
The Tournament of Roses
Since dawn Jesus has walked the streets
with different faces and portable PA’s
expounding on hell Jesus has nothing good to say
before the flowers come roll down the road on wheels
on floats made of roses and rice and lentils everything organic
Police on motorcycles clear the road
an elegant performance of authority weaving
through one other practiced turns braids
of uniformed noise that leave people breathless behind barriers
the hot dog vendors follow 8:00 AM smells like lunch
Out of the silent sky roars
a black triangle that eclipses the sun
jagged kite stealth bomber dark overhead
before we knew it was part of the show
the beginning of tomorrow’s game
We squeeze tight in our nest
all our upturned and open mouths waiting
like wet chicks for our mother to drop
all the weight she holds
down our throats
Clear Cut
Fly west into sunset soar across map lines and hours
touch down in adolescent groves hand planted over forty years
by a married couple tree by tree growing their home
on old plantation land once deforested for pineapples purchased
with borrowed cash but repaid in greenery living
in island shade as if boundaries and clocks
remained uninvented or counted only where anger is measurement
abacus in a suit not the light or rain required
to conjure thousands of native palms
reaching to sky and clouds over native soil
Fly home forward into turbulence and migraines
into bosses and modular office space
feel the blood in your brain drip
into contracts and clauses
talent on lockdown in the cells of spreadsheets
no formulas for trees no sum of palms sprout
at the bottom of a white column you
stand beneath wall clocks whose second hands sweep
and chop until your body’s trunk is clear cut
fallen man nothing to stand for
Second Coming
Straight-line wasps and symmetry, half a brain on feed
and half a brain on build, the ingrained will to wait
out the garden hose’s harsh nozzle, a nest’s erasure,
because here is the home, the cedar shake not far
from fallen birches, unstained lawn chairs, and the seasonal
return to the right angles and joist of the hive.
Why kill them each summer? The children ride bikes nearby,
the mother walks for the mail. Last year wasps wiggled
the window between storm glass and pane and performed
for the kids like a science experiment—watch them
come and go, see the fresh eggs yearn and pulse.
We are here. They are here. We call for the chrysanthemums
ground into powder. For clarity
in toxins. Don’t save the receipts. It was
paid for years ago. Prophecy. We drowned chipmunks
in paint buckets as they paddled until tired
of swimming in seeds, while the mice nibbled on green
cubes in the cool basement, an engineered demise
they deliver to their own nests inscribed
with the symmetry of feed and build. The cost
is a bother. Our spending a cross out
through a line. The woodpecker returns. Bangs the house
for bugs. You can hear hunger knock in every room.
Feed and build, so we’re planting a religion of trees,
apple and magnolia, invitations for mouths and wings
and even the deer who stand on hind legs
to batter the high fruit from the sky to the earth
while you’re still trying to figure out why, why
am I in this day with these dulled senses.
Why live the world by laws of languages
unreadable, unrecognizable, meaning
tucked away in old, fossilized nests and mud dens
and hollowed trees uninhabited by the life
that presents today as nuisance—and it is said
Abraham or Christ would return unrecognizable
among us, maybe in the stench of homelessness,
the grip of addiction, or a woman who wants to live
as a man, but the symmetry is our undoing, always
feed and build, because the return is already
over and done, it lived as the tic or the ant,
silverfish or centipede, the savior in an insect
with a soft shell for this world.