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My Twentieth Year - 29. Appendix - the complete book
*warning: a few of the poems deal with suicide*
.
My Twentieth Year
Poems Written
when I was 20 years old[1]
by AC Benus
Poem No. 1
I live in a world
in which my words
are plucked from a limited
sea of intellect
I sit in a room while
my fate sits in another
I'm too lazy to get up and
go and look for it
Poem No. 2
Two doors down
lies a specter of my hopes –
they mingle
amongst his fellowship of brawn
in open, jock-boy gropes,
never wondering why he's single
How he came,
I can form no idea of –
why he came,
I can only dream the same
as above,
yet, I want to confront him by name
Down two doors
lies a hope for my fate's way –
I wish I knew him,
for his shyness seems not very poor
and very near to me, so I say
I simply wish to know him[2]
Poem No. 3
I see you in a dream of blue –
the color a hazy melody –
a vision, set anew,
given me at a price hardly free.
Poem No. 4
"It is that rare thing, a perfect composition,
satisfying in its completeness, precise in its
detail – solid without weight, lightness sans
frivolity. It is like a last movement
by Mozart when the master pulls everything
together and brings off another miracle."
Poem No. 5
There was a case. In the Great Shop
it was filled with beautiful jewels,
also a bright red line painted down the center.
The Shop-owner said unto me
"You may pick any of the jewels,
as long as you pick from the left side of the case."
The jewels on the left were grand,
each one a lovely and divine thing,
each one purposeful and filled with subtle beauty.
The right, oh the right, had beauty unmatched,
for every one filled my mind with joy,
for on every face, there burned tenderness, undenied.
Poem with too many names
Poem No. 6
It rides on the mists of sleepy nights,
shows itself, and mysteries unbar,
Images of ghoulish fate and Elysian heights,
ambiguity unknown, buoyancy wide and far.
Such masks seem to disappear at twilight,
as sweet and calm then return,
Showing a glimpse of ponderous things out of sight,
the Universe seems as one, no ambitions, no lessons to learn.
Poem No. 7
Ship of Tyre[3]
I see a wall
its bricks make a translucent surface
clean and smooth are they
so smooth I can't see or feel their grout
I can come close
but I cannot go beyond the wall
Why? I ask myself
fingers on their surface sense them so cold
Visions betrayed
are so lovely and so very close
refined work is there
judged crudeness lives on my side of the wall
I see a wall
that I cannot break
mediocrity
I wish I've wings to fly to vast regions
beyond
the wall
Poem No. 8
Adventures of my Umbrella
When I was but a child,
I had an umbrella.
I was seven; it was new.
I remember it when
Seeing it the first time;
Downtown is where it was,
In some ritzy display.
In a place with glass doors,
The shop like the ‘brella,
Was black – how elegant.
My mom bought two that day:
One for her; one for me.
She had had some before;
For me it was my first.
What mysteries were in
That black new umbrella;
How I longed to use it.
Then finally one day,
Rain was in the forecast;
Out of the closet it
Came for its first big use.
It wasn’t easy though
To convince Mom the need
Of taking it to school.
But I argued, saying,
“Why did you buy it then,
If I can’t ever use?”
She swayed; it came with me.
It didn’t rain, but what
Did that matter right then,
For I’d still showed it off.
Boring school, like always,
Made me long for day’s end,
And “Who knows, there could still
Be a massive downpour!”
Marian looked after me
Afternoons until my mom
Could pick me up from work.
So, though a rainless day,
The school bell rang and I
Collected my things to
Trudge my way back to her.
To get to Marian’s house,
I went the high-school way,
Though she told me not to.
I thought about how many
More chances I could get
To impress with my toy –
My new black umbrella.
When I walked by the grade school,
I saw the daughter of
My once-a-week tutor.
They lived in a big house
That wasn’t far from mine;
My tutor was so nice,
It never seemed like homework.
My tutor’s daughter asked
If I would like a ride home.
I said, “Sure, that would be nice.”
I did wonder though how
She knew to take me to
My babysitter’s house….
She started the right way.
She went down the right street,
But then suddenly turned
The exact opposite way.
