• Hep Cats and Restless Nights of Dog Days

  • Madwort & Other Essential Oils

    Your favorite pot this

    study now
    a single bee
    powder tease

    sigh breeze

    a list
    of things
    to do
    today

    such a tiny weight
    like a baby
    in a swing
    a spider string

    blue flowers
    light steps
    portentous portfolio
    ambitious
    after evening
    of Inherent Vice

    as the bee busy transpires
    bloom, bloom
    blossoms
    lobularia maritime

    “by the sea, by the sea
    by the beautiful sea”

    milks this moment
    line by line
    for you
    to make honey

    when blissful bee lands
    on tipsy flower
    branch, soft strand
    shakes

    bee breeze blows blue dust

    never get much
    done in this
    common loveliness
    this stillness this
    bee’s momentous
    visit

    red & white
    shadows
    orange wings
    ocher clay
    pot broken
    bricks
    pavers

    this sitting
    of course
    this entry
    this walk
    some pics
    this post
    before you
    get out
    of bed

    these lines
    awake

    may recede
    themselves
    like the bee
    by the sea

  • “Settings” – a Poem by Eleanor Rigby

    “I was mislaid,”
    Eleanor Rigby said,
    “Amused
    at my own voice.”

    She sat and sat and sat,
    but instead of growing tired,
    wrote:
    “This poem I write
    is for Me only.
    Signed,
    Miss Understanding.”

    She didn’t know
    all alone poems
    find a reader
    sitting,
    darning & clicking,
    long through the night.

    Eleanor Rigby
    thought she was writing
    only for you.

    When suddenly, strings
    opened up the sky,
    a quartet of likes,
    and an aeolian
    comment
    trilled and thrilled
    the air.

  • Noir Street Choir

    Purple plaque plugs these rose drowsy lines
    Cowled slugs slow tunes wet needed nibbling speech
    Crawls to neck to nip & gnaw ear snack signs
    Where moons have placed your pierced panache.
    One day we’ll dance this sonnet for Monet
    Gather green garden bonnet bright flowers
    Moist morning your sweet toes curled sachet
    & place feathers in quick fallen embrace.
    Breathless word sighs don’t keep us paced spoil
    Rhyme misalign pillows cockeyed up side
    Down marigolds spill orange & yellow roil
    Lemon grass whispers timed noir ride:
    Crimson lisps smear across smoke screen gloss
    While robed within plush toilet rinse & floss.

    Grapes

  • Oblique Obligato

    1. Moon fresh ribbon
      smooth platen
      ball dust sea
    2. Fastened to fish
      risk bamboo
      water chills
    3. Homespun shark
      teeth reek bark
      oil tea tree
    4. Screeched scrounge scrawn
      crested pinch
      ear reach thrills
    5. Stringing brew broils
      cooking pot
      catch read bin
    6. Critical swarm
      goat bearded
      bee attack
    7. Smoked fuzz moss
      yucky hot
      sunder skin
    8. Feet faintly sweet
      & ditties
      sour retract
    9. Poised hipster red
      shower cap &
      surf sandals
    10. Now turns one last
      again then
      salt pearls
    11. Ask brack weed meme
      vandal cleaned
      type taste twirl
    12. Spring Selene not
      bald booby
      care fool horse
    13. Trifurcation
      from dear morph
      solo bliss
    14. Under deep stays
      curling waves
      allusiveOblique Moon
  • Not one but two needs relish sweet sorrow

    Not one but two needs relish sweet sorrow.
    Wooden shoe wish new saga song bonnet?
    Purple flower here now gone tomorrow.
    One knows not lief, and if hair be sonnet,
    Wold eat polka dotted cotton culotte.
    Back seats escape too simple bounded rules,
    Schemes where at smart turn deer quickly departs,
    Shirking away from linked coupling rope pulls.
    Gears thrown greased ball bearings plop soft thudded,
    Rustling rough yon fat fig leaf yellowed grass
    Into well palms of gleeful looped poet,
    Frogs Voila! in deep wide throated bass:
    Now twanged by gee sang plus web danced for thee,
    Not two but three may now exclaim in glee.

