U.S.A. 1980
James
Blood Ulmer's funky jazz
prays
to a red-brick sidestreet
where
smoke speaks in haggard tongues,
Cadillacs
- rolling past. There are cigarette-voiced men inside,
hats
like temples that shield their faith;
this
is the word of John Coltrane - can I have an amen?
Jake
and Elwood and Sister Aretha
spin
on diner seats
like
the records Van Morrison played decades away,
time
for cool-crisp rain crackling like bacon on beautiful concrete,
time
for tv, Ranger Smith and Squiddly Diddly, who gave me the kiss of life today.
Teddy
turned his lips from the television screen an hour later
and
killed his daddy's dream.
America
said just enough in its post-mortem,
Fatso
in Hawaii took out the bill of rights,
bleached
it in venom
The Shark
Small-town
dreamers huddle like leeches around this
boy,
soft-ball captain, suit poured on him, all 140 or so pounds;
His
pop had problems back in '85,
though
that waterfall ran dry,
I
guess he's lucky to be alive;
each
time I reach out, he's reaching somewhere else,
fixing
his dicky bow, flaring his nostrils;
The
Shark, they
call him - laughing,
the
pride of Hicksville ready to strike;
His
mom avoids me most days,
unless
it's a funeral,
or
the seamstresses she runs to decided to run away;
Nor
was Harriet Olsen available today.
In
his brother's crusades
mats
are kicked away from the west,
allegiance
to one God,
one
God alone,
like
he’s Jesus' own stepdad, immortal in this creeping flesh.
I
call up Captain Quint
on
Thursday -
he
says he’s got better ones to fry
Song for Jon-Erik Hexum
Bleached-smells
turn to gold-dust’s vomit
and
dressing
gowns
sweep
sorrow
from
an endless apology of
bed-pan
floors.
On
floors where nurses talk of high-school full-backs
from
mid-west towns where grass and wheat grows rib-cage high
I
dream with you, hold your hand.
The
handsome boys know jack-shit about anything life sends their way,
God’s
greatest song
is
coming to its coda in this one,
the
fragments piecing broken life back
together
Song for Gaetano Scirea
A
latter-day haircut tight and creeping
like
a dream that takes a wrong turn
into
Dante's smoke and mirrors,
a
short back and sides tell me that dream's
weaving
through a back-street in Turin,
and
we can all begin,
hovering
like a matador down that wing,
the
barbers of death like a moon bleeding out its stars,
a
September song
with
its hair always long
John Doyle is from County Kildare in Ireland. He returned to writing poetry in February 2015 after a gap of nearly 7 years. Since then he's had 6 poetry collections published, with a 7th collection, "Isolated Incidents" due to be released by Pski's Porch in Summer 2021.
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