Not Another Holiday Poem
grandmother’s
annual holiday poem
was nothing like The New Yorker’s
annual holiday poem
the top bard of Walton, NY
poet laureate of St. John Street
wouldn’t think of starting a poem
with “Greetings, Friends!”
she was more
Miss Havisham
than Grandma Moses
in those later years
when the wraparound porch
on her black & white Victorian
collapsed like a poorly measured
fruit cake
and the delivery man
who dropped off groceries
& cases of Genny every Friday
would find her
on the old wooden swing
kicking out
over
the abyss
noting the times & the season
hark, with each pump
of her schoolyard legs.
Suburb
such a fuss
was raised last night
by the chickens
in the neighbor’s coop
you would have thought
kids were staging boxing matches
in the foreclosure
on the corner
or Mr. Connolly was finally
putting the misery
out of his sour puss
wife
or a delivery man
who knows that evil
works against us
on a daily basis
was fighting
the high-casualty event
of middle class
life
by arranging
a tufted boudoir chaise
in a perfect pelt
of moonlight.
Mount Vision
it’s a small town
nothing to do
but fantasize
so when news
cropped that the radio tower
on Mount Vision
had picked spectral music
out of the sky
the disappointment
was as sharp
as finding
a plastic toy saucer
at the bottom
of a technicolor
cereal
box
the rise and fall of the west
‘You’ve gotta’ be fucking kidding me,’
I say, half under my breath ‘are you
sure that’s right?’
The woman
behind the cash register
is wearing pink earmuffs. It’s December
but there isn’t a bite to the air
or as much as a flake on the ground.
The pink earmuffs are her way
of saying ‘sorry, fucker
I can’t hear you bitch
about the cost of potatoes
because my ears are huddled
in pink earmuffs.’
I’m so pissed
about the cost of potatoes
I wanna’ tell the woman
that her pink earmuffs
make her look like she feeds
on the homeless.
But she won’t hear me anyway,
so what’s the point.
Then, in a mock hospitable voice
she adds, ‘sir, potatoes fueled
the rise of the West.’
The last item scans, chirps.
‘Paper or plastic?’
‘Plastic,’ I say
doing my part to hasten the fall.
the last roundhouse on dead end street
south
of the rib, in the flatlands
dram shops & the
roundhouse, upstate’s
industrial colosseum
the Canadian Pacific
razed it in 93’ but demolition began earlier
36 of 52 brick stalls
scattered like a game
of pick-up
amongst the ruins
& rotting Pullman mail cars
a woman
with a dismembered
goat hoof between her legs
says to an ex-con:
tastes are becoming hard to satisfy.