June 26, 2012

Change by Vern Rutsala from The Moment's Equation




















In agate type the sports page lists
Transactionsso and so traded,
someone put on injured reserve,
another waived out of the league.
Such lists uncover the sadness
of change and separationour
own lives dwindling into fine print
with the aging bonus baby
sent down to double A, his great
hopes and ours a faint blur
on page four. We think of such players
gone to a kind of limbo, bat
and ball denied them, carrying
only their scuffed shoes down some road
of sore arms and bad knees. We eke
out our days among the injured
reserveslike us they may be fit
some daybut feel ourselves sliding
toward the saddest of all,
that invisible leavening of all
trades during the hot stove league,
players who don't even have names,
the players to be named later.




from the book, "The Moment's Equation" by Vern Rutsala

June 23, 2012

DON'T ASK ME ABOUT THAT FALL




Fuck it. Cold October
nights rocked the Columbia
as details hazed. Lights
shattered on the river. What
they call reflections. Sex
no longer Mystery but what
dripped from our cigarettes inside
the teeth of the colossal wind.
The stars sprayed out like tic-tacs
on the reckless river. My coat
held open just across your beating back
as if I wasn't stopped by everything, the wind
straight through us like screen doors
banged by wind. Lights shattered
on the river, and who wasn't reckless.
Steeped in the force of fall, nobody
ever questioned. As for myself,
I shoved against you, rough as tides
at every push. And as for you, it's best
your daily blackouts wash away
the way we gambled everything
with holes in both our pockets,
shooting the indifferent moon. As if
we could change anything, as if we had



-from the chapbook "Smithereens" by portland poet Starlite Motel
http://www.nightbombpress.com/




June 10, 2012

Day Labor by Jim Shugrue



Day Labor

At an age when friends desert you
going over to the dead, what is there to do?
Sit in your house surrounded by old books
while the senile republic reminds you
there are worse things than death.

Wood smoke drifts over the winter landscape,
picnic tables covered in blue plastic tarps, who knows
what the neighbors are thinking? Who knows who's harmless,
who armed to the teeth plotting revenge? I watch the birds
at the feeder for hours at a time. Their appetites,


their rivalries. How they survive the winter here.
Nervous, contemplative, a little, it seems, confused,
but eating, living, being the one thought they have.
And I'm somewhat less than them, though I too serve
to fill the cylinder with seeds.



-from the chapbook, "Floating Verses," published by barebone books

http://www.poetry.us.com/jimshugrue.html