rising off the confined cattle.

  It rises from her memory now and permeates

  the room.

  A needle pierces her breast,

  her gown slips off,

  the cows bellow and her sweaty fingers

  grip the table.

  On the drive home,

  the hills embroidered gold

  with mown and baled hay

  prick her eyes.

  She hears the calves—

  they are bawling now.

  You Call Me to Jump

  You call me to jump into a pool.

  The water is dark. It looks deep.

  I do not recognize the place.

  Kids swim and flail,

  ducklings without instinct,

  some drop below the surface.

  My day grows short. I hear your voice

  and I hear a six-year-old yelling at me—

  Auntie, help, I need help.

  I push the kindergartener

  up the hill on his bike

  and listen to his non-stop shouts—

  Look, I can ride a bike.

  Can I push up my sleeves,

  lift my skirt

  and jump in?

  Here I am,

  hitting the cold surface.

  Keep calling.

  I need to hear your voice.

  Barry W. North

  The Molotov Cocktail 
of the Deep South

  I swore I would never

  lie down with one of your kind,

  and it was not even within

  flying distance of possible

  that I would ever let one of you

  relive the slave days at my expense

  by taking me from the rear,

  although I must admit I had, on occasion,

  used my vision of such a coupling

  to amuse myself and others

  with the image of a

  modern-day wannabe aristocrat,

  the color and texture of vanilla ice cream,

  gone completely soft,

  like so many of your tribe

  have a tendency to do,

  getting his rocks off

  by mounting me from the posterior position,

  in honor of his long departed heroes.

  I pictured him

  as a ludicrous caricature of his ancestors,

  clad only in rolls of milky flab,

  riding me, like one of his prized fillies,

  while lashing my rump

  with a tiny whip,

  to match his annoying little node,

  all the way to the finish line,

  at which point,

  wild-eyed and exuberant,

  he raised his hand in victory,

  as the Caucasian crowd,

  overcome with generational nostalgia,

  cheered for the triumphant return of privilege

  as it was in the glorious slave and plantation days.

  I must confess to you that

  my unbridled enjoyment

  in depicting of your people’s

  moral corruption and physical debauchery

  showed me how satiric ridicule of my own folk

  might seem like great entertainment to certain

  twisted members of your bloodline.

  Then you,

  white as a damn Ku Klux Klan robe,

  came along, and

  to hear my girlfriends tell it,

  ruined everything.

  Like a medicine man with a magic elixir,

  they say you somehow managed to scramble

  my little black circuit board.

  They claim I am no longer myself

  and with that I cannot argue.

  I am so out of whack, at this point,

  the only thing I know

  is when I look at your face

  I am struck colorblind

  and at that mysterious

  juncture inside my brain,

  where animal meets human,

  there is a fire raging,

  sparking off boiling daydreams

  of the two of us making what is still

  the Molotov cocktail, here, in the deep South,

  with me screaming,

  like the fool I so clearly am,

  as we burn old Dixie down.

  The First Day

  Today is the first day of the rest of your life. . .

  —Charles Dederich, a reformed alcoholic and founder of Synanon.

  The day after her

  only daughter’s suicide,

  she came out

  of the upstairs bedroom,

  dressed in white,

  like a virgin bride instead

  of a grieving mother

  and now childless divorcee.

  She hesitated at the top of the stairs,

  and then slowly descended,

  as though going once again

  to unite with her man

  and begin their life anew.

  In an unexpected vision, she saw

  the faces of her deceased parents

  floating beneath her, their sparkling eyes

  full of hope and love just as

  they had been on her wedding day.

  She stopped at the foot of the stairs,

  stripped off all of her garments,

  and trudged forward to the reality

  waiting for her in the kitchen.

  Inside the doorway, she paused

  to take a few deep breaths,

  and then started the ordeal.

  With sponges, bleach, bucket, and mop

  she cleaned the room for hours,

  from ceiling to floor,

  until, by mid-afternoon, the task was complete.

  With her hands raw and bleeding,

  she stood on the gleaming ceramic tile,

  covered with her teenager’s insides,

  her skin glistening

  like the scales of a fish.

  She left the kitchen,

  went through the downstairs bedroom,

  where her only child had been conceived,

  entered the bathroom

  and stepped into the shower.

