• Free Words (some assembly required)

    not spoken words
    not hidden words
    not hearded words

    dug words
    fished words
    sifted words

    surfed words
    combed words
    well travelled words

    free words on
    the sidewalk
    skipped by

    letters spewed
    like weed seeds
    across a manicured

    lawn as solid green
    as the village scene
    where words score

    sales counts
    remaindered words
    recycled words

    composted words
    buried words
    words love lost

    lost and found
    words washed
    up on a beach

    words gargled
    words swallowed
    words repurposed

    words typed
    words scratched
    words fallen

    from the sky
    like manna
    made into beer

    words loaded
    words emptied
    words cooked

    words eaten
    words wiped
    clean

    as tables
    freshly set
    with white tablecloths

    words waiting
    aside
    words walking

    whispered remarks
    “Shall I hear no more?”
    utterly.

    (note: written while reading
    noT wriTTen words
    by Xi Xi, trans. Jennifer Feeley,
    Zephyr Press, 2016.)


  • A Gift of Morning

    To dose is to give, a gift. Not to be confused with to douse, to souse. I felt somewhat pickled yesterday morning waking up absurdly early to get to my 2nd Pfizer dose down at the Convention Center, no time for coffee. This diabolical virus travails! (And it’s not often I use the exclamation point.) But I felt peaceful, if not happy, and light in the early morning sun. I was reminded of commuting days, leaving home the morning still night. Ah, but the morning! The fresh starts! The spring smells fueled by a full spring sun. The Convention Center was again abuzz, as if for a game or a concert. The loop was well oiled, and I soon found myself sitting in the waiting area for 2nd dosers, 15 still, quiet minutes, like sitting in church, waiting. I prayed for peace, happiness, and lightness, for myself and for others who came to mind, those I love, and those I don’t, feeling none too much any of it – had I been in a cot instead of a chair I’d have fallen back to sleep. Holy Thursday on the Catholic calendar. The Last Supper. Today, Good Friday. All bearing crosses, awake and asleep, crossing, looping in lines for the wearying doses, soused by the pandemic, in procession, waiting.

  • It’s Its Own Thing

    On our walk last night, birds,
    low in the trees and on the ground,
    in the grass and all around,
    and it started to rain.

    Tomorrow, it may be sunny.
    It takes many shapes, this thing.
    Sometimes it’s an ear ringing,
    a particle of physics.

    It is not Paris or San Francisco,
    certainly not El Paso or Cairo.
    It comes and goes like wind,
    ubiquitous and protean.

    It’s not me, though
    I often have it, or not.
    That’s just it with it;
    you never know for certain.

    It is a professional, white-collared
    without capital, contained
    out of site.
    When it decides to rain,

    not a thing you can do about it,
    except dance or hustle home,
    from which you want
    to get away from it all.

  • An Approach to Stylelessness

    Language, the dress of thought,
    words its buttons.
    What are we trying to cover?
    Nothing.

    The dress interprets
    the body,
    its own reveal, skin and hair,
    apparently lacking

    something necessary
    to complete the ensemble,
    where sound means
    stylelessly.

    Dress, the body licensed
    for use, the slow decay
    its words describe,
    its missing buttons.

  • Spring, perchance

    “Spring is like a
    perhaps,”
    e. e. cummings said,
    “hand…”

    For all I know,
    as luck would have it,
    mayhap e. had been
    a weatherman,

    instead of a poet.
    Poets often talk
    about things nothing
    know they about,

    like Spring,
    but as things may turn out,
    e. e. wasn’t talking about Spring,
    but about a hand.

    But Spring’s not here an either
    or proposal; Spring’s neither
    but here nor and there but per
    adventure thru a broken window.

  • Through the Alley at Twilight

    Twilight, the time of evening just before dusk,
    brouhaha of shadows passing to their roost,
    a calico on her last prowl before turning in,
    ethereal blue rectangles lighting living rooms.

    Porch lights welcoming neighbors and intruders,
    strings of lights celebrating an open cafe or pub,
    or a place to sit out on the stoop and talk,
    couple browsing by in postprandial comma,

    recalling injuries of the day, hair down,
    disappointments, missed chances, kiss offs,
    walking up or down the darkening alley,
    unpaved gravel, ruts, the walk difficult,

    but nowhere near impossible, preferred
    way, the two birds scuffle, feathers ruffle,
    they separate, then come back together
    and drop lower into the trees, looking

    for a mate that won’t hate to sleep alone,
    will get up and fetch the bone without
    undo complaint, make some coffee,
    filter dreams, shovel another load of mulch.

  • Add Title

    You say primordial like it was a long time ago,
    but look around, see the ooze from the same
    old sores seeping through the bandages of time.

