• At the Centinela

    We squiggled and danced around
    and the radio and the romance
    until all the songs blew fuses
    and the whole night crashed down.

    We could hear that dark fall coming
    down in the valley and up on the hill
    whistles and the steel rail humming
    buttered popcorn and bubble water.

    At the Centinela drive-in theatre
    in my ’56 Chevy hoping it would start
    up again when the twiddle ended
    under surveillance during the draft.


  • A ^ for D

    To envision a V
    perceive to verify
    unfold in flight

    and to survive
    a disquisition
    (without dropping out)
    think grapheme

    & other reifications
    the keyboard caret
    for exemplification

    when shifting six
    has exponential
    potential

    for turning things
    upsidedown
    & pointing out

    something needs
    to be inserted
    at this point

    D for dan buoy cork
    with flag to mark
    man overboard.

  • 2 + 2 = 5

    That two plus two equals four
    used to be true, but no more,
    not necessarily, and out the door
    our core of being washed ashore.

    Dostoevsky came close to avoid
    the obvious and said to make five
    you need at least four things,
    the fifth the wit of leadership.

    For the true leader takes 2 fish
    and 2 loaves of bread and convinces
    the constituency they’ve been fed
    the truth, the whole truth, nothing but,

    for what is right might be wrong,
    we hear from the physicists,
    who wander far afield from logic,
    language, and Mother Earth.

    So, if you happen to have two
    apples and two hammers, you
    are missing six of something.
    You are a long ways from home.

    “I admit that twice two makes four is an excellent thing, but, if we are to give everything its due, twice two makes five is sometimes a very charming thing, too.”

    “Notes from Underground,” Dostoevsky, 1864.
  • About Nora

    Most of us carry about a particular picture of ourselves, seldom the same picture others have of us. Some carry a portfolio of pictures about, anxious to show all they meet all about themselves – their family, schools, jobs, homes, accomplishments, disappointments, hobbies, books read, movies liked, places visited, lived, abandoned. Friends. Others don’t like having their picture taken, the only photo about them on their driver’s license, and that they don’t like either. Acquaintances may be more interested in your market value than in your face value.

    Taken at face value, that is, legal value, net worth at birth, which may or may not bear any resemblance to one’s market value at the end of a life of living, of struggle, of getting by, of adapting to, or avoiding where possible, the more absurd cultural mores, steering as clear of the wildly ridiculous ones met on the street as one possibly can, Nora Barnacle’s life story is nominal, average, without great distinction. Most of us share a similar story. But, as the lifelong partner of the famous writer James Joyce, Nora’s life story far exceeds its salvage value – it’s a life worth a ticket-scalping.

    But how should Nora’s story be told? Nora never read her husband James’s books, though he often read aloud to her from them, and she put no stock in literary values other than as a means to put food on the table, and which, as a means to make a living, for most of their lives proved woefully inadequate. They were never, until later in life and only then to satisfy the legal issues of the passing on of debts and assets and to protect their children, married, though they remained devoted to one another, having two children they were almost never separated from, living literally on top of one another in a seemingly endless succession of rented rooms, flats, shared spaces, hotel stays, sustained by gifts from sacrificing siblings and wealthy benefactors, until at long last Joyce’s reputation and writings began to produce earned royalties, distinction, and then the trappings of fame.

    Joyce was always, and in all ways, a difficult man to live with. He was impractical, stubborn, inattentive, wasteful, and drank to excess. They fight and argue, Nora threatens to take the kids and leave, but of course she’s nowhere to go, but more importantly nowhere she wants to go – she wants her life with Jim to settle in with the peace and love of its original promise, which was to take her away from a life and family and place of destitution, beggary, and abuse. At the same time, they love and celebrate – their family, birthdays and holidays, their marginal achievements and successes, their apartments, the air and freedom of life away from dreary and unfair Ireland. They celebrate food and drink, family and friends, music and poetry, dance and lovemaking. Meantime, they’ve the bad luck of having to live through two World Wars and the Great Depression.

    But how is the life just described, at face value, any different than most? Why do we want to know Nora’s story, particularly when, as we probably already know, she’s destroyed Jim’s letters to her and requested him to destroy her letters to him to keep private their private lives? They both remain victims, or feel victimized, to attempts to shame to control – attempts by the state, the church, society, friends and acquaintances, critics. Their attempt to live an existential life, defined by free choice, true to one another and to Jim’s belief in himself and his ability to make a difference with his writing (a difference to art, literature, and to all of the above), is a messy affair.

