MICHAEL ROTHENBERG

 

See Michael Rothenberg's BIO & NARCISSUS JOURNAL on Tsunami bOOKS

 

PHANTOM, COME HITHER!

                             for Ira Cohen

 

 

 

You're not having enough fun

Or smoking enough dope

 

Not opening up your head

Or heading out into the open

 

So go (NOW) to the Cosmic Hotel

Check in to the Paradise suite

 

Give the Akashic cashier

All your hard-earned money

 

Condemn the sacred incantation

Of your tragic virgin muse

 

Pay tribute to the grave robbers

 

To troubadour Francois Villon

Master bandit vagabond

 

Break open the sky!

 

Let the shattered stars shred all memories

On the bloody road to ruin

 
Map the trail where lost dreamers go

 

This is not a day for archives

Libraries or documentaries

 

Pound the wheel into motion

Lie without shame

 

In a bramble of white roses

 

Run in terrible glee through worlds

Of avant-garde Pinocchios

 

Dance like Yakas

 

In the hallowed wheat fields

Of Indiana, Ohio and Idaho

 

The Killing fields of Pollyanna!

 

Drink to the masked dancers. Have fun!

Because that’s what suffering is for

 

There is no time for contemplation

No time to lean on a lamppost

And smoke that forgotten cigarette. . .

 

Instead, blow blue smoke into the lights of a dying city!

While the sun goes up and down and up

 

And you shed your skin
And I shed mine

 

And die, and die, and die

With every fucking breath

 

Death-click, enlargement, refraction, replication and scan

 

You're holding on too tight

To your rule book

 

Operating manual

 

Your life

You don’t need your life!

 

Step outside and scream

To the Daughters of Hell!

 

I’m waiting for you

Ghost draped in flesh

 

Waiting for you

To turn me on.

                                  

           June 7, 2000

 

 

* this poem appeared in the book CHOOSE  (Big Bridge Press)

 

DAY OF CHANGE

 

( this poem appeared in the book My Youth As A Train, Foothills Publishing, NY)

 

 

 

Toothpick, quarter, nickel, four pennies, red paper clip. No one to call

All heroes gone. Briefcase, calendars, fresh sharpened pencils

Business cards with another change of address

 

What did it mean when I said, "Don't stop" and she said, "I haven't even started"

Family photos

 

When will they bury me?

 

Puppet Shakespeare, stone crab claw relic, dead coral verse

Everyone complaining, philosophical, equipment malfunctioning

 

Wash towels, dishes, sheets, face, brush hair, teeth

Keep up appearances

 

until license plate, jazz lamp, onyx letter opener become slivers

in a nightmare-Armada of small jinxed boats

Like after hurricane Donna when kids paddled down flooded Miami streets

 

Or when the outboard motor lept into an Everglades swamp and sank

No one said chain it down

 

I rowed home against a rising tide

 

                                               *

 

Somewhere in the Keys,

a mile out fishing for sheepshead and snapper,

in rolling waves by tolling buoy when a storm blows in

We can’t beat it back to shore
Bail with cup and saucer,

soaked in matching windbreakers

tiny white sneakers and daybreeze scarves

Until an old Dutch freighter takes us all aboard

Faces whipped by tears and rain

Mom thought it was the end of the family line

 

                                                           *

 

Still, tides played, drummed black sand shores, thundering again. Seagulls, white ruffled, perched on tide-bound cliff. Braced against flying Pacific swell and brine, while she

thought of something else, Odessa, Black Sea or Crimea, but not my deep need for intimacy. So I set sail, slept in a thousand rooms, drove desert west, then south through clattery muck and thick green flesh of Florida. Turnpiked and truckstopped, aimlessly, so maybe just once I could face the ocean's fist, infinite daylight, play on bird's-nest reef, sift through olive, scallop, conch shell, painlessly, conjure the stroke of tide, her pale narrow wrists, adore... But that beach has slipped. Only dark poetry drives me


Pocket change, typewriting paper, blood-red inkjets

 

                                   *

 

I took my son, Cosmos, and a shopping list

 

Bought size 1 running shoes, gray heeled socks

Bounced across the mall parking lot picking up lost pennies in potholes

 

                                               *

Columbus Day weekend

Sailing synchronized clouds blossoming overhead

Impossible blue jets in formation

crossing between towers of joyous Golden Gate

Bumper to bumper we drove up the ridge

then down by foot, over slick face of scrubby Marin headland

Almost slept in the treble of pebbles bouncing on our heads

But we couldn't sleep, and what she said and I said

counted for nothing

 

                                               *

 

See an exhibition of women's art

Four plaster death masks, none of them mine

 

                   I sign the guest book

                     to make a place, always

      

Yet never enough of a place to make a point, make a trip, guide

my free broken spirit into myth.