  She let the water flow over her

  and watched what remained

  of her fifteen-year-old daughter

  swirl around and get

  sucked down the bathtub drain,

  at which she continued to stare until

  she was looking at her three-year-old,

  full of life,

  waiting for her bathwater to disappear,

  at which point, just like she always used to do,

  she suddenly tossed her hip to the side,

  flipped her hands out at shoulder height,

  glanced up, and said:

  “Look, mom, it’s all gone.”

  All That Glitters

  The trees at the edge of town

  seek in vain to be heard

  with every passing wind.

  The crescent moon

  and stunning array of stars

  have not a single disciple

  on the empty street,

  but inside the pulsating nightclub,

  women, wearing neon skirts

  and perfume which smells like money,

  sit cross-legged on high-backed stools,

  sipping cocktails

  not worthy of the name,

  surrounded by men

  whose clothes jingle

  like pocket change when they move,

  and whose eyes, when reflected

  in the dazzling mirror behind the bar,

  seem, at times, to flash

  inside their heads like some sort of

  genetic, next-generation bling

  making its ghoulish debut

  in the midst of a receptive crowd.

  Thanks

  Mom,

  for the gift of life

  because it doesn’t take a Nobel Prize Winner

  to figure out
that without it I would have been,

  from the beginning of time

  part of the black pall of absolute nothingness,

  which, for some strange reason,

  has just made Archibald MacLeish’s

  stunning little work of art

  The End of the World pop into my mind,

  a gem, it occurs to me, I would never have had

  the joy of reading for the first time,

  or the pleasure of re-reading over the years

  to remind myself that life is a circus

  there is no way out of,

  even if you try to play it safe

  by being only a spectator.

  And thanks, Dad,

  for the unconditional love,

  which I have carried with me

  every single day of my seventy years,

  like that little pocket knife

  you always kept in your trousers

  that seemed to be able to do more work

  and get you out of more jams

  than a truckload of specialty tools.

  And thanks, God,

  for letting us all die,

  often in bizarre, unexpected, and brutal ways,

  because without death,

  life would just not seem so precious to us.

  Funny how that works,

  but I guess you would have to have your perspective

  to fully appreciate the humor in it.

  You Are Also What You Don’t Do

  When my country went to war based on a lie,

  I saw the face of my dear dead father

  as he instructed me to always tell the truth.

  When my country engaged in torture,

  I thought about the astonishing irony

  of every talk show host

  and every concerned parent in America

  condemning, with high moral indignation,

  the act of bullying.

  When my country said that the euphemism

  Enhanced Interrogation Techniques

  had produced valuable results,

  I wondered how it would be to

  live in a world in which everyone believed

  the end always justifies the means.

  In spite of all that,

  when my country violated its principles,

  I did not take to the streets to protest.

  Instead, I stayed in my comfortable

  three bedroom house pretending

  it was not being done in my name;

  sat at my spacious dining room table,

  enjoying the fruits of the land,

  as though not a single thing had changed,

  as though what was being

  done on my property, somehow,

  had nothing whatsoever to do with me.

  Charles C. Childers

  Camouflage

  Under the shade of a barren

  apple orchard, little children play

  at poverty.

  With no shoes, they smear dirt

  on their noses and clothes.

  All innocence in hillbilly blackface.

  They make mock depression dolls

  with their lunch left-overs, chuck rocks

  at beehives, pummel a copperhead corpse

  with fiberglass fence-posts and fish for leaves

  in mud puddles with bits of string.

  They were sensible enough

  to bring these things

  from the air-conditioned city.

  By the time they return

  to the farmhouse, they’re covered

  in burs, like coonhound curs,

  new clothes all tattered and torn.

  Their aged grandma catches them,

  and tans their backs with a switch.

  The children, tear-choked,

  scream incoherently

  at the injustice of it all.

  Privilege

  It was a generation that crept

  along on knee-pads.

  These, the picayune people,

  preyed upon

  the Almighty Dollar,

  panhandling in cashmere suits

  and charmeuse silk dresses.

  Recessive

  My mother’s in the living room,

  staining the walls, spraying

  them with the sickly sweet yellow

  smell of cigarillo smoke,

  using calloused hands as an ashtray,

  and my father’s out of work.

  I can hear him in the bedroom

  suppressing sobs,

  like smothering puppies,

  into a bed-wallowed pillow.

  They barely speak between

  their gasping, both fighting for air

  in their claustrophobic closeness.

  Underseam

  Between the incessant barking of the mixed-

  pomeranian pup and the cutting clink

  of knives on plates, nothing was audible—

  a silence intolerable.

