Three Poems (2005)

I Saw Johnny Depp in Secret Window

I go to the movies alone on Monday nights

Weariness makes me taut like the screen

Blank and white

Ready to receive the likes of that crazy Johnny Depp

I guess for some it’s the looks

But for me it’s the subtle Chaplin humor

 

After my ticket is torn I head to a stall

So I’m not pulled out of the best scenes

By those tired demands

As I come out I see the urinals

And realize in a B movie twist I’m in another dimension

The realm of the wrong sex

I plan a daring escape before the aliens return to the ship

Peeking my head out just enough to see

The father and son with popcorn staring at posters

The manager adding up figures on a screen

Then like characters I’ve seen in movies

I walk out slow and deliberate

So as not to attract the wrong kind of attention

 

I sit in the theater with couples

Their popcorn a loud crunch at the wrong moment

Their candy a rustling that muffles dialogue

 

The urinals hadn’t seen me

They wouldn’t tell the joke behind my back

To the next guy who stepped up

 But I needed someone to laugh

And I was ashamed to be alone again in that theater

With the couples slurping through their straws

Whispering things not meant for me

In the hollow moments between trailers

 

After the credits I hurried through a side door

Afraid the manager had seen me after all

Lousy film, great performance and all that

Nowadays everybody goes to see Johnny Depp

They like his brand of comedy

But I am invisible at the movies

The unseen men’s room comedienne

The star that no one is watching

 

Mowers

The lawnmowers march steadily forward

Over neighboring countries of grass

The push mowers advance from the west

Over the fields razed so many times

They’re cracked and yellow

While the red riding mowers

Sweep around our left flank to distract us

They are loud proclaiming

Their racial supremacy dogma

The superiority of one plant over another

We sit in our garden in the late afternoon

 But we can’t hear the voice of the ghost

The ghost of our venerable old gum tree

Gone all these years

 

Here is our appeasement:

We are growing native prairie land

We are peaceful here

We don’t need the mechanical troopers

But all over the neighborhood

The blood from the grass spills

The purges go on

And the voice of the ghost is drowned

An Apology to Garrett for the Poems

All those thee’s and thou’s,

Your dark eyes and your soul,

My breath and my inspiration -

What the hell was I thinking?

 

You only liked it when I called you a beautiful bastard,

A sewage romeo,

The casanova of the mop sink room.

I know because you laughed.

 

You wanted limericks, not sonnets,

And we were in New York City in 1998,

Not 19th century England. 

You didn’t want to be

The melody that lights my dreaming mind,

Or the music I would still remember. 

You didn’t want autumn’s west wind in your eyes,

And who could blame you?  It would probably sting.

 

I was convinced I had the soul of a poet 

But that soul was a damned traitor.

She will never be trusted with anything important again.

I think you and I can both be relieved about that. 

 

July 30th, 1998,

I listened furtively to your music

Ballade No. 1, Opus 23 in G minor

Staring down the front of my filthy overalls

When you caught me in the act

And with one word,

Chopin

Acknowledged everything I’d felt for months.

 

That was the real poetry wasn’t it?

In that moment all that happened

Is you looked at me and knew I loved you.

As the years go by,

 

The things I want to say to you

Slip into the same between the lines place

As the word Chopin

It’s a place that’s gone mute.

 

I don’t understand hearing your voice on the phone now.

You want to recommend some CD’s to me.

It’s a strange, late offering from you,

But I’m trying to accept it as though it were divinely ordained.

It would make you laugh to see me.    

 

Now your music plays in my car.

One CD ends, and I grope to replace it with another.

You have provided the soundtrack for my life after all.

That was the only thing I was right about,

Saying I’d remember the music.

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The Complete Goofy Quizzes on Victorian Novels (2008): Villette, Mill on the Floss, The Woman in White, Tess of the D’Urbervilles, Dracula

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Bea vs. France (2005)