On your 79th Birthday - C.K. The Borg
to the memory of C.K. Williams (Nov. 4, 1936-Sept. 20, 2015)
If I were to build you
as a borg,
I would keep the long,
basketball body,
the arrogant entrance,
the eyes that could register
today and anger
the past and irony
and embed
the long, floaty
lines
that kept people
marveling and confused
for when the Borg
began to rebel enough
to shape words
into poetry
Poems Dedicated to C.K. Williams
Wednesday, November 4, 2015
Tuesday, October 6, 2015
Shell Game
Shell Game
Sh. and B.
in the Green Kangaroo
or whatever that
hippyish restaurant
on CommAv across
from the Department
was called -
divulged
with many a
sad downcast look
and a paused sip
of espresso
that you'd made
a pass at P.
What they didn't say:
you and Sh.
On a couch.
Every week.
In your office.
Sunday, October 4, 2015
First and Second Acts
First and Second Acts
The famous poet A.,
who helped you,
along with famous poet S.
and not as famous poet G.,
who disliked you on principle,
got drunk at the Ritz in town.
(A. parked at the
loading dock and said
it was okay
because they were going
to get loaded.)
Sh., B. and I drank instead
at Grendel's Lair
and took public transport.
Sh. sexed you.
B. adored you.
I love-hated you.
The play goes on.
Friday, October 2, 2015
Warning
Warning
After Friday class,
B. no longer
had sex with her husband
When I grew sad
and looked grumpy,
she said, "Have fun with it.
Don't sweat.
I go to all his readings."
She and her husband divorced
twenty years later.
Wednesday, September 30, 2015
In Praise Of
In Praise Of
You told another prof
I had more brains
in my little finger
than everyone you knew
combined.
I stretched my little
finger
back and forth
when he told me.
We watched brainlets
unravel
by the nerveload.
Tuesday, September 29, 2015
After You Got Angry
After You Got Angry
My housemate
heard a sound
that groaned
then sloughed off
then gathered nasal
steam
then rose to an aching
sob
then stopped so short
that she tiptoed
into my room
while I was trying
to breathe again
and woke me
to tell me
I had been
screaming
Saturday, September 26, 2015
The Poetry Man
The Poetry Man
You crept into your office
each day around eight,
not because you embraced mornings,
but because you couldn't work
in the small Back Bay apartment.
Your son was five, I think.
He bored you.
Your office held no books.
I never saw you nap,
but then again,
I only bearded you
in your den
late afternoons.
More of a lair.
You nursed the desk.
Several of us
spotted the wine
in the drawer.
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