I wanted to tell her
To go the other way –
But then, the whole idea
Seemed a very bad one.
And what of Marian?
Would she be worried when
I didn’t show up soon?
So, I was on my way home;
My mind raced as what to tell.
“Why are you home so early?”
My dad was sure to say.
These were the things I thought
As my tutor’s daughter
Sped in the wrong direction.
I considered this because
My Mom hadn’t given me
My very own front door key –
Wait… “I left my umbrella.”
This I thought as she drove
Off with my new equipment,
But, by then, it was too late.
Now what was I to do?
I feverishly delved,
Looking for an excuse
Where my umbrella was.
Not much came right away,
Then again when asked, I
Would come up with something.
“At school,” is what I said.
Mom replied, “Don’t forget
About it tomorrow.”
“I won’t!” was my swift answer.
My brand-new umbrella
Lay on the back-seat floor:
Left but not abandoned.
I went to my tutor
Every Tuesday evening,
After dinner, from home,
I walked myself over there.
They had seen my umbrella!
It lay nestled against
The others in their care.
I stroked it in the hall tree,
Knowing in an hour
I’d be able to put right
A mistake that’d ballooned.
When I left, I snagged it
To take it where it would
Be finally at home.
I was out the door,
And way down the sidewalk,
When I realized I
Had a major problem.
I told my mom I had
Left it back at my school;
What could I tell her now?
What bold explanation
From my seven-year-old
Brain would explain this one –
What to do and not panic?
Starting to walk on home,
Worry marched by my side;
Suddenly I had a flash.
It wasn’t a good flash,
In retrospect I know,
But despair was to blame
When I think back to it.
In my home’s direction,
Near my tutor’s abode,
Was a buried culvert.
I took my new shiny
Umbrella and stuck it
In the dry drainage pipe,
But felt ill doing it.
Yet, I did have a plan
To get it back next week,
Barring some rain, that is.
The week flew by slowly
Bringing Tuesday ‘round to me –
It hadn’t rained, so I
Hoped it was still in place.
Tutoring went quickly.
When over, I leapt out
Her front door to get it.
The path was blocked instead,
Showing me my mom with
A stranger idly talking.
My mom! What was happ’ning?
She’d never walked me home
After my tutoring.
I couldn’t believe it.
After chatty intros,
To my horror, we all walked
The few blocks back to home.
I had no chance to get
My lonely umbrella;
It would have to wait longer.
The following week dragged
Slower than the previous;
It had been so long since
I’d seen my umbrella.
Back to look in the pipe,
My umbrella was gone –
I’d never see it again…
Now you see my woe,
For when I was a child,
I had an umbrella.
I was seven; it was new.
Postlude:
Memory of love, or love of memory
I don’t know which is true of my umbrella
The case now, I cannot state very calmly
Did I love then, or only hence, that umbrella
I only know if I were to run away
To the blue hills, what would occupy me there
Where the hills and my umbrella are I can’t say
I only know they’re gone, yet still they are there
Where are the distant, rolling blue hills of my youth?
Where do I look? To Memphis, Lincoln, or Duluth?
Poem No. 9
Lyrics:
You are a radiant sun shining on an unworthy shore
warming sweetly regions benign
hidden though they are in the cold dark
You stimulate them with your light.
Your light draws love from a very deep place hidden from even me
sweetly warming regions benign
which I didn't realize were there
Your light, so gentle, do I need.
You are a radiant sun shining on an unworthy shore
with your light can I take on wings
with you can I create dreams coming true
Your thought makes words dull in contrast.
because
You are a radiant sun shining on an unworthy shore
Poem No. 10
If I could burn my soul,
all that it means to me
If my spirit were made of paper
and evil said its lines
In fire could I be born
into new life
Free from pain,
and free from strife.
Poem No. 11
AISLING
She stands upon the hill so fair,
lightness dreams for her,
Of soft, sweet, distant air,
where a wafting breeze makes her stir.
So gently she comes to moor,
as a thought in slumber does,
A heartened pang to adore,
a silent lady, forever to love.
