The quacking bum has found a partner
in the obese woman who’s taken off her
Mercedes Benz T-shirt. They’re kissing
smack in the center of the fountain.
The sun reflects the pool:
for a moment- they are beautiful.
The lunch-break secretaries in sneakers
are frightened by the lovers’ exalted state,
and return to high-rise cubicles.
But the couple in the fountain
are so blessed that even prick cop
Sanchez doesn't write them tickets.
Instead he's lighting a cigarette
for a blonde face-lift in 90 degree
heat and leather pants.
A naked girl with filthy feet
is laughing. Another little girl
kisses her on her left nipple
and strokes Sappho's hair.
A tattooed drunk yells to the crowd:
"My wife is royalty!"
He is embracing a grey haired
woman who is, despite the odds,
statuesque and regal. They
know they are Royalty.
Holding hands, they laugh
and stagger to an ivy bower.
After a luxurious fuck,
they fall asleep, oblivious
to us anti-royalists.
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About Me
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2010
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January
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- October by William Taylor Jr.
- A Night With Lyn Lifshin by Catfish McDaris
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- i read the big shot poets & i just don't fucking g...
- Liar by Hunter Liguore
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January
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8 comments:
This is the kind of poem that makes me wonder if the poet is an addled form of divinity perceiving surroundings; or, if he just notices the divinity that most of us over-look: and that the drunks, whores, and junkies may be hidden saints.
Not a poet; a theologian.
Nikki says,
More like The Goddess in everyone. Not the sexless, violent Yahweh, but the self-affirming, life-affirming, lusty Divine Virgin/Mother/Crone who says, "Use it, that's what it's there for."
I see this as an observation of sexual innocence in an anarchic fantasy-- A type of situation that breaks the boundaries we have created out of fear for what life lust lends.
happiness is filthy feet
Walt Whitman grunge and mighty grand at it: sloppy, gritty, clean.
I admire your ability to find beauty in all humans and situations.
I'm excited by this poet's ability to create such a full and living scene with such an economy of words.
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