Build Me A Frank Lloyd Wright House

The wild young October-held hibiscus
          called out to the hulking metallic ship keen for the sea;
It extended to the summer-setting sun of horizon—
          the one the ship kept sailing into,
          puffing grey smoke that smelled of burning leaves—
          two well-packed purple buds, luggage left behind at shore.
          In October’s breeze they waved like ungloved fists,
          seeded reminders of construction begun in the spring.
On the sailing ship, its young lover, leaning on the stern railing,
          looking back to shore, thinking about something
          he had said way back in April;
          looking hard, remarking, Yes, he does look like an hibiscus.
          Further, From here it looks as if he’s about to bloom.
But any launch those purple fists considered
          must have been defused by the icy wind,
          or else grew discouraged one autumn night
          by the presence of fewer than forty degrees,
          when they tried but failed to break open at the palm
          and crack their delicate sun-loving knuckles.
And so the buds never sprang to life,
          and from the back of the ship, she said,
          Maybe not an hibiscus after all,
          no purple flowers to show for himself,
          just a couple of limp fists, looking like they’ve been dipped
          in watered-down purple paint, left in the rain too long.
          That or this sunset came with a matted finish,
          or the bay’s caught a fog, or something.
On land its fists indeed shriveled inward,
          the hibiscus thinking, She can’t even see me anymore.
          And in its frowning, creped fingers atrophied
          absolutely every cell of photosyntheticuriosity,
          cut off from the care of what might happen
          if it opened those purple fists
          and said to the sunset, Take these fists with you to sea,
          let these blooms be the sky,
          let them be the purple in her eyes.

Rain, Again

1.  Love.          Tangled in the rain,          a soaking rain,          the king’s rain,          working its way down               from           the sky’s rafters,          taking care not to make mud,          not to be part of the first frost. 2.  Rain.          Doesn’t want to parent plants;          Doesn’t want to be sealed away in leaf or stem,               its plant the earth               its roots the ocean’s deepest trenches—                    scars left behind when crusty plates … Continue reading Rain, Again

The Sunday Price

Sunday!  Sunday!Every day is Sunday.I walk into an overgrownfurniture warehouse showroomwith the Sunday paper in hand.Pointing to an ad, I say, “I want the Sunday price.”The red-vested salesman looks me     right between the eyesbefore he raises an arizona eyebrowand responds, “But it’s Tuesday.”I wad the worthless paper in my handsand stomp on it. “It ain’t Tuesday!” … Continue reading The Sunday Price

The Ship Is Me

This is my ship:its creaking bowis mine own. Its hands mine,the planks of its deckmy ribs.  Its captainmy captain, my heartspinning like the helmin his hands.  Checkmy conscience forlatitude and longitude,my throat for the letters S-O-S. I feel the rising weather in my bones as the waves fondle its breast,my hull.

Neighbor

From across the fenceyou ask for it:twenty cents,you say you need,     for the bus          or the gas bill               (whichever arrives first)as you water your sharp, green grass     straighten up your JESUS sign,          wipe the spider webs               from your concrete goose’s head.I’m sorry, I say,I can’t offer you anythingmore than what you’ve already got:     the words of the Savior,          and his various disciples,               some dead,                    some … Continue reading Neighbor

Dream Fire

Sleep is part
of the underground—
not taxed.  All
these hours, colors,
and people (real and not)
are coming to me for free,
cracking their belts
like whips,
offering me
chests of money.
What code—
what provision
of science—
does this fall under,
this unregulated
carnival of closed eyes?
Is it safe?
Are the funnel cakes
sold here
soaked in trans fats?
I fall asleep at night
on a welcome mat,
in front of the
brick-hard hearth. I
keep warm
by throwing one more
log, one more day
on the fire.

Button-down Shirt

Two ways to take it off.
Pull it up over your head
if you’re in a rush—
if you’ve just gotta have
that bare chest on parade.

Or, take it off slowly:
from the top down,
button by button—
if you’re a bit tired,
if you’d be so kind
as to massage
the muscles
of method and time.

There is no third way
because two is enough.

Tea for Whoever’s Left

Untouched cheeksplague me likegum in my stomach.My heart is too aware of them:it sends out chemical warriorsto cleanse body and mindof thin-armed remembrances.Like the tender turf of a battlefieldmy spirit is impressedwith the sound of hoof-beats.As I clean up afterward,sorting shield and sword,ghosts of the fallen beg meto lessen desire, lessen desire.