If a tree moans, I know she nears,
her fragrance scents the air,
A perfume, subtle, familiar, and dear,
I know she comes so fair.
The Lady's calm will in me stir,
a grateful tone to bear,
For lightness dreams of her,
the Lady of the sweetened air.
Poem No. 12
She stands in misty darkness still –
silence is her breath
gentle motion, whitened will –
she of calmness does request
An effortless sea of white does fall –
she covers all so tenderly
a gentle scene that sings to all –
of peaceful, blanched tranquility
Her soul clings to the branches of trees –
traces still of her movement
a silent lady forever to believe –
sweetened white to give deludement
In darkness still does she stand –
colorless oblivion
her motions gentle on the land –
her calmness envelops all thoughts of sin.
Winter Snow
Poem No. 13
I have seen you everywhere
countless times a specterful sleep
the world's not real to me
I want to be what I can be
already.
The weight is smashing me
how I long to be what I can be
I simply face the morrow wanting
God in Glory to fall asleep
already.
Poem No. 14
Haiku:
Fiery-winged fowl,
A goose of wordless feathers
Flees his woes by flight.
Poem No. 15
If God be in a bug,
we'd all better stick ourselves
under the rug.
If God be in a bug,
and he's squashed, we've all got our
burial dug.
For if you were a bug,
and had your brains smashed out by
a fool from above
You would feel a grievance done
if you were God and a bug
then squashed from above,
so,
If God be in a bug,
we'd all better stick ourselves
under the rug.
Poem No. 16
Six ā to the zee, bee to the zee minus ten bee to the zee
minus –
Three ā to the zee, cee to the zee, less five cee to the zee
Six ā to the zee, bee to the zee, minus three ā to the zee, cee to the zee
plus –
Negative ten bee to the zee plus five cee to the zee
Three ā to the zee, times two bee to the zee minus cee to the zee
plus –
Five times negative two bee to the zee plus cee to the zee
Three ā to the zee times two bee to the zee minus cee to the zee
minus –
Five times two bee to the zee minus cee to the zee
Two bee to the zee minus cee to the zee
times –
Three ā to the zee minus five.
Ode to a Polynomial
P.S. God help me…[4]
Poem No. 17
Moonless midnight
and memories
Phantoms in flight
difficult to keep in solidity
Too many memories
to remember
Such wicked abstractions
to which I have no identity
Poem No. 18
Prelude:
I hate to be alive,
how more simply can I say it.
I have nothing for to strive,
no happiness in which to simply sit
What possible gifts do I have to give,
when I take space and do nothing but stare
So I ask, for what reason do I live,
to cease such a life, do I think to dare
My problem with that, is this,
the world is so damn beautiful, why did God
Put a scourge like human kindness
on the planet to muck and mess up the sod.
All I know is that:
I hate to be alive,
how more simply can I say it?
Poem:
The blood rushing from my arms
making me impure by its super purity
rushing until perfect bliss be found.
Poem No. 19
i.
I might have been first
Instead I am the worst
Did God make an illiterate writer
a painter with no hands
Did he make a critic for his creator
a simple fool with no fans
What exactly did God make –
a quivering mass of self-pity?
No, not God. I did that despite his sake
he is love, and cannot be flighty
ii.
The rain is coming now
How nice it would be
to be washed clean by it
but
I lack such soap.
I might have been first
Instead, I'll remain the worst.
Poem No. 20
Sweep and pound as hard as you can
wind, throw them at me
Sweet pungent smell, clean my mind
fury of the storm, make me see
Wetness awaken me, frighten
me with the cold
I don’t like the air I breathe now
fill me with newly brisk air
Rain help me see me
anew!!!
Poem No. 21
They…
…squeak, and squawk and rumble,
and they fly.
Oh, I'd like to be an elevator humble,
and live in the sky.
Poem No. 22
The spring is beautiful
As I watch her dress the Earth
In emotions I had almost forgot
Using colors stored in careful places
Kept safe from the frost of the soul
Safe in the warmth of knowing
That no matter what, her day will come again.
The spring is a beautiful reason
Not that she has any cause to be
Wars are still being fought
People are still hating many things.
