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    Joe

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    Joe

      By

      John J. Beach

      ~~~~

      Published By

      Joe

      Copyright © 2013 by John J. Beach

      ~~~~

      License Notes:

      This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. It may not be re-sold or given away to others. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please purchase a copy of your own. Thank you for respecting the work of this author.

      ~~~~

      Contents

      Introduction: Joe

      Airport Terminal

      Flying in the SUV

      Dwelling Place

      Rough Housing

      Petting Livestock

      Member of the EPA

      Further Basement Detail

      Hitting the Bricks

      Immurement Empathy

      Social Function and the Secondhand Eight Year Old

      Inter Networking

      Curves and Tangential Lines

      Ends of the Earth

      Aetiolation

      Devising

      Watching the Boy Play

      Pig Iron

      Pedestrian Priest, Bicycling Boy

      Ōþala

      Repointing

      About the Author

      Introduction

      The terzanelle is a poetic form that combines elements from the terza rima and the villanelle. Terza is italian for one third (of three equal parts), while rima means rhyme. Each stanza of a terza-rima poem contains three lines—often ten syllables each—and the poetic structure uses an end-rhyming pattern: ABA, BCB, CDC, and so on. A terza rima poem can consist of any number of these interlocking tercets, but it usually concludes with a couplet (or a single line) rhyming with the second line of the last tercet. The subject matter of the poem can be about anything, but anecdotes or descriptive portraits are popular.

      Joe is a book of 20 terzanelle poems. These poems are also a work of sequential fiction created and arranged in order to tell the story of a young boy. After his mother moves halfway around the world without him, Joe is transplanted into new surroundings and culture. Here, he befriends a pig, and, within an old photograph, he discovers what he believes is a great mystery.

      Joe is dedicated to the inquisitive children who live inside of all of us. May we never outgrow them.

      ~~~~

      Airport Terminal

      “I love you—with an exclamation mark.”

      Her words rustle in Joe’s brain. She unbends,

      rises ready to board and disembark

      without her young man. Where this journey wends,

      her path, uncertain. Like a wind-blown leaf,

      her words rustle in Joe’s brain as she unbends

      their small family. “The Great Barrier Reef

      can be seen from space, Joe. It’s biotic.”

      Her path, uncertain, like a wind-blown leaf.

      Her touch, bloodless. It’s a broken-off stick,

      no longer serves the community. “It

      can be seen from space, Joe. It’s biotic,

      the largest skeleton the world has knit.”

      At this point, Joe feels his bones. His mother

      no longer serves the community. It

      will exist in memories that smother

      “I love you” with an exclamation mark.

      At this point, Joe feels his bones. His mother

      rises, ready to board and disembark.

      Flying in the SUV

      Rear-storage pockets on the bucket seat—

      Joe tips fingers in, stretches back the flaps,

      repeats a plop-popping polyester beat.

      Dad pendulums eyes from road to boy, wraps

      short, meaty-hands on the steering wheel’s neck.

      Joe tips fingers in, stretches back. The flaps

      flop. Joe’s hand flutters, circles the flight deck

      (the plastic armrest), landing in a screech.

      Short, meaty-hands on the steering wheel’s neck

      twist, crush out an audible squeak, beseech,

      “Read. Quietly. My son.” Joe props upon

      the plastic armrest. Landing in a screech,

      his eyes claw roadway signs, catch on

      names of cities, rattle inside his head.

      “Read quietly, my son.” Joe props upon

      the floor carpet, haunch sits. Both his hands spread

      rear-storage pockets on the bucket seat.

      The names of cities rattle inside. His head

      repeats plop-popping polyester beats.

      Dwelling Place

      “That’s it, there.” Joe watches the farm house grow

      two-, four-, eight-times larger as they draw near

      driving up a stretch of Class 5 gravel,

      park their beast, wait for Grandma to appear.

      His father’s mother is now Joe’s mother

      (two-, four-, eight-times larger). As they draw near,

      her gravity pulls one then the other.

      She presses her freckles to their faces.

      His father’s mother is now Joe’s mother.

      Slender hugs become sumo embraces,

      stretches. Morning begins at five o’clock.

      She presses her freckles to their faces.

      Little Boy, her cat, paces, likes to stalk

      murky against the wood, looks for someone,

      stretches. “Morning” begins at five o’clock

      at night, with cat’s lair shrouded from the sun.

      That’s it. There, Joe watches the farmhouse grow

      murky against the wood, looks for someone

      driving up a stretch of Class 5 gravel.

      Rough Housing

      For the first week, Joe follows Little Boy,

      learns the lay of the house—slanted. Its floors

      tip towards rugged decor that’s Hoi Polloi,

      rooms with air pockets full of the outdoors.

      The cat knows the warmest spots, and Joe soon

      learns the lay of the house. Slanted, its floors

      don’t quite meet the walls, and a mousey tune

      scratches, burning between the two by fours.

