past the peanut butter jars with wires full of electricity. nobody's dog. moving through it all. brave as any army.

Thursday, January 30, 2014

roots.



      naked knuckles

all rings removed and

dropped like tears into loose sand

      flicking air and tugging atmosphere

reaching into the earth

tearing off the tops of mountains

      pulling thunderheads behind

      dragged like balloons

in dusty silent carnivals

      nobody laughing

      brush grown thick through sidewalk cracks

      cotton candy booth abandoned

      inhabited by baby birds

itching to fly for their first time

to kiss that cloudless sky

      and falling against gravity

      proud burning friction

      feeling good to be alive

      wings outstretched

reaching into the earth




west.



“West,” said the oldest cowboy,

but it came out more like a cough

or a laugh that got trapped in a smokehouse,

and he closed his eyes,

stroked his horse’s stoic mane

chomped the mushy corpse of a cigar.

The others nodded, half-smiling like all true believers,

   squinting into the sunset,

   night closing in around the sounds

   of flapping ponchos and swirling dust and coyotes

   of heavy sighs and restless wind

   and whistling through canyons

   the light that only grows in dry deserts,

   silhouetting lonesome crows

   and making their young faces glow

   the oranges and pinks of an old man’s America

and they stood in circles and drank beer

kicked dirt on the fire at bedtime

and fell asleep under vast granite skull-piles

   believing their grandfathers

            when they told each other stories

            about which lands the Gods called home


            and their holy Western orientation.

MJ 1/30/2013