And yet, she comes
Offering her gift to the world
No questions, no bills
She comes for reasons unknown.
With a million secret colors
She paints a million emotions
Far too many to write
And so I'm left with nothing but…
The spring is beautiful.
Poem No. 23
Each day a million thoughts are born,
each needs prove itself against reason's scorn
Wrong or right, they are our history
Filtered through the mind like sand,
they are the eternal story of Man.
Poem No. 24
She from a dream does stir
to awaken what was forgotten
with those gentle fingers of her –
the land and dreams forsaken.
She in calmness does fall
into this, our raging world of life
till she becomes part of it all –
the point of instinctive strife.
When she moves in her first step
all others must dearly pay her heed
for her birth, and her first breath –
only then may they proceed.
She stands in airless anticipation
bringing all to the cusp of the hour
returning to recognition –
for the Lady has such power.
Spring Thaw
Poem No. 25
Poems have dealt with life and love, and a lack thereof,
of pretty things, and heroic man that sings
I want to think above, of what's not been thought of
besides the same old fling, there must be something
How about some hogs, or a wagonload of logs;
Infested with lice, or with some such device?
Puppy dogs, and little-girl frogs;
ants, and mice – now, how do those matters entice?
-------
Shall I ever write newly of unspoken things truly?
after all, what's left, but burglary and theft?
Hey, now there's a thought duly, of something new and unruly
and if I fail with heft, at least I've tried to be deft.
Oh well, with that cavort, back to mundane things of sort
of love, of life, and songs of strife
Perhaps I'll just write of Mort, who drank a bottle of port
and fell out of sight, from a cliff of some great height.[5]
Poem No. 26
Is there anyone happy in the world today?
What happened to the children who used to play?
And the preachers who used to gossip –
They don’t anymore, they don’t speak of it.
I know why the children don’t play today;
It's because I'm not a child's stature, per se,
And why the preachers don’t speak of it –
They haven’t seen me in church for a bit.
What changes; the world or the people?
I have, for I've lost childish glow,
And it hurts the more I know –
Being of the earth makes me a cripple.
Poem No. 27
I look for beauty
but can find only the beast.
As children we are told to avoid it –
only purity for purities sought –
unforbidden duty
but the wrong offers such a feast
that only children can avoid it
and I am not a child with a child's thought.
coming out
Poem No. 28
Sweet embrace of a horrid thought
a simple one, one of immense truth –
its presence revolts me
The thought is entirely there
though magnified by the night so still –
the thought of who I am.[6]
Poem No. 29
You know of course I meant to go
before she went
but then she went before I got the chance to go
so now I'm going after she went
oh, no.
Poem No. 30
Portrait…
My God, what a lovely face she did once possess
filled with all the emotions we could ever need
Now is it drained of charm from every recess
by those who claim to be her rightful seed.
All that she had, she gave; nothing is left to assess
yet impatient fools, who only think of their greed
Try to draw blood from her every abscess
for when she doesn't look, then her children feed.
She was young, and oh so sublime, not so long ago
but then she bore the frightful scourge of herself
And her children, they sucked away her blooming glow
while she raised not a finger to say no unto their pelf.
She used to be proud
and held her head high,
but now covered with a shroud,
her children ask with a sigh,
'Is this the beauty who raised
my sisters and brothers?
This? Torn so by motherly duty…?'
My God, what have we done to our most important,
life-giving mother? Please forgive our earthly sins.
We thought we would never be accountable
and reduced to the status of your orphans.
…of our Mother Earth
Poem No. 31
Beauty is of itself, a whole thing.
It can't fight its enemies
And we, too stupid, don’t know
What they are.
So, Beauty suffers, while
We do nothing.
Poem No. 32
In the mist, I think I can faintly see
a vision that perhaps is of me,
but since I know myself not at all,
in mystery it lies with my wherewithal.
Poem No. 33
Loneliness' song is slow but sweet,
its voice, ever-constant, eternal –
Through the history of Man, its beat
pulls us to ourselves most fraternal.
Poem No. 34
The night the poems died
it happened all once
everything just shriveled up inside
all of it, at once.
