the pale green plaster walls crack
to a nicotine ceiling sadly
coughing up our acrid interior
hazy through their shroud of putrid.
--
a thrift store van gogh muses
from his living room perch on high,
they lie catty corner to one another
in fading upholstered coffins
numb to vincent's goodwill sunflowers.
--
sick, smokes, and delirium
and never ending bargain basement booze
flow by the hand-me-down television
tuned to unwatched watergate hearings
whose treachery can't be bothered
in this netherworld of ours.
Sunday, August 25, 2013
Saturday, August 17, 2013
Wonder of the Wenceslas Square KFC
She got drunk on a feeling -
I wish it were mine -
then left me
without ever having come.
She's a never ending angst
to those she inhabits
with herself more at ease
than a child's imagination.
She's my lost love, the wonder -
working the counter
on the late shift
at the Wenceslas Square KFC.
I wish it were mine -
then left me
without ever having come.
She's a never ending angst
to those she inhabits
with herself more at ease
than a child's imagination.
She's my lost love, the wonder -
working the counter
on the late shift
at the Wenceslas Square KFC.
august '77
Elvis is in rehearsal for his last show,
polishing the toilet seat
for an audience of one;
the king can see that final curtain
rising through the mist
of his deep dried fame,
singing songs to himself
no one will purchase,
gummy through the cobwebs
of pharmaceutical sadness.
--
My father is in rehearsal for his last sale,
dampening the sofa cushions
for an audience of us;
my dad can see that final customer,
yellow through the mist
of cirrhosis fever,
speaking words to himself
no one will fathom
as they drown into a jigger
of bourbon madness.
--
The king and my pops
never made it to September,
dissolving into nothing
in the flush of the Summer of Sam.
polishing the toilet seat
for an audience of one;
the king can see that final curtain
rising through the mist
of his deep dried fame,
singing songs to himself
no one will purchase,
gummy through the cobwebs
of pharmaceutical sadness.
--
My father is in rehearsal for his last sale,
dampening the sofa cushions
for an audience of us;
my dad can see that final customer,
yellow through the mist
of cirrhosis fever,
speaking words to himself
no one will fathom
as they drown into a jigger
of bourbon madness.
--
The king and my pops
never made it to September,
dissolving into nothing
in the flush of the Summer of Sam.
Labels:
1970s memories,
alcoholism,
elvis presley,
father,
poem,
poetry
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