The Generalissimo’s cigar has burnt down to a thumb,
they’re digging graves in the orchard. I counted four blackbirds this morning.
The firingsquad’s a lazy cat in this heat, the poor lads are perspiring.
They drink coca cola all night and coca cola all morning.
The dust swirls in little devils, in the redondel where I will die,
without achieving herohood, some inglorious morning.
The chicken bones of my last meal are clicking out a prayer for me,
the signs of dissolution have been found nailed to the morning.
Freedom mixes with the blood of the enemy, and of those who died for me,
I think of them most afternoons, but I tend to forget them by morning.
I bury myself in the snows of Wisconsin, now, heat and dust close my throat,
I bury my songs in the hills; there are no blackbirds these mornings.
Rounds
Downstreet from OM we opened
A bar called AMEN, where the noise
complaints came from above,
where our choir howl swept
the dust. Ask the Jehovists:
they’re slow to trust the dark, corroding
our confidence in flashlights—our faith
in the warm beer of blackouts,
and they LIGHT candles to make wishes
and we DARKEN OUR DOORS
with mezuzahs, our floors with mandalas,
but catch you on the flipside
never meant anything to me.
Waking from nights out, dawn
long gone seems so spirit heavy, grave.
Our pains are answers to our prayers.
Copyright the author(s) ©2007–2012