GOD’S LAST WORDS TO THE STARS
June 12, 2009
Coming home from beer with a beer
I hear the brain cells popping off
one by one like firecrackers
The stars going out one by one
leaving the sky black
God sweeping the last stars
under the celestial rug
Muttering not Good riddance
to bright rubbish but (more kindly)
Out of sight out of mind
Another poem from the Songbook.
PARK BENCH POEM
May 20, 2009
Mind if I put up
a park bench
in your mind?
I mean, if
the mind is a park,
why not have a poem in it?
After all, when
you get through
buying hotdogs &
getting a load
of the swans
you’ll want
some place to
sit down. It
ought to be fairly
comfortable by
the time a few
generations of
transient assholes
have worn it
smooth, & the paint
off – though
the original idea
was to advertise
my product: my own
green life, now
flaking into winter.
EveretteMaddox.org
January 2, 2009
Well, the www.everettemaddox.org site is back up. Thank you to Tom Woolf, the sponsor of that site.
In honor of this happy start to the New Year, here’s another Maddox poem that’s just about perfect for a New Year’s posting.
BREAKFAST
Oh hush up
about the
Future: one
morning it
will appear,
right there on
your breakfast
plate, and you’ll
yell “Take it
back,” pounding
the table.
But there won’t
be any
waiters.
Everette Maddox Songbook
December 5, 2008
Well, everettemaddox.org is down again. Damn.
Some small compensation: I found that the Everette Maddox Songbook is posted on Google Books.
Not all of it, mind you, but it’s something. Ah well, so here’s a poem from that book:
GIFT
life death eternal significance
bullshit
from now on i’m just
going to make whimsical little gifts
this one is for you
it starts off with bullshit
which is mostly just to get your attention
then trudges along
through some fairly dull
explanatory stuff
and finally comes out (if i’m lucky)
at this point which
is where a little silver cowboy
blows the head off a stuffed tiger
with a pop gun
nobody is really hurt
just me because i know
you won’t accept it
Thirteen Ways of Being Looked At By A Possum
May 1, 2008
In honor of the return of www.everettemaddox.org, the poem this little outpost was named for.
THIRTEEN WAYS OF BEING LOOKED AT BY A POSSUM
1
I awake, three in the morning, sweating
from a dream of possums.
I put my head under the fuzzy swamp of cover.
At the foot of darkness two small eyes glitter.
2
Rain falls all day: I remain indoors.
For comfort I take down a favorite volume.
Inside, something slimy, like a tail, wraps around
my finger.
3
Hear the bells clang at the fire station:
not hoses, but the damp noses of possums issue
forth.
4
Passing the graveyard at night
I wish the dead would remain dead,
but there is something queer and shaggy about these
mounds.
5
From the grey pouch of a cloud
the moon hangs by its tail.
6
At the cafeteria they tell me they are out of
persimmons.
I am furious. Who is that grey delegation
munching yellow fruit at the long table?
7
I reach deep into my warm pocket
to scratch my balls; but I find, instead,
another pocket there; and inside, a small possum.
8
My friend’s false teeth clatter in the darkness
on a glass shelf;
around them a ghostly possum forms.
9
At an art gallery the portraits seem to threaten me;
tails droop down out of the frames.
10
I screech to a stop at the red light.
Three o’clock, school’s out:
eight or ten juvenile possums fill the crosswalk.
11
Midnight at Pasquale’s. I lift my fork,
and the hard tails looped there
look curiously unlike spaghetti.
12
When I go to the closet to hang my shirt on the rack,
I have to persuade several possums to move over.
13
Drunk, crawling across a country road tonight,
I hear a shriek, look up, and am paralyzed
by fierce headlights and a grinning grill.
I am as good as gone!
THE SENSE OF DECORUM IN POVERTY
April 1, 2008
I put on a shirt
with a couple of
gone buttons and a
pair of pants my wife
hates and walk into
the living room and
sit down in a dull
chair. In this way I
acknowledge nothing’s
going on. If I
wanted to really
suffer I could go
lie down in some shit,
but that transgresses
the fine line between
propriety and
masochism. If
I were any kind
of poet I’d go
stick up a Jiffy
Mart or, Say, the First
Bank of the Cosmic
Imagination.
Then I could buy a
red plaid jacket with
a rooster tie and
stumble out into
the clear autumn air
crowing “Guilty! Life,
I’m your beautiful
man.”
RUTLEDGE YOUNGBLOOD REFUSES TO LIE UNDER THE BANYAN TREE ANYMORE
February 9, 2008
Rutledge has made up his mind
this is the last day he will lie
at length in his glinting hair
his eye fixed on a fig
his toes alive in the permissive mud.
Out beyond these roots in a pool
clear by day dark by night
purple eels jiggle:
that is another universe of course
but that is not where Rutledge lives
and neither is this.
Though the air is thick with bells
bizarre with flutes
Rutledge lies on his belly now
billowing like a child’s balloon
and it means nothing to him
that ultimates and ultimates buoy him up.
He will leave in the morning
by the ordinary door
and walk in the shrill gray streets
in the old soot and sunshine.
He has learned all he needed to know,
what he already knew, that he is happy.
The Picture
December 30, 2007
The cream stucco
of my ex-wife’s dentist’s office
across the street
Light green budding liveoaks
A sky-blue Volvo backing up
on this side from
behind the red white and blue
Cinzano umbrellas
Dark figures in the front
of the dark bar
faces edged in TV baseball light
from Busch Stadium
And down at this end me
If I should die now
Oh if this moment
should indeed prove
to be the corner
I’ve spent thirty-five years
painting myself into
think only this of me
That one more cheap camera
has shattered
against the world’s beauty.
No New Tabs
December 26, 2007
“NO NEW TABS”
(Sign in the Chukker October 25, 1971)
When the stranger swung into this dark butt-littered bar,
draped his white weird toga, or whatever, over a stool,
and ordered Miller’s Malt, no one was perturbed
(it being late, and most of us dead drunk).
But when he said “No bread,” a hush fell like a flatiron.
“No new tabs,” Mark said, and gestured.
The stranger scratched his beard,
his blue eyes slow and casual as swimming pools.
“Lookee here,” said the stranger,
“I don’t know how long it takes you necks to get the papers,
but I’m the son of God,
and I could turn this Miller into wine;
but I’m inclined to turn you and your buddies into Ovaltine.
What do you say? I’m kind of in a hurry.”
One skinny arm reached out of Mark’s white shirt,
shaking, and tore the sign down.
A row of white teeth chattered and chattered,
and said, “Here at the Chukker, if nothing else, we believe.
More to the point, you gotta make exceptions.
What about another?”
Brushing the sticky halo from his hair, he went to fetch it.
Anonymous
December 26, 2007
ANONYMOUS
I sent my Shell card back with a small check to show my good faith
then i sent my Bank Americard back with the minimum monthly payment
then i cancelled my life insurance sent the Dallas lawyer all i had declared myself bankrupt
then i sent back my driver’s license social security card birth certificate
then i sent my old wallet flopping into the brown river
now when I lift my hand the sunlight pours right through it
now there is no one left for you not to love