It wasn’t as painful
as one would think
but then, I've forgotten that pitiful
can lead you to the brink.
I wasn't prepared to face the truth
I'd rather lie and make believe
and with my soul strike a truce,
but, that I can't, I want to believe.
Malingerant coward that am I
to hope I could cower and die
what a sick and pain-filled lie
because all I can do, is sigh.
Poem No. 35
I lie awake and spy
on visions of burnt dreams
flashing boldly in the empty sky
of my mind, bursting its seams…
To be anything less than a success
is to have failed totally;
not to go forward, but to regress
is to show your shame boastfully…
I've lost what I was going to say
but it doesn't matter, I'm sure,
for there'll be another day
of tortured tolerance with which to endure…
And I imagine I shall too.
Poem No. 36
I need a cure –
Does anyone know
The cure for self-contempt?
Poem No. 37
In the dreams of men
thoughts are born
specters of fame and fall
and of none at all
it merely depends on the storm
of a mind that needs a mend
Visit my tonight?
Who knows what will –
whatever it is,
whoever it is –
well, I’ll remember it still
when I awake in the daylight
Should I be afraid
of phantoms unknown?
I won’t wake
in the same world
I went to sleep in;
memories will have flown
and I think they haven’t stayed
Then again – maybe
I’ll see sweet, soothing light
that will calm and quench
my spirit’s ideas there they entrench
and illuminate my sight
to enlightenment most free.
In my mind
thoughts are born
specters of fame and fall
and of none at all –
it all depends on the storm
of a mind that needs a mend
Poem No. 38
"Dwight"
When subtle things move behind a smile
beckoning for a chance all the while
but still unsure is he
who thinks, but wonders what could be
behind the cheerful expression that's grave
a fantasy to treasure and save
When subtle things move behind happy eyes
that try to hide deeper things by disguise
but leave looks to remember
as calling cards from the lender
visions I dare not think be true
imaginings of immensities misconstrue
"I am very confused to meet you"
when your eyes speak before they let you
when your smile denotes something special
that I can approach at the same level
am I to act on subtle clues of hope
or should I stop and give up any hope?
Poem No. 39
The Materialist's Love Song
Prelude:
Sweet sound of the VCR –
click
rurrrrup
and then a steady purr
From the hollow within
come visions
created by
workmen unseen
I come to the VCR
when days are dark
for I know that joy is never far
from my friend who doesn’t smell or bark
Happy days from the VCR –
click
and then a steady purr
all this, and I never have to call it sir.
Poem:
Things give pleasure, how can I deny?
Money gives power, as great as the sky.
And what's the price? Oh, not much –
Well, there's no lice or stuff such –
All you have to do, my wondering dear,
Is give up your chance to know why we respire here.
So, you want to have? Well, have it all.
Most simply done; ignore your conscience-call,
Life can be a daze of contentment,
So forget the maze of fulfillment.
I say forsake all; live for the gain of money.
What else can matter as long as the days are sunny.
Postlude:
Pleasure marked on a physical basis
can be no more than painted faces.
Happiness doesn’t lie on a dollar bill
unless it's used on the poor as a pill.
Then happiness will come to both
the Christ and the giver of hope.
Poem No. 40
Prelude:
When love's not love…
And has apathy only for hate…
When the sincerest insult is to tell the truth…
Poem:
On a summer night
When the heat is past its height
I lie awake
And wonder just what's at stake
My dream's a depressing sea
On a boat un-tethered but still not free
Sailing through a fog I cannot master
Because the mist simply rolls in faster.
I float along in the windward lee
Sensing the weight of utter despair, she,
Is a power that I won't be able to shake,
And could sink me perhaps before I wake.
Poem No. 41
Prelude:
In 1941, the City of Peter
was laid siege upon;
900 days later, it ended.
As the Nazis left
they burned the home of Peter
and his descendants, and his people.
Poem:
What monument could befit
Mikhail Kraminsky?
Not stone or brick, marble or glass –
Wood's inadequate from ages past
steel and cement aren’t the clue either –
for what he has done, has made man seem bright.
Mikhail Kraminsky,
for immortality you are fit.
