‘The geezer alcoholics in the corner?’

Wikipedia Poem, No. 867

     break into 
air 
       leather man
break into air 
     
breathe 
      into  
   leather man
          breathe into air 
   leather jacket
   licked back 
      hair
and 
steal 
another 
      man
        break 
into 
leather 
     man
don't break
don't break man
     don't break   
       
look leather 
man
       break it or lose it 
     leather 
man
break the air 
man
      pomegranate flower
hoplite bannister  

leather man
      slip into 
        the air 
like a man
          breaks in his  
      leather 
man
breaks into 
          the hairy air 
       leather rip
    jacket rip
licked backseat 
          nothing
man sniffling 
a diagram
then sentenceless i don't exist rip
        lick leather men sniffing 
about arson
one might hang 
  about 
arson around
  one night about 
     like smoke
one might 
   break the air 
          smoke around
       one just might smoke leather man

Motorcycle Poem (Toward a Synthesis)

Wikipedia Poem, No. 845

toward new 
language [breath]  
liberate power [breath]  in a language [breath]  liberate 
choice [breath]  in a language on two wheels [breath]  hurtling 
toward the language [breath]  language [breath]  language [breath]  
liberate power [breath]  
in a language [breath]  liberate choice [breath]  in a language [breath]  
language [breath]  liberate power [breath]  in 
a language [breath]  liberate choice [breath]  in a 
    language [breath]  liberate power [breath]  in a language [breath]  
liberate 
choice [breath]  in a language [breath]  
liberate power [breath]  in a language [breath]  language [breath]  
liberate choice [breath]  in a 
language [breath]  liberate power [breath]  in a language [breath]  
liberate choice [breath]  in a language [breath]  language [breath]  
liberate 
power [breath]  in a language [breath]  liberate choice 
[breath]  in a language [breath]  liberate power [breath]  
in a language [breath]  liberate choice [breath]  in a language 
[breath]  liberate 
      power [breath]  in a language [breath]  liberate choice 
[breath]  in a language [breath]  
liberate power [breath]  in a language [breath]  language 
[breath]  liberate choice [breath]  in a language [breath]  
liberate power [breath]  in a language [breath]  liberate choice 
[breath]  
   in a language [breath]  liberate power [breath]  in a language 
[breath]  liberate choice [breath]  in a language [breath]  language
 
     on two wheels [breath]  hurdling over the shackles [breath]  suddenly
unlocks [breath]  dissolves 
or simply drop [breath]  dissolve or simply drop [breath]  dissolve or 
simply drop [breath]  dissolve or simply drop [breath]  
dissolve or simply drop [breath]  dissolve or simply drop [breath]  
dissolve or simply drop [breath]  dissolve or simply drop [breath]  
dissolve or simply drop [breath]  
dissolve or simply drop [breath]  dissolve or simply drop [breath]  
dissolve or simply drop [breath]  dissolve or simply drop [breath]  
dissolve or simply drop [breath]  dissolve or simply drop [breath]  
dissolve 
or simply drop [breath]  
by a new aesthetic of the scrutiny of the language [breath]  liberate power 
[breath]  in a 
language [breath]  liberate power [breath]  in a language [breath]  liberate power 
[breath]  in a language [breath]  liberate power [breath]  in a language [breath]  
liberate power [breath]  in a language [breath]  liberate power [breath]  in a 
language [breath]  liberate power [breath]  
in a 
language [breath]  liberate power [breath]  in a language 
      on two wheels [breath]  hurtling flow of 
      language without fairings [breath]  uncompromising toward the language 
[breath]  language [breath]  liberate power [breath]  in a 
language [breath]  liberate 
     choice [breath]  
in 
a language [breath]  
power [breath]  in a language [breath]  choice [breath]  in a 
language [breath]  power [breath]  in a language [breath]  choice and power 
[breath]  in a language on 

two wheels [breath]  hurdling over the language [breath]  that language [breath]  
self-extols strength [breath]  in a language [breath]  extol strength [breath]  in a 
language on two wheels [breath]  hurtling toward the language [breath]  
extol strength [breath]  in a 

language [breath]  language [breath]  extol strength [breath]  in a language 
[breath]  extol strength [breath]  in a language [breath]  extol strength [breath]  
in a language [breath]  extol strength [breath]  in a language [breath]  language 
[breath]  extol 

strength [breath]  in 

a language [breath]  extol strength [breath]  in a language [breath]  language 
[breath]  

extol strength [breath]  in a language [breath]  extol strength [breath]

 

Poem Without Metaphor (Highwire Act)

Wikipedia Poem, No. 827

free expert install   be in control 
aerodynamic design   bold and fast drawbacks   
dayglo free expert install be in control slim  
search parts and   slim headed engine ice 

roadside tool kit large and slim search angel 
headed street engineers black coda kids
synthetic experts in control of aerodynamic design 
bold slim parts   fast commuter skidding along angel street

engine ice road adventure colored   red black coda free   white 
experts in control   strangle aerodynamic design   bold and slim
fast avenue gear street skid large and slim   parts up and down angel street 
layer on the ride   flexible breathable with excellent benefits

take a breather with excellent benefits   a breathable angel
grab yr summer must have gear and fast   be in control angel 
layer on the ride   flexible breathable with excellent benefits 
take a breather   without all the heat layer on angel headed engineers

“What did they attack? How did Syria react?”

