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    Poem Bale Three Regarding Horseplayer Luck & Lack

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      Title Page & Licensing Notes

      Acknowledgements

      Poems (1-25)

      Title Page & Licensing Notes

      Poem Bale Three Regarding Horseplayer Luck & Lack

      By Thomas M. McDade

      Copyright 2014 Thomas M. McDade

      Return To Contents (Or Scroll Forward or Back)

      Acknowledgements

      Special thanks to the following publications that have published many of these poems:

      Bender, Blind Horse Review, Blind Man's Rainbow, Chance, Creative with Words, E Pluribus Aluminum (Liquid Paper Press), Home Planet News, Insert Zine Name Here, Moody Street Irregulars, Mushroom Dreams, Nerve Bundle Review, Paisley Moon, Pawtucket Times, Small Pond Magazine, Thrill & Swill, White Crow, Willow Review, Yo-Yo

      Return To Contents (Or Scroll Forward or Back)

      Poems (1-25)

      Boarder

      Luck

      Lily Eyes

      Volunteer Corn

      Rimbaud of the Roses

      Important as Weather

      The Clocker, Narragansett

      Clocker Sarge

      Three Talents

      Paradoxical Thirst

      Systems

      Belated Respects

      Resume

      Late Post

      The Dancer

      Poor Blood

      Saturn

      Buster’s Full-Service Gulf

      Richard Hugo, April 6th, 1978

      Ivy League Bookie

      Ice Cream

      The Well-Cleaned Room

      Wishin’ Mission

      Sandalwood

      Return To Contents (Or Scroll Forward or Back)

      Acknowledgements

      Special thanks to the following publications that have published many of these poems:

      Abbey, Amaranthine Muse, Bean Feast, Bender, Bibliophilos, Brobdingnagian Times, Chance Magazine, Clark Street Review, Lake Effect, Lucky Star, Mushroom Dreams, Nerve Cowboy, Pawtucket Times, Pitchfork, Poet's Fantasy, Santa Clara Review, Slugfest, LTD, Sunken Lines

      Boarder

      Between the race track and the river

      that once powered textile mills,

      there’s a gray cottage

      a woman who never married bought

      after working forty-five years

      inspecting cloth, never missing a day.

      Since 1962, she’s rented the extra room

      to a horse trainer from Houston

      who’s as courteous as the parish monsignor.

      She keeps the room spotless, always fresh

      Air Wick on the dresser,

      a frond of blessed and braided palm

      above the mirror.

      She tells her friends the sixty or so days

      he’ll be with her are just enough of company.

      The track’s a mixed blessing.

      Her waitress niece will cause some trouble

      angling for a jockey like the married one

      who gave her a fur and more last year.

      Her nephew will be staining the family name

      acting crazy with wild hot walkers and grooms.

      And her brother will be betting with both fists,

      calling every day to check if the boarder has

      confided any inside dope.

      No doubt she’ll be sponsoring Christmas again.

      But that’s off her mind on racetrack days

      when smooth, sweet horse names echo

      from the announcer’s calls, hook the wind

      to ride into the mill-worn river’s memory

      like whispered compliments that will repeat

      and amplify nights she slips into the trainer’s

      chilly bed to sleep a fitful boarder’s sleep

      when the racetrack awkwardly hosts

      a boat show or circus.

      Return To Contents (Or Scroll Forward or Back)

      Luck

      If there were a meter to measure

      luck, Slaney would never have to lie

      to leave work to check his level at the track.

      Fired again, he goes to the library

      to start another self-help book.

      A woman sits beside him, thumbs rapidly

      through a PDR.

      Catching Slaney’s eye she begins to chatter.

      Her son has cancer, she’s checking

      out his prescriptions.

      She talks of driving to the hospital,

      a hubcap flying off here dying heap.

      She didn’t care, it was the last one.

      At the light a half-mile later

      a crowd watched as the runaway cap parked

      against its wheel.

      Is this a sign?

      She sobs like a person whose ration of luck

      ran its course with a homing hubcap.

      As if Slaney had to leave work early to bet

      the surest nag ever, he lies, says he heard

      of a similar situation.