    Readers familiar with the James Joyce story, whether fan or foe of his writing, may feel differently about the Nora Joyce story. In Nuala O’Connor’s “Nora: A Love Story of Nora and James Joyce,” we experience the James Joyce story through the eyes and ears – the sentiments and temperament – of Nora, who tells the story in her own voice. And we get the Nora Joyce story. Nuala’s book is neither straight biography nor straight fiction. Readers may choose to focus on one or the other, but the blend is a perfect mix, and you can’t have the one without the other. The Nora here is Nuala’s Nora, not Joyce’s Nora nor even Nora’s own selfie. But you come to see that you can’t have James Joyce without Nora Joyce, nor can we have Nora without James. What a glorious and perfect union.

    Nora: A Love Story of Nora and James Joyce, by Nuala O’Connor, 2021, Harper Perennial.

  • Of an Old Style

    When you need to get close to each season,
    to know which direction our vast Earth spins,
    come sit under the apple tree and reason,
    pink blossoms now against winter winning.
    Life is not much of a competition;
    most creatures make the best of and endure.
    And then there’s this endless repetition
    of flowers come-hither with alarming
    allure. Such is the plan it would appear,
    since the same thing happens every year.


  • Starbucks (sung to the tune of “Skylark”)

    Starbucks, have you any coffee for me,
    can’t you see I am very sleepy,
    won’t you tell me where a barista might be,
    is there a cappuccino and a table,
    an umbrella, and a seat?

    Starbucks, can I sit outside your door,
    on the sidewalk with a napkin and pen,
    writing my poem that no one will read,
    doodling my time away
    to an ambiguous ending.

    And when the barista comes out,
    asking me if I’d like some frothy whipped cream,
    wonderful cream like the fall of moonlight,
    the garden lanterns are lit,
    while a gypsy jazz trio plays
    dans les nuages.

    Starbucks, I don’t know if you have what I need,
    a lonely table under a carob tree,
    where I’ll sit and sip a cold coffee,
    my heart squeezed through a napkin ring,
    wishing for skylark wings to fly away and sing.

    (“Skylark” is a 1942 jazz standard song, lyrics by Johnny Mercer, music by Hoagy Carmichael.)

  • A Sign

    They looked for a sign
    in the skies, the seas
    somewhere, anywhere
    around the universe.

    A sign that might tell
    where to go, how to get
    there, a range, a stage
    or stay the hell put.

    But signs are placed
    not by the gods
    but by you and me
    fools to think we

    know anything about
    directions, instructions
    nods, wags, or winks
    we live on the brink

    where all the signs
    say, “Keep away
    from the Edge!”
    that surrounds us.

  • Auditorium

    Shaped like a church
    where to hear is prayer
    the pews sawn apart
    into separate seats save
    the balcony benches.

    Quiet like a church
    and cold in accordance
    with the carpenter’s
    measure for harmony
    and economical noise.

    The sound rolls in waves
    through the vast archipelago
    of ears tuned to assumptions
    and predispositions
    of critics of the church.

  • This Cat

    This cat slinks, creeps
    into rooms, the ruins
    of many a holiday
    in soft golden light.

    Mottled, she mews,
    back arched clown,
    perhaps of self
    catalytic origin.

    She’s fleecy, wooly
    tufted, easily shocked,
    as if any thought
    is a threat

    to one’s peace
    full sleeper day,
    like a vacuum
    or a house rejigged.

  • The Gate

    Those years after she lost
    her memory she said she
    mellowed as her hurt went
    down through her bones.

    Still she knew all the hidings
    and when one was out of place
    she awoke in the dark under
    her worries and prayed

    she hated she said when
    someone did her like that
    her ears keen on the gate
    latch and the open and close

    of the side door where they
    escaped with such little
    grasp of their own budding
    sorrow like lily bulbs.

  • Clothesline

    Tall steel T’s in concrete
    about twenty feet apart
    three wires pulled taut
    but she needs a forth

    with another on the way
    wet clothes lines sagging
    in the sunny backyard
    of the corner lot on Mariposa

    where a city truck pulls up
    workers dash to the Village Market
    and out hop back to work
    when she hears a wolf whistle

    as she dangles bras and panties
    diapers socks and a white sheet
    from the lines to dry and she
    wonders at such sun in winter.