THE BURIAL
I admit
I want a sleek black Benz
and a 4-car garage
and my studio reached by tunnels
in the northern California reaches
the Pacific O not far
for sojourns, including bonfires
and now that I can see the stars
let me doze on the hump of beach
and ponder cosmos
my driver awaiting
as I drink from my flask
an elixir not of this world
but from dreamscapes of old guys
like William Blake
or Hieronymus Bosch
with the peep of Miss Dickinson
forever tickling my scrotum
I confess
in my world Emily's Korean
and knows all the ins and outs
of perfectly fermented kimchee
while I wield my nakiri
I got a stable of thoroughbreds
I got a mansion the size of Atlantis
and places to go, like the moon, or Saturn
flat on my back caressing the curvature of the earth
the Pleiades behind my Ray-Bans
nurturing some
new flower
THE HICCUP
somewhere
somebody's getting banged
or burglarized
or eating a grilled cheese
sandwich
having a quiet drink
watching a re-run
betting against
the home team
somewhere
somebody's shooting up
staring at the wall
or walking the dog
putting laundry
in the dryer
raping some autistic girl
poisoning the pigeons
while elsewhere
someone's
reduced to a husk
by taxes
by arthritis
by teetotalism
by television
by lethargy
while in the 1% spectrum
it's a party
a banquet
a wedding
a victory
one day
after the other
the only surprises being
a microbe
or a virus
some libidinous scandal
or terribly random accident
just a blip
a hiccup
a drop of dust in a speck of bucket
beyond the pale
before business as usual
one day after
another
THE CRASH
In an emergency
it's a racecourse for fire engines and ambulances.
inferno in the theatre,
a high-school shooting,
a furor at the nail salon-
telle est la vie.
In alleyways the tent-villagers turn and gawk
before resuming jonesing.
It's not considered grave until the helicopters arrive;
choppers, drones hovering in the backyard,
barbecue in a tornado-
quick, where's the kids,
'cause it's high time for
target practice at the preschool.
There's a crisis, a cannonade in the making
spurned by chequered flags,
the Jolly Rogers of Indianapolis,
Le Mans, Daytona, Monaco.
NO FOAM
I got a beard like Rumi,
Brancusi,
Walt Whitman,
Monet.
it's wild and intangible;
a briar patch of alien
intervention.
neither Adonis nor Apollo,
not David with his sling.
in the end, though
despite my infinite excuses
I'm really just a lazy bastard
who hates shaving.
Jay Passer's poetry and prose has
appeared in print and online since 1988. He is the author of 12 collections,
most recently The Cineaste, from Alien Buddha Press, 2021. Passer lives
and works in San Francisco, the city of his birth.
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