      Good luck followed

      the rolling omen.

      Kissing his cheek, she walks away smiling.

      Without control, Slaney rises, staggers in circles

      around the newspaper racks, wishing the library

      door were a black hole to suck him out of orbit

      because he feels lucky and knows the entries

      hold a horse named Hubcap or something

      else that woman said.

      There might never be another wheel

      so sure to rest against.

      Return To Contents (Or Scroll Forward or Back)

      Lily Eyes

      Lily, has been working Lincoln Downs

      since arriving from Dublin decades ago.

      She handles binocular rentals.

      Hubby Jim works nights at Pontiac Textile

      so he’s on hand for all the five furlong sprints.

      He and Lily have a gainful scheme

      they researched for weeks like scholars.

      It’s fixed on the first three entrants in a dash.

      Seconds to the bell, Lily rushes to grandstand

      light to zoom in on the starting gate

      with her very own field glasses.

      If one of the trio springs out first she hikes

      an arm and signals eagle-eyed Jim

      with finger or fingers corresponding

      to the leader’s saddlecloth digit

      like a drinker ordering pints in a bar

      on Grafton Street.

      Once he got three winning ten-dollar

      tickets before the machine shut down.

      But most of the time it was one or none

      depending on clerk chicanery.

      When the technicians finally got it

      right and their system went belly-up

      Jim turned to spiking income

      through break time

      booking at the Pontiac mill.

      Lily when bored would sucker bet

      the entire trio in a race, a homage

      to the old scam before waking up

      and renting out her personal scopes

      along with a history: honest to God

      Royal Navy equipment

      her IRA uncle, one of the luckiest

      to ever wager in Ireland, willed her.

      Of course, just men looking dapper

      and heeled enough to spring for five

      bucks instead of the single on the sign.

      She kept things on the up an up

      putting a buck of each side

      transaction into the till recalling how

      her right hand arthritis used to vanish

      days of the Horsy Trinity and she crosses

    &
    nbsp; herself, tapping forehead, chest

      and shoulders with the three fingers cocked—

      praying for the technology to fail.

      Return To Contents (Or Scroll Forward or Back)

      Volunteer Corn

      Sully ran the Longmont Club

      and he often provided a pot of butter

      & sugar corn that he farmed himself

      in a rented Seekonk field.

      Weekly, he’d announce a special

      batch of volunteer corn and then

      explain what it was again,

      grown from seed the farmer spilt, etcetera.

      Sully claimed it had medicinal properties

      and was the only kind that tasted good with Bud.

      Sully took bets on horses and sports.

      Oh, just about anything: how many

      white and yellow kernels on any given ear?

      Vice squads raided his operation regularly.

      Always seemed to be the day of the volunteer

      which was confiscated for evidence.

      The sergeant worked a toothpick

      during the bare bulb interrogation

      pissing off Sully more than the fine.

      Stomach cancer got Sully and some patrons

      argued volunteer corn did him dirt.

      Some said the vice squad stress cause Sully’s death.

      His younger brother, Joe, blamed Utah Beach shrapnel.

      He took over the bar and the Seekonk field.

      Joe couldn’t produce volunteer corn, but the rows

      were never straighter. He reasoned seed you’re aware

      you’ve spilled won’t volunteer.

      It was a Zen thing Sully mastered by forging on

      despite vice squad harassment.

      Joe refused to walk the bookmaking path.

      Many customers moved on,

      settled at the Silver Cloud Bar

      where there’s a bookie and on Saturdays,

      hot dogs, plain and simple.

      They fondly remember Sully and wait

      for volunteer corn to show up

      on a TV quiz show

      but they don’t dwell on it.

      Return To Contents (Or Scroll Forward or Back)

      Rimbaud of the Roses

      Working asphalt I’m a mystic

      stalled on a bed of fiery coals.

      It takes hydrants of ale to put me out.

      Occasionally I drive blacktop

      from my mind, think of yellow bricks

      leading to Oz.

      But it would take a shaman’s soul

      to rescue me from the taverns.

      Bartenders, please teach me magic

      to spread asphalt out cold.

      Then what excuse to act

      like a drunken hint
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