      The cat knows the warmest spots, and Joe soon

      is there listening with him. Joe’s dad roars,

      “Can’t catch mice in walls, even if they’re dead!”

      Scratches, burning between the two by fours,

      trip and blow breakers in the feline head.

      Too much care murders a cat. Brooding thoughts

      can’t catch mice in walls. Even if they’re dead,

      they’re beyond worry. Feeling at a loss

      for the first week, Joe follows Little Boy.

      Too much care murders a cat. Brooding thoughts

      tip towards rugged, decor that’s Hoi Polloi.

      Petting Livestock

      Her other cat is a pig named Fat Man.

      Grandma Mother calls him, “Kitty, Kitty,

      here, Kitty.” Joe’s dad prefers “White Trash Can”

      and not hauling scraps to him. The City

      once complained about the stout omnivore.

      Grandma Mother calls him, “Kitty, Kitty,”

      but cutesy words don’t domesticate boar,

      change ordinances, or remove complaints.

      Once complained about, the stout omnivore

      and Grandma Mother, neither of them saints,

      greasy-palmed some councilmen, requested,

      “Change ordinances or remove complaints.”

      In the end, this failed, and her pet, bested,

      lives now just out of town, well fed, sloppy.

      Greasy-palm
    ed, some councilmen requested

      pork-free statute law if the pork pet be.

      Her other cat is a pig named Fat Man,

      lives now just out of town, well-fed, sloppy

      “Kitty.” Joe’s dad prefers “White Trash Can.”

      Member of the EPA

      When it rains hard, the cellar water-fills.

      Joe’s new job is to broom it to the drain,

      move low-spot puddles or “start growing gills.”

      Floor’s patched, glaciated, looks like moraine

      accumulated into pebbled sheets.

      Joe’s new job is to broom it. To the drain,

      he squeegees in canals and silty streets,

      landscapes for his Lego adventure teams.

      Accumulated into pebbled sheets

      are years of green substances. Swirled in streams,

      they’ve become “radioactive,” scrubber

      landscapes for his Lego adventure teams

      clad in vinyl hazmat suits and rubber.

      Joe’s mission: near-surface waste disposal;

      they’ve become radioactive. Scrubber

      work’s hazardous, but, each man has his role.

      When it rains hard, the cellar water-fills.

      Joe’s mission: near-surface waste disposal,

      move low-spot puddles or “start growing gills.”

      Further Basement Detail

      It’s a pine painter’s caddy, white painted,

      repurposed, a rest home now for captured

      moments, life Polaroided and ancient.

      The film images are washed and blurred,

      randomly sorted, bent into this box

      repurposed, a rest home now for captured

      memories, postcards, bad-investment stocks.

      Joe notices details, organizes

      randomly sorted. Bent into this box,

      a picture of the basement surprises

      the boy. In the background, there is a space.

      Joe notices details, organizes

      what he sees, and knows a wall in that place;

      yellowing, mortared, cement blocks seal off

      the boy. In the background, there is a space

      that’s been repurposed like this picture trough

      (It’s a pine painter’s caddy, white-painted).

      Yellowing, mortared, cement blocks seal off

      moments, life Polaroided and ancient.

      Hitting the Bricks

      Joe is down there and doesn’t love a wall

      that curtains frozen, airless space behind,

      drapes enigmas, from the sun wears a shawl

      of new and old brick courses well aligned.

      He has come to examine the façade

      that curtains frozen, airless space behind.

      Joe is a hunter, hunting down the fraud

      and would have the rabbit out of hiding

      he has come to examine. The façade

      multipled. Joe would have it dividing

      at his touch, breaking open the warren,

      and would have the rabbit out of hiding.

      This stone fence needs unmending; he’s the one

      wants it down, uncovered, but it stands strong

      at his touch.  Breaking open the warren,

      that two-by-four space, is his new mouse song.

      Joe is down there and doesn’t love a wall,

      wants it down, uncovered. But it stands strong,

      drapes enigmas from the sun, wears a shawl.

      Immurement Empathy

      Mother taught Joe to search the Internet.

      Deprived of oxygen, the body rots.

      Pancreatic enzymes digest, beset

      the abdomen, which blisters aqua spots.

      Skin shrinks, looks like hair and nails have grown.

      Deprived of oxygen, the body rots,

      outpours green substances. A gassy moan

      often protrudes and bubbles off the tongue.

      Skin shrinks, looks like hair and nails have grown

      for weeks until they detach after lung

      fluids have oozed up and out. The death spew

      often protrudes and bubbles off the tongue.

      This is where hyperlinks have led Joe to.

      He can feel his last meal. Churning inside,

      fluids have oozed up and out. The death spew

      reeks of methane and hydrogen sulfide.

