My Irish Poet Friends Sure Don’t Smile
at Saratoga
for John Doyle
And it’s too bad, really.
Because after pocketing more crowns
than a king at the Pardubice
steeplechase
I thought you knew a thing or two
about tack and tape, your pick riding
vertigo
in Taxis Ditch, past Havel’s Jump to
the Irish Bank.
Gerald is at the barn walking hots
his nickname’s “The Monk,” quinella
fella
of the Leaky Roof Circuit, says he has
a tip
got Muldoon’s goons sizing Semtex at
Saratoga,
hard boot and harrow smile, the sky a
red shoe boil;
like capture the flag at Ticonderoga
we’re chalk players claiming box,
shoe-in
until the House of Upsets drops a
coffin bone.
So much for heaven in the afternoon,
let’s blow this popsicle stand
try our hand with the girls in Polo,
chute the Travers Canoe to the Galway
Races—
look at that turn of foot
beats mugshots on the morning line,
in the frame for old Muldoon’s crimes.
Riddle of Steel
Beyond the mists of time
In the fall of ’82
My brother started a band
Named Thulsa Doom,
Bought a Strat from The Eighth Note
With money earned from three paper
routes,
Found a drummer named Lotus
By posting flyers at a noticeboard at
the Autumn;
Day and night, again
And again my brother’s turntable
Spinning like the Wheel of Pain;
He’s shackled to power chords
Pentatonic scales
Denim battle vests
Lined with crudely stitched gore
And black magic marker.
I, his chronicler
Four years younger,
A decade smarter
Watch as he masters the universe,
Learns the riddle of steel
Opens for Vicious Angel at the
Chestnut St. Theater,
The girls slinking into his snake cult
As math equations pit fight on my
troubled brow;
And yet he still found time
Time to toy
Time to whoop swords and punch camels;
Us, waiting for the HBO Guide to
arrive
So we could plan our monthly late
nights
Of L (language), N (nudity) and V
(violence)
Watching, again and again
Doom’s children lose grip of their
mother’s hand.
Dog Star
From where I live
I can see
Girls on copper grass
Doing gymnastics;
Hot air balloons
Bending backwards
Like armfuls of jelly bracelets.
As the rock stars
Of their day
They have no love
For boys
Who dream
Of wooing Star
And so the sky screws black.
Tar and torpor are afoot,
And summer’s last tape
All but breasted;
You come and go
Talking karma
Stringing along a Slush Puppie,
Cartwheeling the heart
One-handed.
I can see
From where I live
A platform game
Of snakes and scorpions;
Tar and torpor are afoot
And summer’s last tape
All but breasted
Yet still we crave
The golden age,
Racing the beam
And dying fall
Like lost boys
On a merry-go-round.
-Mr. Toad
On Our Way
Down I-95 in naked weather
Recklessly asunder
Past summer’s unravelled farms
The hubbub of the pub
And TNT factory
Tudor estate hedged behind the artery
The crossback ringing
Until the halberds drop wildly
And so you rise from the grave
Drive your way
Through the painted plywood flats
Crash the doors of the hall
Like a stack of plates
Joyride I-95 until the bell claps
And the prayerwheel parts your hat
From hair
Let the ride begin again
Left track, right track
Your motorcar in different scenes
But the one way street’s the same
A shootout between police and weasels
Winky’s two beer spin
And in the devil’s mouth
Careens the locomotive wind.
Damon Hubbs is the author of three
chapbooks: Coin Doors & Empires (Alien Buddha
Press), The Day Sharks Walk on Land (Alien Buddha Press)
and Fly Creek (forthcoming from Naked Cat Publishing). He
lives in New England. Twitter: @damon_hubbs
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