How can the role of hero be filled?
In you it showed simple enough.
You are the restorer of your nation's monuments,
you rebuilt what once was present,
what once was ignorantly destroyed,
but after, you saw and had no anger to display,
you only knew crying wasn't enough,
and with a hopeful sigh, sad: "We will rebuild."
In forty not-so simple years
you've built a monument to yourself
through your tireless love to restore –
from piles of rubble, towns again stand,
gilded in majesty, not remade, but reclaimed –
and you, Kraminsky, for us made it the same
palaces of others, but as a monument to yourself,
you have struck away all the tears.
The greatest triumph of Man –
you have done no less –
where others would have only anger,
you had only conviction that's stronger;
where others would fill with concrete,
you had a vision only to restore complete.
What other monument could befit a man
who has done the greatest triumph of Man
and no less?
Postlude:
Let this be my memorial to you,
Mikhail Kraminsky,
And please accomplish what you have to do,
Not only for Russia, but for all to know that dreams come true,
Mikhail Kraminsky.[7]
Poem No. 42
Sonnet:
The world calmly shouts what it has, and always will –
a question pleaded since the first wave of God's hand
with a fearlessness that's been called anything but bland –
time has not removed it; the question is posed still.
In the future people like me will get their fill? –
Doubt will come to the next, and be as sure as sand;
believe me, I see only pain from where I stand,
where so many others felt their hearts break and spill.
The question simply put: what is beauty; what is love;
Can beauty be in everything, say perhaps a foot?
Can love be in everyone, in their personal check?
The answer's seen by people who know what is above –
a joyous work of longing whose seed has taken root –
the world sings it's an unfulfilled emotional wreck.
Postlude:
What is it in the face of man
that proves he's more than simple sand?
Poem No. 43
The gentle drift of a thought
slides silently into bed
and whispers things that were said –
thoughts and wonderments of the dead,
their lives spent for what they sought.
Darkness brings the visitor
that lies besides me every night
that brings visions of ghoulish fright –
and with the birth of day will take flight,
and leave behind, less of a shell, and no victor.
Night Thoughts
Poem No. 44
death
embrace me
take me away from my lover
lonely
aggress me
death
trees I do not need
grass I do not need
so what's there to hold
me
peace I cannot find
love I do not want
help us death
embrace me.
Poem No. 45
Qu'est-ce que l'amour?
that is the principal question
asked by some before.
I saw the door ajar
and wished I could
pry it some more –
to inch it with purpose.
-------
Only once was man given the sublime
and he can't see it;
thinks it's in something else.
How wrong he is.
I hope he finds the spark
of the true rhyme
that was given to us.
The one spark, that was given
and not made.
Poem No. 46
I.
When the City of the Saint
Was the city of the West,
When all was fresh and new with paint,
This and the spring of '46 were at their best.
From the East a young man came
For an adventure to find,
Francis Parkman was his wealthy name,
And a guide is what he needed to be signed.
From the West a young man came
To the city that gave him birth,
Henri Chantillon was his name,
And a guide from the age of fifteen was his worth.
The two men came to the western city
One in search of his manhood in the West,
One for a break in his life of things pretty,
They didn't know they'd meet; they couldn't have guessed.
II.
Different men they were for sure
One a happy Easterner,
Who had never a hardship to endure,
Indians and Adventure were the West's big lure.
For the other had become
A man among his brothers,
His heart was one with the meaning of the Chisum,
His mind saw as brightly as the others.[8]
…..
Poem No. 47
What's the matter?
Money again,
or shameful sin.
What's the matter again?
Poem No. 48
We dream to become what we're not
look for visions to be sought
it doesn't matter if they're our own
as long as we have them sewn
with the thread of hope in our thought.
Poem No. 49
If in days yet to come,
no one can recall our face,
or know what we've done,
can't fit us into a space,
can't know what we've sung
if, they knowing we were unhappy
or know unfulfilled,
if they know we were daffy
beyond the normal still,
then they will find a common thread
to link them to us, at least in the head.
Poem No. 50
Like a song that wove itself into a soul
Like a glance that set into a mood
these are abstract thoughts
that express what I feel
Poem No. 51
You can give yourself to God
Only if you give yourself to your brothers.
