
    with plastic tarps bicycle
    parts organic architecture
    like Falling Water cantilevered
    over gutters running
    incessant and unrelenting
    life out of woods where
    one lives deliberately
    as autumn approaches
    preparing for rain wind
    and snow provisionally
    on the surface of the
    bottomless city plans.

  • Tabor Space

    At the bottom of the bell tower you poured
    yourself a coffee, put a contribution into the jar,
    and through the big doors entered the space,
    a two story high ceiling of 100 year old wood,
    brick walls with stained glass windows, a few
    stuffed chairs by the Brobdingnagian fireplace,
    tables and chairs spread out in the space,
    a lending library bookshelf, a kids’ play area,
    and the floor to ceiling folding sliding doors
    hiding the dark cool nave of empty pews.
    I would sit in a stuffed chair or at a table
    and read papers or doodle in my notebook,
    sitting on the big couch in the far corner.
    Young moms with children came and went,
    small group meetings held at the larger tables,
    couples hooked up for a coffee & snack talk.
    It was mostly volunteer, then went commercial,
    then closed as the virus swept through
    so many spaces, closing doors and attitudes.

    Anyway, Tabor Space has now reopened,
    a second location for Favela Brazilian Cafe,
    and we visited yesterday, chatted with the
    Brazilian baristas, and we sat with a coffee
    and we looked around and I took a few pics,
    and we’re glad the space has reopened:


  • Variations on a Theme

    One word at a time.
    Onewordatatime.
    At a time one word.
    At a word one time.

    Word data time.
    One word one time.
    Timeword dow.
    Wordtime.

    At a one time word
    at a me wime tord
    da da
    ta ta

    twon word town time
    drown mod me at
    meet word time mate
    mata mada

    one word at a time
    at a time one word
    a word one time at
    a time word one

    excuse me sir
    you dropped a word
    dripping yes
    time drow

    don’t look
    for nonsense
    where there is
    none

    look to the heavens
    look to the skies
    look where
    you’re going

    look at the mud pies
    stuck in the gutters
    rise rise rise down
    falling swimming with

    outword crescendo
    there is no progression
    now is the time
    to decompress

  • Leaves

    “The road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom,”
    said William Blake in his “The Marriage of Heaven
    and Hell” (1790-1793). And later says, “A fool sees
    not the same tree as a wise man sees,” a leavening
    thought, where leaves allow for us to see the sky
    and its Cyclopean eye in easy earned middle class
    moderation, where all things are divided by two.

  • Autumn Us

    In the evening the sun is placed
    over 60th and Belmont walking
    down the middle of the street
    into the powdery scene I snap
    a few pics with my phone cam:

    Autumn Equinox 2022 from SE Belmont and 68th

    Earlier in yard I cut feather grass
    as dry as a lint trap and the spent summer
    daisies cringed crinkled into dust as
    I yanked on the stiff stems like the barber
    at my gone to seed hair a mess she said.

    Looking west over downtown to West Hills from SE 68th and Stark

    End summer evenings still too hot
    to walk but coming of Fall equinox
    portable air conditioner quiet fan
    spins cooler nights tiny blue eyes
    charge to pay to keep cool to sleep.

    A day later, a bit cooler, orange to blue, Morrison and 68th

    So it goes Vonnegut said so it goes
    around and around on old vinyl the needle
    finishes its drive toward the center the turntable
    still spinning the needle clicking back
    and forth wanting to stop but caught in the groove.

    Caught in the groove walking around and around

    No one understands Universe least of all physicists
    who must talk a taught tongue while the rest of us
    find rhymes and rhythms as we dance around and around
    until the moon goes down as Chuck Berry said around and
    around until the sun goes down and the moon comes up.

  • My Affliction

    Everywhere I look I see
    signs of the cross
    in telephone poles
    at the busy intersection
    of the homeless and
    the morning commuters
    in the brow of the woman
    wearing the human billboard
    advertising her three kids
    and out of work husband
    a veteran and a nice guy
    trying to get back on his feet
    after stepping on a landmine
    at the bottom of the cross
    and I don’t doubt it and wonder
    if she’ll take the afternoon off
    and drop the double sawbuck
    just handed her all in one place.

    I am tempted but the cross
    at the local church remains
    hidden behind a giant plastic
    boastful Jesus his coiffed hair
    combed and sprayed by the
    altar ladies with their flowers
    holy water and broken nails
    who come and go they have
    come and gone and still
    they come and go
    and carry their crosses
    quietly and secretly
    and do not advertise
    their own club afflictions
    and anyhow don’t allow
    admittance of my cross.

    Every Friday at three
    in the afternoon
    the altar ladies
    take down the real
    Jesus and put up
    the plastic one
    and Sunday after
    masses they hang
    the original back.

    Meantime at the bottom
    of the telephone pole
    at the crossroads
    the homeless gather
    to disperse the day’s
    take and affirm
    nothing is finished
    the kingdom never
    comes but the will
    is always done
    daily bread is not hard
    to come by not nearly
    so hard as forgiveness
    of debts and trespasses
    or deliverance from evil.

  • Inwait

    Inwait watching listening
    to what he wants to hear
    then to critique that lesson
    passably betraying purpose
    occasion audience intent
    the critic in wait teases out
    the objections passive
    aggressively indirectly
    disconnects the circuit
    breaks the circle of care

    the critic lies in wait
    for pretentious chichi
    affectation of what is
    stretched thin to impress
    takes a back seat alone
    in the cynical corner
    and enjoys the play

    meanwhile the husband who hopes
    the woman who kneels knows prayer
    the child who tries to please and fails
    drama takes place in an empty house

    words linked absurdly together
    like barbed wire avoid likes
    but attract comments like flies
    to sweet sticky paper

    happens all the time
    you who always
    those who never
    it argues thus
    near dusk
    all at once
    it comes out
    without revision
    without a second
    thought

    that’s ok it’s not easy
    hitting a baseball
    being social
    attending holy mass
    body and blood
    sitting alone
    writing a poem
    being a critic

    keeping the secret
    watchdog beware
    keeps it chained
    to his heart barking
    champing at the bit
    coughing up crud
    it’s not easy
    being a critic
    lying in wait
    taking the bait

    still the sun also
    rises and climbs
    and falls but too hot
    too cold too close
    too far away
    too bright too long
    too short a day
    for the critic
    on the hunt
    for something to say

  • Comma Splices

    If I wanted to use one,
    I’d use two, one for me
    and one for you, 4 to a
    bar, 5 to a fence.

    Comma connotes pause,
    like a cat’s paw does,
    when lifted midair.

    Pick up your comma poops,
    put in scoop bags,
    and place in the trash can.

    The Once and Future Comma Queen
    will return to Gramarye.

    Pause, and enjoy, an ice
    cold comma, tonight.

    Harmonic Bohemian Comma Scale:
    lunula moon, clipped ring finger
    nail, crow talon, gypsy jazz plastic
    guitar pick, muddy udder rudder,
    silent scythe, silver clacker spoon.

    There is no substitute
    for a comma, either
    you use one or you don’t.

    Comma rules form
    a book of spells,
    a Grimoire.