Tuesday, 13 June 2017

A History of Sexual Preference -- BY ROBIN BECKER


We are walking our very public attraction 
through eighteenth-century Philadelphia. 
I am simultaneously butch girlfriend 
and suburban child on a school trip, 
Independence Hall, 1775, home 
to the Second Continental Congress. 
Although she is wearing her leather jacket, 
although we have made love for the first time 
in a hotel room on Rittenhouse Square, 
I am preparing my teenage escape from Philadelphia, 
from Elfreth’s Alley, the oldest continuously occupied 
residential street in the nation, 
from Carpenters’ Hall, from Congress Hall, 
from Graff House where the young Thomas 
Jefferson lived, summer of 1776. In my starched shirt 
and waistcoat, in my leggings and buckled shoes, 
in postmodern drag, as a young eighteenth-century statesman, 
I am seventeen and tired of fighting for freedom 
and the rights of men. I am already dreaming of Boston— 
city of women, demonstrations, and revolution 
on a grand and personal scale. 

                                                       Then the maître d’ 
is pulling out our chairs for brunch, we have the 
surprised look of people who have been kissing 
and now find themselves dressed and dining 
in a Locust Street townhouse turned café, 
who do not know one another very well, who continue 
with optimism to pursue relationship. Eternity 
may simply be our mortal default mechanism 
set on hope despite all evidence. In this mood, 
I roll up my shirtsleeves and she touches my elbow. 
I refuse the seedy view from the hotel window. 
I picture instead their silver inkstands, 
the hoopskirt factory on Arch Street, 
the Wireworks, their eighteenth-century herb gardens, 
their nineteenth-century row houses restored 
with period door knockers. 
Step outside. 
We have been deeded the largest landscaped space 
within a city anywhere in the world. In Fairmount Park, 
on horseback, among the ancient ginkgoes, oaks, persimmons, 
and magnolias, we are seventeen and imperishable, cutting classes 
May of our senior year. And I am happy as the young 
Tom Jefferson, unbuttoning my collar, imagining his power, 
considering my healthy body, how I might use it in the service 
of the country of my pleasure.

Saturday, 25 February 2017

Sugar Nap (prose)

It's a case of run from the law.
Or is it?

I stepped onto the rail, waiting for when they opened the gate.
He came over and said I had to come down.
I asked why and he said it's the citation.
I asked what the difference was between the law and a citation.
I replied: One you forget to remember, the other you regard as a half-forgotten relative.

I got in beside him. Quiet, moody he was.
He drove onto the pier and straight to what seemed like the ferry.
I became excited. "Are we going on the ferry?"
He said, "Well, we'll see, won't we?"
Sharp inhale of breathe as he looked over to me, saying that.
He parked, got out and rounded a corner.
I followed but stepped onto his heels as he quickly returned.
He seemed taken aback by something and nearly ran me over.
I half fell onto a concrete beam against the building and in his momentum, he toppled over me, leaned into me.
He quickly righted himself, I smiled.
Back in the vehicle, I said: " You don't appear to know what it is you want."
Response: "Maybe."
(Blue Bird)

The law came down hard. The cop knew 3 minutes remained before the ferry left.
They scoured the waiting rooms but Bobby was outside, checking the vehicle and I was sitting. not too far off.
The cop looked at him, thought he looked familiar but moved on.
They got word of a yellow cab waiting for someone.
A couple.
They fled on foot to see the cab pull away. Hot pursuit.
Meanwhile, there we were, actually lying down quietly on a lawn nearby, concealed.

Bobby and me.
Why Bobby with a rucksack full of talent, ready for the worst, crow road.
And me, in a daze, ruddy for reload.

Who's who?
I thought I saw in my swim to coast, a gigantic body pass me by.
The eye of God opened and in my surprise, my heart stacked up.
Pearls danced round me, a fizzy cloud and the eye closed.
I had that chance to climb off mortal mess but declined.
He was still there. A darn hot cuppa!

The runaway genius with visions in his head and pains on the side.
Could never stay.
Broke my heart, a thousand grains.


Sunday, 5 February 2017

signal in time

what wiill yoù blame this time?
in the blink of an eye, time skips a beat
and in it, I am lost.

you may consider many things destroyed
all by your capable hand, yet nay.
all caught up in the fray, you are.
think you not it's overdue to get up from that idea
the one that claims loss as a weapon?

rise from the ashes and hide no more.
recognition of the old pattern reveals more
it's only a signal in time, a wrinkle in the plan
one that breaks the order to a very needed chaos.












Saturday, 4 February 2017

Longing ----- by Matthew Arnold



Come to me in my dreams, and then
By day I shall be well again!
For so the night will more than pay
The hopeless longing of the day.
Come, as thou cam'st a thousand times,
A messenger from radiant climes,
And smile on thy new world, and be
As kind to others as to me!
Or, as thou never cam'st in sooth,
Come now, and let me dream it truth,
And part my hair, and kiss my brow,
And say, My love why sufferest thou?
Come to me in my dreams, and then
By day I shall be well again!
For so the night will more than pay
The hopeless longing of the day.






.........yeah.
Hopeless longing.....



Saturday, 7 January 2017

chilled fruit

Then there was the time he dreamt long, of apples overflowing and cotton candy cups.
Who's duping who, in an age when stars go faster than the whirlwind inside?

His memoirs are made of trinkets he bought at shops no longer standing.
She lets herself go, oh dear.
Tip that bottle.


For the sake of four jugs, earthen
you're fighting my poetics again
but they stand the ground
you're crafting vessels of absence 
but nary aware I am aboard.



Not ate, but confiserie a bit tart
and fruit, chilled
blood runs
 a regular lil wriggler 
buy on Monday, blow out on Tuesday
eat on Wednesday
what a party.


Those steeds run a full decade
mercurial harness
swings Pluto closer
the codger harps on his childhood
singing songs nobody knows
a lonely serenade to the forgotten 
red eye rims behind bars, misunderstood.

Rejuvenated, new step.
On a halved expressway, I'm flying through
and feel alive!