Poem No. 52
You know of course I meant to go
before she went
but then she went before I got the chance to go
so now I'm going after she went
Oh, no.
Poem No. 53
Prelude:
Today I watched
the sun be born.
In words, it went like this:
Poem:
I.
Fizz and fuzz and chill a-snap
it's sad above the trees
Will and wile and still a-chap
It is cold enough to freeze
Fizz and fuzz and chill a-bap
the sun nothing more than a tease
Will and wile and still a-snap
only a cold light edges the breeze.
II.
Hint and hue of burning blue
an amber coal gives rise
Brace and bob of hinting hue
through misty, drowsy skies
Rick and reel of sighing sight
rousing thus by its color
Sent and steel of wronging right
forgetting what was duller
Moan and moat of changing chance
half an ellipse raises its voice
Choose and change of manly stance
asking all to make a choice
Heat and haul of blaring new
an amber coal gives rise
Burning off the hinting hue of blue
ascending misty, drowsy skies.
Poem No. 54
I walk into my room the same as always
Set down my drawings too, just the same, I thought,
But I didn’t know a mystery lurked for me.
Something that was changed from all the other days,
Some subtle hidden thing, something not the part,
I accidentally walked by, but didn’t see.
I addressed my roommate: "How are you today?"
"Better than usual;" he's been ill you see,
Still I didn't see it. On my way I wanted to go.
Before I left though, before I could get away,
I needed a drawing; get it and I'd be free.
Bent down to get it, I saw it and said, "Oh."
A pair of black shoes. "Oh, are these yours,"
I said to my roommate. "No, I've never seen them before."
"If they're not your shoes, then why are they here, and whose?"
I could say no more about such strange occurrences;
A pair of black shoes visits my room, what a strange scene;
Not my shoes, not his shoes, we look and wonder who?
Postlude:
Yukio, my strange and subtle friend
who doesn't know how to pronounce 'lend'
but can read hearts and knows what they have to send.
Poem No. 55
This is a rhyming test, so don't sound the alarm
So do not be distressed, don’t sell the house and farm
I'm simply trying a scheme, to see what I can do
To think of something that's new, strange as that just might seem
So to begin I will, let's see…I'll start it this way…
This is a rhyming drill, and that's all I have to say.
Poem No. 56
In slumber days
the sky was pink with excitement
because innocency lived in a sigh.
Poem No. 57
Prelude:
A lady does her nails, in a class about Death
and then leaves
They're ugly red nails, in a class about Death
they match her sleeves
Her ruddy color pales, her throat swallows a breath
and then leaves
A lady did her nails, in a class about Death
to match her sleeves
Turns pale and leaves.
Poem:
There's a leaf on the floor,
All the way in the corner, under the window,
And I wonder how it got there.
Poem No. 58
Lyric Sonnet:
What's beauty for,
if I can't embrace it?
and still the more,
to what can it befit?
why need it be,
it seems out of kilter
far beyond me,
why doesn't it filter?
So I must ask,
what can beauty be for
if in it I can't bask;
without it I can't soar?
I have one gentle task,
to know beauty once more.
Postlude:
To come to a dream
and not to recognize it
Is not knowing how to live
Poem No. 59
There's a stillness in my heart
that I can't draw on this paper.
It is made of buttercups,
or vagrants lying in the street.
How very stupid I am,
for if I can't see it, how can you?
So, a mystery it'll remain,
and we're better off not knowing.
Poem No. 60
I'll dream of you in the sometimes hour,
About those days of years gone past,
A haunted melody, meant not to go sour,
Dried a quiet memory in a mind dyed fast.
Your eyes are set eternal in my hope,
A thing never meant to fade,
There I see you always;
What eyes can say, when words simply fade:
a cruel glance bared its bitterness,
and lasts as long as a bad Coffey dreg;
a glance if chance held the newness,
a glance of hatred lingers like the plague.
But. I'll dream of you in the sometimes hour,
About the ones I've seen in years gone past;
Some a joyous thing, others can go sour,
Dried a quiet memory in a mind dyed fast.