  Of course, not racist, they kept their traps

  shut. But still, she was a stain on the white tablecloth,

  which one hides on the underside

  or else attacks vigorously with bleach.

  Synchronized

  It’s dusk, and fireflies dot

  the horizon in every direction,

  communicating with their own kind

  of Morse code. Brief dashes and dots

  lighting up the trees, signals intermingling

  with the indecipherable effects

  of this midsummer evening.

  As I fiddle with my notebook, trying

  to capture the intricacies

  of their language, I realize

  its a frequency which has been denied me,

  the antenna of my linguistic ear

  broken to the complex cries

  of their community.

  One of theirs lands on my hand

  in an act of sheer defiance,

  as if to further my frustration

  flaunt its semantic prowess,

  and began to brandish

  a rather aureate display

  in order to irritate me.

  . . . - - - . . .

  I smashed it and felt satisfied,

  demonstrating my own form

  of intellectual supremacy.

  Ricky Ray

  Listening

  A man, tired after a day’s long journey, comes to a cabin in the woods and opens the door. The hinges squeak and the sound of wings shuffles overhead. He walks in, waits for his eyes to grow into the darkness, to make out its forms.

  He finds a stool by a table and sits to rest, not wanting to try his back on the floor. He has no sleeping bag and does not feel like piling leaves. He puts his head to the table and listens.

  It speaks through his skin, his mind, tells him all he can remember of tables, of wood, trees, seeds and growth, of splinters, termites, rotting and soil.

  Eventually his mind takes him to the edge of the field where he grows quiet and humble, where his inner voice no longer speaks for the table, and feeling takes over.

  He sits there a long time, until his forehead begins to hurt. Then he lifts his arm and runs his hand along the edge of the table, slowing to finger its nicks, its rough spots, stopping at the rounded corner.

  There, in the oily smoothness that might be the inner elbow of someone he once caressed in the night, he grasps the part of the table, the part of the tree, the part of himself that, then as now, he does not and cannot know.

  In that shadow of time, in the descending darkness he belongs to the cabin and falls asleep, waking when his neck grows hot under the morning sun. If he dreamt, he doesn’t remember.

  He listens, not to the table this time, but to the living day—the things he can hear, and the things he can’t. The hinges squeak. His stomach grumbles. A box of crackers, quiet as a skeleton, stales in a hidden alcove behind the cupboard. A small-breasted birdsong slips under the door.
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  The Crossroads a Pound of Flesh Is

  Sun and water become seed and soil

  become timothy and clover

  sharp and soft in the evening,

  lips wet, fuzzy with milk, manure in the barn,

  calves the color of gloves and coal

  grazing in the rain.

                                    Add years and slaughter:

  a block of meat bought from a beef farmer,

  blue-green plaid kilt,

  splashes of red in his beard, slight New England

  twang, an upturn at the corner of his mouth,

  neither smile nor smirk, etched, when

  he needs to put it on.

                                       Add minutes and sweat:

  this block, ten dollars, marbled with fat,

  frozen pound in plastic pressed between palms,

  freezes the hands I wrap around my dog’s Irish ears

  as we sit on the bench, inching back from the sun,

  gently rocking in the rise and fall of her breath

  as she raises her nose to study

  a scent I cannot detect,

  folds upper lip under lower canine,

  pensive about its statement.

                                                   Add seconds and sense:

  come to some conclusion, she crosses one paw

  over the other, tufts of cinnamon pluming

  between toes, drops her jaw, unrolls

  her tongue, lets drip one bead

  of saliva and pants the heat away.

  Quiet, Grit, Glory

  Sometimes I go silent, not intending to,

  just following an inclination to be quiet,

  and then some shadow will pass

  and I’ll think to respond, engage again,

  throw voice and opinion,

  take the counterpunches they ignite,

  but before I do I turn my head aside

  and hear the woods calling,

  and the pull of that call tugs deeper,

  so I go into the woods,

  and when I come out to some

  road or town or intent to be social,

  I feel obliged to live up to the weight

  the silence has spread over us,

  and I can’t, the word weighs too much,

  puts a whole world of gravity in the tongue,

  so I stay silent—I sit with it until it breaks.

  And sometimes that breaking is heavy,

  the shattering of metal, lead, hammers,

  brick you have to chew until

  the teeth work it down to grit,

  then the tongue resumes its fighting shape of yore

  and lashes like I’ve always been in the ring,

  even when I left all buildings

  and said nothing but what was said

  by the ring of the horizon.