    Theory

  • While your comment is awaiting moderation

    This slideshow requires JavaScript.

  • Optotype

    Line 15 currently detours across the Hawthorne Bridge due to a temporary weight restriction on the Morrison Bridge, which is under repair. I hopped off the bus at the west end of the Hawthorne Bridge, passed the Salmon Street Springs Fountain, and walked south along the Willamette to the eye clinic, just over a mile upriver. I saw some strange markings on the sidewalk, as if math really is fun. A gaggle of signs befouled the views, whispering orders, dangers, and cautions. I noticed there were no warning signs near the mooring bollards, and wondered how many people walking along ogling the view have tripped over them. Rarely do I have to yield to slower traffic.

    Just south of the Hawthorne Bridge, I noticed an interesting, kind of improvised, lean-to-dock moored just off the west bank between the bridge and the park beach, downriver from the yacht harbor. The boat and dock set-up reminded me of Anais Nin’s “Houseboat,” and of Penelope Fitzgerald’s “Offshore.” And the usual gaggle of geese casually befouled the park beach area. I don’t mind the geese, though the city has been taking precautions to minimize the goose poop problem. But I was wearing the new Fila walking shoes Susan recently scored for me, and I wasn’t sure the goose path was how I wanted to break them in. Portland is called the City of Roses. You would think the roses wouldn’t mind the geese.

    Modern accommodations for travel, appurtenances for getting around – what a mess! Just north of the Ross Island Bridge, workers were just about finished dismantling the Project Pabst Festival. It was a little early to be thinking of a cold PBR Tall Boy. I walked along “River Place,” above the small harbor, and passed by the “River Walk Cafe,” enjoying the cliches, and at the corner of Meade and Moody thought, how about “Mead Place,” or the “Moody Walk Cafe”?

    A rowing crew rounded the pilings of the Marquam Bridge (a concrete brouhaha that spans and expands the definition of bridge), the submarine moored behind them on the east bank, below OMSI and the Portland Opera. The Pabst Horse trotted off on a trailer. The Portland Aerial Tram (constructed at a cost of $57 million), juxtaposed with the old Ross Island Bridge, reminded me of the 20th Century: “Turn! Turn! Turn! (To Everything There Is a Season)”.

  • Packsaddle Off

    what is this sound sprinkling glow
    yellow doilies weaving thru blue
    fescue glass chandelier worm atrium
    air city surf gas soup & jazz salad

    sitting under dwarf apple waiting,
    waiting, wanting nothing save
    green this wait as Thoreau’s
    Wangle Dangle backyard rhetoric

    drinking can of Okanagan
    Spring: “natural, simple, & pure”
    pale ale & all bronze
    gone Henry’s lawn

    this dog’s lair
    cut once a year
    then go to seed
    rampant & wild
    tainted ear

    so much depends upon so little
    take this green garden wagon
    for example
    go on, take it, really take it
    grab the handle and pull
    you’ll see the wagon is full
    of ripe red tomatoes
    kids’ toys
    bucket of finished garlic
    bowl of basil & cilantro
    some zinnias to dry inside

    there’s no one in that pink
    ceramic bird house hanging
    from the golden rain
    tree imagine living
    there your nest
    waiting for your mate
    come home yr turn
    go to store & supper

    you call the kids
    Caw! Caw!
    & they call back
    Not Yet! Not Yet!
    Summer! Summer!

    a cloud like a clown down
    pillow on clean blue sheet
    perhaps it will drop a load
    somewhere near soon &
    sweep weep sleep deep

  • A Fourth of a Poem

    Grand Ave Beach

    All around us,
    the plants whisper
    in dry brittle voices,
    “water us, water us.”

    Sotto voce,
    there is no water,
    and what falls is not wet
    or gentle,

    but drops of chthonic fireworks,
    urban, rural, coastal infernos.
    The plants dig and pray to Hades,
    and cooler there

    than here in this air.