Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Evolution, March 24, 2o15

This I threw together rather fast . . . first thing this morning . . . Ted Cruz just announced yesterday he's running for the POTUS in 2o16. I listened to him talk to his captive audience, hundreds of good, Christian college kids. What he said about America, about the America he wants to create was . . . well, just plain scary! I found this dinosaur pic as I cruised the internet. Hmmm, it inspired me.

Evolution
 
I prefer plastic Dinosaurs
over those made of flesh
and cold blood  . . .
Plastic ones don't bite
and they melt away
if left too long
in the morning sun . . .
 
The real Dinosaurs,
the vicious ones
are far too dangerous
to live with us
in our civilized world . . .
 
And yet,
there they are
walking about,
running for office,
gobbling up
all the tiny
little dinosaurs
that we've become.
 
Evolution sucks
Woodie o3-24-15

Wednesday, March 18, 2015

The Dead, March 19, 2o15

Another poem that got lost in time, rediscovered a few days ago, rewritten and . . . well, posted here. It is a rather bleak poem  . . . stylistically, a lot like Welcome to the Freak Show but looking to give it a bit more of its own flavor. Let me know what you think.
The Dead
 
Dead. We are the dead.
Mere shadows lingering between
the narrow slit of closed eye.
Our words mumbling mournful things,
a whispered prayer, a whimpering
so lonely the darkness weeps for us.
 
Dead, we are the dead.
Vacant minds burnt, sacrificed
slithering toward the open pit.
A crowish smile pecking at our wounds,
The mourners gathering like moss
on the north-side of the abyss.

 
A multitude of sores bloom in yellow plumes,
the raving lunatics are knocking on the door.
Neatly tied up bound by promises
and that old liar hope, we wiggle on the hook
believing ourselves ruthless sharks
never knowing that we’re nothing but  bait.
 
Yes, we’re surely dead.
Apostles to the bone, the mortal breath
adrift on streams of unconsciousness;
we drown in chaotic harmony
with all those other souls grasping
at malignant straws . . . they do not float.
 
We are the dead . . . sucking in a world
that spews us out upon the dank Persian carpet
where mother lies a bleeding,
her empty eyes receding from her life
in short agonizing gasps
her broken fists grasping at the thinning air.
 
Dead, we are the dead
from the day we were born.
Woodie 1o-3o-14 (rewrites o3-17-15)

Sunday, March 15, 2015

Welcome to the Freak Show, March 2o15

This is one of those poems that I'll probably never be satisfied with. I've been rewriting it, taking stuff out, putting other stuff in for at least  five years. Every time I think I'm finished, a month or more will go by and I'll look at it and think, this needs something more. This time however, I'm just not that sure. I may never be done with it. So, here's the Latest version:











 
 
 
Welcome To . . . the Freak Show
 
Shuffling footsteps down the hall
come one, come all the end is near.
 
Where breathing labors like a vacuum cleaner
running out of suction! All those horrible years spent
a munchin' kitty fur, and globs of wadded dental floss.
All our years we grieve, we grieve like withered leaves
in bleak December. All those mourning cobwebs piling up,
all that dust and cigarette butts fornicating on the rug.
 
"Heya, Heya!" cries the Barker from the sideshow tent,
"See the amazing frog boy pickled in a jar!"
And there he is! Piss-yellow skin and eyes
a gangrenous green, yes, there he is!
 
How our blue-stain fingers mock him,
our skeptic sneers, cruel jeers torment
that lifeless body as our hopes await
his resurrection in the soiled shroud
the blessed Bearded Lady left behind
for we mere specks to wonder on.
 
So, better kiss me quickly, dearie, while my tarnished lips
remember how your warm, wet tongue once brought to life —
 
But she'll have none of that. She’s far too busy now
her hands a burying the dead, her tapered fingers
screaming lily white, and red fire tears
carve crimson rivers ‘cross her angel face.
 
Our graveyard spirit spits too much these days
and drinks too much  these moments in.
We dance too close to sparrows. And our sin?
A desperate need for simple truths,
a simple ways that might encourage us,
the multitude of us still dying . . . lying  . . .  
naked in the winter’s snow.
 
We shall sleep, no more. No more may we sing
for better or for butter or for weather kinder
than the mother who dropped us at the nunnery steps
beside the curdled cream the milkman left.
 
But willows weep and hang their weary boughs
and mutter blasphemous oaths  as the horsemen
trample passed our wailing ghosts.
Too demanding we have been. So cruelly circumcised
from nature's tattered teat no longer can we recognize
the bourbon scented breath of poor departed father
as he staggers from that smoky barroom in the sky.
 
And that is where we’ll meet our makers!
Brutal, careless gods who ram themselves
deep inside our youthful throats
then lick their sores like wounded dogs
and disappear into the fog.
They never loved us, no, not at all.
Woodie, 2oo8 (rewrites o6-27-12, 1o-22-13, o3-15-15)












 

Saturday, March 14, 2015

My Eyes, March 2o15

Hey, guess what? A new poem! Well, yes, the first draft happened in late 2o14, but I had forgotten all about it. I discovered it the other day when I looked over all the poems I had written in December. Surprised to find it, and to be honest, I had know idea that I had written it. It may need some more work, but it seems to work well enough . . . for now.

My Eyes
 
My eyes are leaving me without a word,
no remorse, no goodbye.
they’ve packed their bags the night before
as I slipped beneath an awkward dream
which I won’t remember when I wake.
 
You’d think that after all these years
and all those tears we’ve shed,  
might they not leave a note? No.
There’s nothing left but memories, clumps
of bewildered dust, a lonely cobweb in the corner.
 
In the mirror, two black holes.
My eyes lived there once, they saw, they thrived.
Running down my bloated face blood flows
in gentle slivers, burning red;
my cheeks don’t seem to mind.
 
And the moon, she’s dead. That line of trees
along Trout Avenue, the ones that blocked
my view of that abandoned lot across the way
they’ve disappeared. What’s left to see?
The shadows drifting on the lawn won’t tell me.
Woodie o3-12-15

Monday, March 9, 2015

Rain Day March o9, 2o15

An inspiring day today I Norman Town. protesters in the street over some racist remarks made by some Frat boys. Well, really it was a bunch fraternity and sorority students on a bus chanting this:
You can hang him from a tree,
but he can never sign with me.
There will never be a n***** in SAE.
Somebody on the bus video taped it and placed in on YouTube. All hell broke loose on Facebook last night and the anger and outrage carried over into the morning. The coolest thing though was the huge student protest that took place. No yelling or screaming just a silent march around the north oval.
Rain Day
 
Early morning rain against the window
not thick but steady all day long.
The crowd never spoke.
The only sound shoes
slopping through
the muddy pot holes
that a few hard
winter days had caused.
 
But silence speaks in ways
words can never convey.
Eyes straight head
underneath rain hats and coats
and umbrellas that wish
they could go home
shaken-out and placed in
a warm corner of the room.
 
It’s such a dirty day filled in
with granite thoughts.
The hangman’s noose swings
drunkenly in the courtyard
where the protesters gather.
 
The sparrows are there too
along the tree line.
No chirping today only wondering  
why won’t the world shout its sorrow,
its anger to the sky?
Woodie o3-o9-2o15