    Of universe you birthed forth, blind at first,
    then you thought you could see, with eyes
    no less, your ears and nose full of dark matter,

    and through every pore of your skin comes
    and goes all the bugs of a family fortune,
    a species come true, true to life.

    But you are not true to type or form.
    You mix and mingle and wander,
    one day fins, the next, feathers,

    anything to get ahead, until one day,
    you fall in love with another just
    like you. Well, almost.

  • Is Poetry Good for You?

    Here at The Toads, where we have, since 2007, contributed to the general discussion of literature, we sometimes get questions regarding the uses, benefits, and effects of reading poetry: Is poetry good for you? How long does it take for a poem to kick-in? What are poetry’s side effects? How long does a poem last? Will reading poetry help my anxiety, depression, or pain?

    These and similar questions are often accompanied by anecdotal experience offered as evidence or symptom. Someone knows a guy who read a poem and joined a cult; another attended a poetry reading and woke up with a hangover; a mother noticed her daughter slipping a book of poems into her missal at Mass – what to do?

    What’s the best time of day to read a poem? Is it ok to read poetry while on steroids? Should you mix poetry with television? Are there any good poems about math? Can you suggest a good gluten free book of poems? What are this poem’s contraindications?

    Medical doctors may suggest reading no more than two standard length poems per day. All things in moderation, including poems. As for the opinion of the man on the street, Everyman, vox populi, the wisdom of the crowd seems never closer to madness than on the subject of poetry.

  • Jazz on a Summer’s Day

    Jazz on a summer’s day
    sleepy jazz on a rainy evening
    jazz on the night of a full blue moon.
    Jazz on a transistor radio in the next room.

    Jazz in a whiteout blizzard
    jazz on a foggy morning in the surf
    jazz on a summer’s day
    jazz when the falling leaves fall.

    Jazz in a coffee house with wifi
    jazz in a clean well-lighted place
    jazz high up in the trees
    jazz on a yacht in the tranquil bay.

    Jazz trio at the wine bar
    jazz aboard a tugboat
    on the Mississippi jazz live at five
    jazz out a picture window.

    Jazz on a crosstown bus
    jazz at a sock hop
    jazz in the cold grotto
    jazz in an empty church.

    Jazz from a food cart
    jazz in a classroom
    jazz in Healdsburg
    jazz in Drytown.

    Jazz in a confessional
    jazz working on the railroad
    jazz in a sweatshirt
    jazz in jail.

    Jazz it kind of got away from you
    jazz on steamboats fixing everything
    jazz at The Coming of the Toads
    jazz in and jazz out of a blue collar.

    Jazz on a jukebox
    jazz at Terre Rouge
    jazz in a red convertible
    jazz on a Martian moon.

    Jazz in the slow lane
    jazzy walk around the block
    jazz down on Stark Street
    jazz at low tide.

    Jazz rumbles across the trestle
    jazz if you go out in the woods today
    jazz between Scylla and Charybdis
    jazz on the air.

    Jazz in Seattle in a coal car
    jazz at a concert in the park caldera
    jazz in the near light like a candle
    jazz in the faraway dark quiet.

    Jazz alone and jazz together
    jazz out there and jazz in here
    just jazz at a rent party cleaning
    up after they’ve all gone home.

    Jazz about this and jazz about that
    jazz when flat and jazz while sharp
    streaming jazz in a steamy heat
    jazz on a fine summer’s day.

  • Vaccination Loop

    Around noon yesterday, a bumper to bumper half block line of cars continuously moved like connected parts of a tram and entered the dark barrow shaft entrance to the Oregon Convention Center underground parking mine, while a similar line of cars exited back into the partly sunny Portland spring day. Once in the garage, visitors politely and patiently vied for parking spots, which quickly opened and closed thanks to an efficient and extensive mass vaccination loop leading from the garage and through the building, organized by volunteers and clinicians from various organizations, including what appeared to be a deployment of an Oregon National Guard platoon. With the exception of the mandatory wait after being vaccinated, to watch for reactions, visitors had no still time to browse the book brought along or take out the knitting needles. Indeed, few were even looking at their cell phones, intent and occupied as they were with following personalized directions and moving along – short stays at this or that staffed table to answer a few questions, show ID, sit for the quick shot of vaccine, and schedule the second appointment (if this was the first) while waiting for the reaction release time written on tape and displayed on one’s shirt to expire.

    The goers to this convention seemed mostly older folks, most of whom no doubt did not consider themselves particularly old, just of a particular age, which would be considered an inadequate definition of a person. Yet here we were, grouped together by age and moving along like a line of kindergarteners on a field trip. Except for the Guard, everybody looked somehow out of uniform. Question: How can you tell a group of people is older? Answer: There are no tattoos. One fellow I noticed was wearing the rubber shower shoes we used to call go-aheads, shorts, and a flowered t-shirt, not regular gear in a Northwest winter month. A newcomer from California, maybe.