Poem No. 61
Prelude:
Muscle and bone, that's all it is
blood and brains, that's all it is
put together in a way
that makes my humor and mind
sing of them:
Poem:
A note of amorous kind
passed with a smiling nod
that says more than the note
she opens it like a great find
her eyes dart, a smiling nod
that says more than he wrote
gleefully she gets a pen
finds a paper that's almost blank
and jots something then
a note most amorous sent
passed with a smiling nod
that says more than the note
he opens it like a great event
his eyes dart, a smiling nod
that says more than she wrote
Poem No. 62[9]
The King of Brooklyn
What if he were born in Brooklyn
On a morning like all the others
What if he said he was free from sin
And told us we are all brothers
What if he were born black
And said that he loved us all,
The son of us, the entire pack,
Said he’d come to teach us not to fall
Would we listen to his call
In a public institution,
What if that is where he was born,
Would wise men kneel before his position,
Would others decry his birth a Medicare scam
What about his very young mother,
Would we see her pain in the knowing
That her son was born to in death hover
And think him the lamb of the coming
Would we see his calling
What if a poor child in Brooklyn
Were the King of Kings, the Prince of Peace
Would we listen to him; could we him know;
Could he fit our pre-fab image
Would he be let in the Thanksgiving Day Parade
Would our Fifth Avenue welcome him;
The bishops and shopkeepers, would they delay
The celebration till his birthday began
Would we recognize a Christ if we saw him?
Poem No. 63
A Holiday Postlude
Toe trimmings and tree trimmings
lay together in a bag.
After Christmas, after New Year's,
they're considered something of a nag.
What if there were a Christmas tax:
on sack, box, and carrying crate
on ropes, ribbons, and Scotch tape
on bows satin, and angels in pose
on pictures of reindeer, and on Rudolph's nose
on Christmas tunes, and church to attend
on tinsel gold, and cards to send
on 'good ole times,' and many a friend
on trees green, and carolers in white
on sheep, and every shepherd in sight
on wreaths holly, and berry mugs
on mangers, and clearance sales in floods
on jolly elves, and seasonal duds?
What if there were a Christmas tax
on the things that mean Christmas to us?
~
[1] These are presented sequentially from the calendar year in which I was twenty years old. That means several of the early ones (up to No. 11) were written before my birthday in February, and thus when I was still nineteen.
[2] Two Doors Down: This poem was written about a mysterious and beautiful young man who occupied my old dorm room – 128 Mouton Hall – when I lived two doors down at 126. He stayed alone in the double room by choice, was tall, of medium build, had light-brown hair, and possessed an inscrutable bearing of dignity and sexiness to him. I never saw him in the cafeteria, nor had any classes with him, and barely ever exchanged more than passing greetings to him – but I remember him to this day!
[3] Ship of Tyre: see Ezekiel, chapter 27, verse 1~36
[4] Ode to a Polynomial: The postscript is on the original manuscript, lol. My humble thanks to Parker Owens for checking and correcting the algebraic equation here 'poeticized.'
[5] Poems have dealt with life: My reaction to learning about internal rhymes and alliterations, lol.
[6] Sweet embrace of a horrid thought: This is the voice of one in the closet.
[7] This poem was written after watching a documentary on television. The National Geographic Society was working with the Public Broadcasting Service to make periodic shows at this time, and one featured the ongoing work of Russian historians to restore monuments destroyed in World War II. I have looked, and not been able to find this documentary online. It has also been frustration not finding any information on Mikhail Kraminsky when searching for him (in English, at least). I do have this mention from The Palaces of Leningrad, by Victor and Audrey Kennett, 1973 London. The book is dedicated: "TO OUR BROTHER, MIKHAIL ASAREVICH KRAMINSKY, ARCHITECT, AND RESTORER TO HIS CITY'S MONUMENTS." So, at least I know I have spelled his name correctly
[8] This is the opening fragment of an epic poem I had in mind based on the accounts from Francis Parkman's 1849 book The Oregon Trail. As you can see, I did not get very far.
[9] Written on Thanksgiving Day
_
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