A Match for
Burning
Their idea
of
a night out
on
the town
meant
getting thrown
out
of bars
together
while Mom
was
home
minding
the little
ones,
her feet
propped
up on the
ottoman,
pay for
view
on the
tube,
and empty
dead
soldier,
Barton's
Reserve, lying
by
the recliner
with
the other
comrades
at arms killed
in
the line of
duty:
Milwaukee's
Best,
Genny Light,
Matt's
Premium, a
whole
army of
regulars
and Tall
Boys,
scattered
among
the discarded
fast
food
containers,
empty pizza
boxes,
McDonald's,
Burger
King's, KFC,
Wendy's,
all the best
junkfoods
welfare money can
buy,
the toddler's
rummaging,
augmenting their
dinner
with the
remains,
draining the
bottles,
just like mom &
dad.
grabbing all the
gusto
they can, flipping
bics
recovered from
the
rubble, mock
puffing
stubs as grandma
snores
totally dead to the
world.
poet’s savage
muse
whispers
dread
secrets
outlines
the strange
poetics
of death
iambic
pent-
ameters of
suicide
draws the
shades
covers all
mirrors
snuffs the
candle
flame
between
two black
tipped
fingers
the moving
hand
no longer
writes
slum
goddess
Maybe she
thought
that
if she
main-
lined
enough
stuff,
dressed
like some
kind
of
resurrected
Warhol
queen
and strutted
her
stuff up &
down
McDougal
Street,
she'd be
anointed
the Official
Slum
Goddess of
the
Lower East
Side,
or maybe
she'd
get so
strung
out, so
hyper
no one
would
notice or
care
what she
did
until she
dressed
up as some
low
budget super
girl,
and did a
swan
dive from the
top
floor of
some
closed-for-the-
duration
tenement
high rise to
see
if the stash
of
super balls
sewn
into her
garments
and bundled
in
her cowl
would
make her
rebound
as high as
she
felt, as
high
as the
moon.
All have a razor sharp edge seeping into your psyche.
ReplyDeletegreat rhythm--particularly the last one--moves like fluid down the page.
ReplyDeletegreat rhythm--particularly the last one--moves like fluid down the page.
ReplyDelete