A First Post--in Honor of Walt W.'s Birthday
At the Bus Stop, Endlessly Waiting (shamelessly sampling)
At the bus stop, endlessly waiting, I look around
and hear a song like one my old friend sings.
Near
like a cell, so I almost pick up as it rings,
and at Twigg’s yet more birds trill. Everywhere I used
to drink has feathered sentinels on it.
Two more mockingbirds, perching, still stewed
with manly hopes for spring nests, not a bit
deterred, tweet like two dumptrucks in reverse.
I sit, remember the tunes; desperate cocks,
my brothers, sit in trees for weeks, or worse—
under an eave, above a bar, with no sunglasses.
Come into my Melaleuca; it’s cool!
The leaves are thick and we can hide
from any cat and nest and rest and rest
assured, the soft down of your breast
will love the spiders’ webs, the twigs inside,
the yarn and kitten’s fur—right by the pool!
By now, two weeks of baseball and he still
sits in his tea-tree, floats his curious calls,
so like a car alarm, a phoebe’s peeps.
My brother fluffed and trilled through winter’s squalls,
my brother rasped in vain on hot, desert
Week, 24/7 for months.
The 421
Club’s my spot—we slam shots, extol
the fine tunes, the good drugs, the big wads
we have, but there’s no one to nest with
and my beer’s gone, game’s over, time to bail.
Those willing, drunken dates are just a myth.
It’s getting late, my sweet, don’t mind the light
that cloaks with mist our bright retreat,
our nuptial branch, our bliss. Don’t miss our bliss
this year, my love—you’d be remiss
to merely flutter near. I’ll be discreet;
not one more peep from me, once we’re tight.
At the bus stop next morning my head pounds.
Nothing worked at Bocardo’s where she sat;
not the coke, not the weed, not the literate conversation
from my end, while she sipped burgundy, water back.
She said “thanks a lot” at
not staggering like I was, as I stepped
home, riding cracks in the sidewalk, still bereft,
still on my manly quest, on post-game letdown,
as I passed my brother’s tree—he didn’t sing!
I can’t recall her face—just blue eyes, blonde hair,
the way her nipples poked her top—it’s baffling:
where to sit, what to show, with my Ray-Bans on.
1 Comments:
Great Walt Whitman tribute-when did you write this amazingly great poem?
TRW
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