Saturday, June 13, 2015

A Figure In White



steps up to a strange castle
home of dogs but not man
dogs watching but not calling
staring but never confronting

she lived on the edge of the bog
trapped by the forest
a single path in

trapped past the path
a knight called Sleep
came upon me
and i could not pass back

Sleep came for me
and i could make no move against It

unarmed, Sleep put a finger on me
and i passed out of light
hitting the ground
and coming back up
in an upside down world

the world was dark but i could see everything,
in myth they called this the Gloom
to see nothing but to see it for miles
like a negative image, dark and silver

the world was dark and silver
and Sleep was nowhere in sight
but i feel Sleep was all around

the world was a twin to my own
and so i tried to head back across the path
between the forest and the bog

but here, on the other side of the mirror
the dogs were men, mute and all eyes
staring but not calling
not a move to threaten me,
just to watch

in the edge, in the distance
a figure in white
appeared and vanished in the corner of my eye

when i looked there was nothing
but i followed just the same
towards the castle
but in its stead the castle was a small frail shack
made of bent willow and birch
it looked as though it would have flown apart if i touched it
but even with the low shudder and echo of freezing winds
it stood as sturdy as brick

i passed through the side
for it had no doors
and inside the figure in white
stood

it was a pale young woman
and she said nothing
and i said nothing

the air moved through me
and with a flutter of my eyes
the figure in white
appeared from behind
while she stood before me
and pressed a frozen twig of a finger
into my temple
and like a knife i saw pure white
and cried out in pain

and as swift as ever
i was back from the Gloom
and beside the bog as before
far from Sleep

but i stood before a blackened hag
as bent as birch twigs
as fluid as strands of willow
and dead silent

and there i stood not a man
but a dog
beside the other dogs
silent and staring

the hag vanished
leaving us to wait
as still as the tomb

and there i stand
waiting along the path
between the bog
and the forest
and here i will stand
and wait

But Not To Dream



when we got to california, what did we find?
when we got to california, where could we go from there?

we followed our dreams
from the dead heart
of a rotting nation

through toil and sacrifice
we left our homes
and severed our bonds

we dropped every penny
on a losing venture
we gambled and lost our way
dizzy and cheapened
we walked like kings
and when we found those promised shores
we stooped, and begged
just to survive
and the price of that wager was our lives

we followed our dreams
from the dead heart
of a rotting nation

all the way to the golden gates,
we followed our dreams westward
to the sea
where our dreams
dashed upon the rocks

and like a weight
set around our necks
we followed over the edge

the wreckage of our dreams made manifest
washed up in the tide pools
and the rooks and vermin
clutch at what became of us
and grow fat off our misfortune

when they mention icarus
aiming for the sun
they never flesh out
the fear and panic,
the rot and waste
that icarus left on this world
when he found the sea

so, the wages of daring
is ruin;
the price of a king's step
is found
in the splintered heap we become

when we got to california, what did we find?
when we got to california, where could we go from there?

and long after picked clean
what fragments and trinkets
that collect in the tide pools and surf
will be little more than a half-memorable
offering from the sea;
a caution that resonates
in some idiot sub-speck of brain,
the instinct to toil
but not to dream

Kosciuszko Hall, 1964



i’ve known this customer for 3 years now. he’s always been pleasant, interested in my work. he asks questions now and then but not in an irritating or prying way. he’s a curious man. from the casual 5 minutes we share before i treat his property, i have gleaned that he teaches high school math. and he looks the part; dry, monotone but in a semi-rural midwestern way. his glasses wouldn’t have been in fashion 30 years ago. all his teeth were gapped and when he spoke his tongue was a bit clumsy. like he had a speech impediment when he was young but overcame it with enough practice in the mirror. nice guy, normal and boring. but the world is lousy with people that look normal and boring but harbor a strangeness in them. 

he’s a teetotaler but not preachy about it. the type of man that has a club soda with lime at the bar and sticks around for the local color and some conversation. he always takes a handful of matchbooks as souvenirs. three of them. he impresses this number on me. as if it means something he’ll never explain. he takes them home and stores them in a small box he built to accommodate the size of a matchbook but probably about 20 some deep. he showed me a few of his pride and joy. matchbooks he would’ve been too young to gain first hand. some advertise war bonds. some bear the name of the old ‘sons of norway’ in palatine. i wonder if there’s some flee market mafia that deals just in old matchbooks. the artwork is beautiful, if not unassuming.

i wouldn’t pay too much attention to this customer but something about him makes me take note. chuck remembers my name by the sound of my voice when i call. 

‘hi this is..’
‘henry, how you doing’

he always knows within 3 syllables time which i feel is a bit odd. i don’t think i have a notable voice. but who knows.

chuck knows that i take care of my folks. that i came back from grad school. that i wanted to be a teacher, like him, but got lost along the way. i guess that’s just the way it goes. we get lost along the way. he knows i make something in the neighborhood of nothing. not enough to move upstream. just enough to drown away another year. and then another.

i keep it brief and detached. but he can tell. people may listen for shit. people may lack empathy. but they can tell. you linger just a little. your smile is just a touch vacant. looks like a smile but something about it says there’s something missing. people know when you’re a glass half empty. or in my case, a glass that broke.

he back hands my arm.

‘ya know what? i want you to have something.’

he runs into the garage, pulls out the small wooden box. thumbing through his collection like he knows just what i need. this is the key you need to open the attic. this is the potion that gives men the strength to endure.

‘this is just what you need’

hands me a matchbook. Kosciuszko Hall, 1964.

‘where the party begins and ends’

on the inside, it’s down three matches. with the words ‘Big Bad Wolf’ and a phone number writ in pen. just a little faded.

‘you look like a Big Bad Wolf


i give an honest grin and tell him i have to run. i shake his hand and head to the next job.