    Not without some trepidation had I prepared myself for the field trip before leaving home: what to wear? what route to take? what book to bring? Did I have my ID and medical card? How would I prove my appointment confirmation? This last, it turned out, I had over prepared for, and unwittingly as a result momentarily fell from the loop. Once into the building and into line, I noticed just about everyone was carrying a piece of paper, a print out, it turned out, of their email appointment confirmation. I no longer have a printer, but the email came with a QR (Quick Response) code that can be saved to and read by a cell phone or other scanner. And I had already pre-confirmed via online registration site the appointment, so I thought with that and my QR code saved to my phone, I was good to go. There were two lines moving quickly, everyone six feet apart and masked, instructed to be ready with confirmation proof. We were not yet within the Exhibit Room itself, but still in the lobby with its majestically high ceilings and large windows and aisleways full of natural light. When I reached the volunteer at the end of my line, I showed her my QR code on my cell phone, assuming she would scan it. But she said, “No, I need to see the date.” I had before leaving home cropped the code so it was fully visible, cutting off the rest of the email, including the date. As I now scrambled to find the original, she brushed my effort aside, pulled me from line, and directed me to a woman at a computer located at the end of a kind of train siding line, where no one was in line, so I quickly made my way to the computer and showed my QR code. Instead of scanning it, though, she asked my last name, looked at her computer, said, “Hi, Joe, go on in.” I merged back into line, my confidence in the efficiency of the loop restored, even if my QR code never did get scanned. I was reminded of the time when my girlfriend and I went to see the Jimi Hendrix Experience at the LA Forum. We waited in line while the gatekeepers took tickets and ushered people toward their tunnels, and too late realized that they were also checking purses. When my girlfriend opened hers, the little pint of as yet unopened Southern Comfort placed comfortably and clearly visible within, the gatekeeper said, “Go on in.” Jimi would have been 78 today, and could have fit comfortably into the vaccination line with the rest of us.

    Also, as it turned out, I had overdressed as well as over prepared. I began with my loose fitting Red Sox t-shirt, thinking I would take my outer shirt off and easily roll up the sleeve of the t-shirt to take the shot. Over the t-shirt, I wore a flannel long sleeved shirt untucked, and over that, a vest with many pockets for holding things like book, pen, and cell phone. And over the vest, a bright yellow, thin rain jacket. In both vest and jacket pockets I had stored an extra face mask. At one station, I was given a packet of information with a page to fill out: name, address, phone number, etc. And mother’s maiden name? Good grief! And the same questions, this time answered yes or no with check mark, I’d already been asked by a nice enough fellow at the station where I picked up the form, and from where I was directed to a grouping of round tables with golf pencils available for the filling out of the form. At the next station, an Army NG Sergeant asked to see my papers and ID. He did some work on his computer, scanned my medical card, wrote 70 in bright red ink at the top of my worksheet, and pointed me to yet another volunteer who directed me into a vaccination line. It was at this point I recalled the infamous follow the yellow line at my downtown LA draft induction physical, circa late 60’s. What a loop that one was, but I was now on deck, next up, and was directed to a desk number where sat a clinician with vaccine at the ready. She invited me to sit, and that’s when I realized I had worn too many tops. Trying to take the rain jacket, vest, and flannel shirt off all in one swift move, my arms got all tangled up in sleeves and tails and I fell into the seat feeling like a kindergartner who has just failed hanging up coat after recess. More questions, mostly the same ones, the shot (routine – the loose fitting t-shirt at least proved to be a good idea), bright day glow green bandaid, the piece of tape showing my wait time stuck to my Red Sox shirt, and I was on my way to the waiting area to sit out the reaction wait time and schedule my next appointment, all the while wrestling on the go trying to put my arms through the sleeves of my mess of shirts.

    The wait time proved invaluable as the cell phone scheduling of the second appointment looped and looped, looking like it was going to take as long as it took the schedule the first appointment – over an hour, while getting the vaccination, from parking to shot, had taken only about 15 minutes. But a volunteer happened by, I asked her for help, and she looked at my phone and said, “Oh, just type something into that space, anything, hi.” And I did. I typed “hi,” hit “schedule” again, and the loop stopped looping and kicked out my appointment: 3 weeks out, at 7:45 AM. Good grief!

    Field trip over, headed back home, reflecting on the experience. Before getting a vaccine appointment, folks generally are experiencing frustration and anxiety over the computerized process, the apparent vying for a limited number of appointments, feeling uninformed as protocols and procedures seem to change weekly, thinking it shouldn’t be this way, stuck in a time loop. The Convention Center experience, to the contrary, was personable, friendly, efficient. And I was sent home with a card confirming what I had just accomplished. I have it stuck with a magnet to the icebox.