      Mother taught Joe to search the Internet.

      He can feel his last meal churning. Inside,

      pancreatic enzymes digest, beset.

      Social Function and the Secondhand

      Eight Year Old

      “Well… Mother says religion is a crutch,

      a crime, which holds up God while crushing men.”

      Joe blabs this out, and, perhaps, it’s a bit much

      coming right after the priest says, “Amen.”

      Father “Spaghetti” sits well with the boy:

      “A crime? Which holds up God while crushing men?

      No, son. I don’t believe so. He’s brought joy,

      brings us all together.”

      “For His bounty,

      Father?” (Spaghetti sits well with the boy.)

      “All things good: pot-luck dinners… that brownie.”

      (He wishes he could be eating.) “His grace

      brings us all together for His bounty,

      to share our blessings, fill the empty place

      that is hunger… leaving hope.” (Unfulfilled,

      he wishes he could be eating.) “His grace

      is not desire; God’s in what we build.”

      “Well, Mother says religion is a crutch

      that is hunger, leaving hope unfulfilled.”

      Joe blabs this out, and, perhaps it’s a bit much.

      Inter Networking

      The card reads “Happy Nine Point Seven Five.”

      Joe’s mother will always count in the nine

      months they grew together, were both alive,

      abutting, shared a prenatal blood line.

      Although their universe is expanding,

      Joe’s mother will always count. In the nine

      weeks Emma’s been gone, Joe’s understanding

      who he is, and he’s become more like her.

      Although their universe is expanding,

      the two of them Skype weekly to confer

      life’s nutrients. She’s still feeds him, birthing

      who he is. And he’s become more like her,

      lives far off, is obsessed with unearthing

      a duration of interment. Pregnant

      life’s nutrients, she’s still feeds him: “Birthing

      bears fruit but also the seeds to replant.”

      The card reads “Happy Nine Point Seven Five”:

      a duration of interment, pregnant

      months they grew together, were both alive.

      Curves and Tangential Lines

      On the way to the store, Joe asks his dad,

      “Whatever happened to Granddad’s first wife?”

      There’s a brief pause. “Did I ask something bad?”

      “No, son. She… had a different walk of life,

      loved him, but the timing just wasn’t right.”

      “Whatever happened to Granddad’s first wife?”

      “He didn’t follow her. She thought he might

      although she asked him not to. I’m sure she

      loved him, but the timing just wasn’t right.

      Dad was a creature of his time. Marie,

      your Grandma Mother, lives more in the past,

      although she asked him not to, I’m sure. She

      left us one day, all angry. ‘Dad,’ I asked,

      ‘do you think Mother’s ever coming back?’

      Your Grandma Mother lives more in the past

      and Dad knew that, said, ‘I’m sure she is, Jack.’”

      On the way to the store, Joe asks his dad,

      “Do you think Mother’s ever coming back?”
    r />
      There’s a brief pause. “Did I ask something bad?”

      Ends of the Earth

      A hogshead is a unit of measure.

      It varies depending on what’s in it.

      A hog’s ass is just full of manure,

      infinite shovelfuls of walled-up shit.

      Straw-matted and thick, or a farm slurry,

      it varies depending on what’s in it.

      Slow in coming and now in a hurry,

      Joe’s dad has up and left for Australia.

      Straw-matted and thick or a farm slurry,

      a man’s hog-ass head may muse Thalia,

      flourish in idyllic fertilizer.

      Joe’s dad has up and left for Australia.

      Having half a world may make men wiser,

      know as much as hogs know about Sunday:

      flourish in idyllic fertilizer,

      wallow in comfort, mark your scent, and pray

      a hogshead is a unit of measure.

      Know as much as hogs know about Sunday:

      a hog’s ass is just full of manure.

      Aetiolation

      The hog shed was built to house one only.

      Insulated cement blocks four-foot high—

      just room enough for one boar and lonely

      stretches on the inside. Outside, the sty

      fenced in a hundred twelve feet of wallow,

      insulated cement blocks four-foot high,

      a tarped cat door opening to swallow

      a Fat Man’s entrance. His integral life:

      fenced in a hundred twelve feet of wallow,

      he has two automatic feeders rife

      with dry food, a wet sprinkler he can bite,

      a Fat Man’s entrance. His integral life

      is free from being eaten, from the light,

      from true companionship. He has affairs

      with dry food, a wet sprinkler he can bite,

      a young boy who comes by to share his tears.

      The hog shed was built to house one… only

      from true companionship. He has affairs—

      just room enough for one boar and lonely.

      Devising

      Joe scratched and chiseled Portland brick mortar

      with an old screwdriver and claw hammer.

      He worked around one brick’s perimeter

      on the third course, held down the tools’ clamor,

      kept silent about this undertaking

      with an old screwdriver and claw hammer.

      All the while, he was decision making

     
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