Wikipedia Poem, No. 757

The New Syrian Flag

15mph second 28 mph second 28
mph second 28 mph fourth 49 fifth 58 sixth —
black is purple white is purple white is purple
white is purple white is purple white
is purple white is
purple white is
purple white is purple white is purple
white is purple white is purple
white is purple white is pink purple white
is purple white is purple white is purple
white is purple white is purple white
is pinknd back to man: my
honda rebel cycles through
its gears — first 15mph second 28 mph
second 28 mph second 28 mph second
28 mph second 28 mph second 28 mph second
28 mph second 28 mph second 28 mph second 28 mph

second
28 mph second 28 mph
fourth 49 fifth 58 sixth
— black is
purple white is purple white is purple white is purple
white is purple white is purple white is
pink purple white is purple white is purple
white is purple white is purple white is
purple white is purple white is purple
white is purple white
is purple white is purple white is purple
white is
purple white

is purple white is purple white is purple white
is purple white is purple white is
purple white is pink purple white is
purple white is purple white is purple white
is purple white is purple white is purple
white is purple white is purple white
is purple white is purple white is
purple white is purple white is
purple white is purple white
is purple white is purple
white is purple white is
purple white is purple
white is purple white
is purple white is
purple white is
purple
white
is

purple white is purple white is purple
white is
purple white is purple white is purple
white is purple
white is purple white is purple white is purple
white is purple white is purple white is purple
white is purple white is purple white is purple
white is pink purple white is purple
white is purple white is purple white is purple

white
is purple
white is purple white is purple white is purple
white is pink purple white
is purple white is purple white is purple
white is purple white is purple white is purple
white is purple white is
purple white is purple white is purple white is
purple white is purple white is
purple white
is purple white
is pink and black is pink purple white
is pink purple white
is purple white
is purple
what is purple
white is purple
white

is purple
white is purple white is purple
white is purple white is purple
white is pink purple
white is
purple-white is purple-white

Polypropos

Wikipedia Poem, No. 745

“Being shot out of a cannon will always be better than being squeezed out of a tube. That is why God made fast motorcycles, Bubba….” Hunter S. Thompson

 

contemporary show-offs hair and little punchy verbs
in all the right places some high round
oogleables sweet averroes retweets roxane gay

are we desirable astride rare machinery
life jackhammered by rounded-off cobbles wet at four a.m.
pardner don’t get on a bike blazing in medias res down a texas highway

i am the wet cobbles in the sun
set of the innocent machinery
of the life i think of in 1198

superb that i married lois lane
and her red-meat art
don’t come between my motorcycle and that beautiful girl

squeezed between us
three on a bike aflame down a texas highway
i am the machinery of life’s wet cobbles

that i will to live

Praise Uncontrollable Gruesome

Wikipedia Poem, No. 519

“For either to have expressed desire, to have / reached, would have been to offer the object of desire // power. It could not be done.” Frank Bidart

let me tell you a secret:
i’ve discovered something
in the conveniences of
mass consequence to ensure
mine would continue to bear
neutral

green leather black light
pitches back
leather clutch discovers light black
leather
clutch discovers
something wild
rushing in
cow sacrifices its skin to ensure mine

the new world bears
a neutral green light black leather
rolls back

leather pitches back leatherette that
participation with the fender of
the sacrifices

of

the sun and squeezes
loud lives
conveniences of a motorcycle

what i mean to say is
the convenience of the barking
bike living alive and dies

leather
pitches backwards to
stay here

Muhammad Ali Jinnah

Wikipedia Poem, No. 518

“There was a blue rug on the floor of her room, one chair, one chest, and a narrow bed. Stockings hung in the bathroom. A curious luminosity from the garden, where a lush red magnolia peeked in through an open shutter. Sometimes at dawn the gulls would come and walk busily about on her windowsills, jerking their little bodies like pigeons in sunlight. She began undressing immediately, while he murmured stray strands of information in warning tones, about the cellular panic soon to inundate the world. ‘Madness. It’s pure madness. They’ve broken the locking system which gives form to matter… My dear Esmerelda, they are about to overthrow the principle of creation itself, dissolve the lovely structured essences of nature until only chaos prevails. ‘” from “Antlers in the Treetops” by Ron Padgett and Tom Veitch

dead
   resting ice 
   daily and loved 

you sleep without words 
   will all the mottles claim 
   staying did nothing   about straying
 
without all the uncontrollable 
   head space 
   beside takeout ambulance words

will the large black supple magazines 
   sunglass in the night sun   kabloom
   swiftly he needs to know

how small is this husbandry
   in the supermodels brain of god 
   it is not dependable all this blue flailing

for medicine beef commercial value? 
   what quaint earnest wanting to survive
   as one of my ears my ass into the thought's claim

it's intensely leashed with expensive exception 
   action i couldn't have known
   how i would act in the future tense 

new paltz then as three-headed corporal air 
   perpetual tumble machine between car frame 
   & car frame the fragmentalist's dead of tiredness

From “On Motorcycles” by Frederick Seidel

“On the lyrical state highways of Vermont I blatted and roared, up and down through the gears, at eighty, at a hundred and something, at much more than a hundred and something miles an hour. The motorcycle had a relatively long wheelbase and felt absolutely solid in a straight line, despite the shaft-drive, and steady enough in a turn, but not quick to turn and right itself. The bike was rather heavy, not deft and flickable, but it was wonderful to look at, wonderful to be on, wonderful to ride, a source of pride. The sound it made was magnificent. The feeling was of riding a powerful musical instrument. The hills echoed and the valleys lit up with my song. You used to be able to say of a motorcycle that it was on song when it was going full tilt in perfect tune and at the right revs just at the redline, the rpm limit for the motor. I was on song. I felt in tune, in love, so proud. It was late summer, almost fall. Pride goeth before the fall. Then I fell.

***

“I was rounding a turn on the MV at considerable speed when I had the only serious accident I have ever had. Years before, I had jumped the Triumph Metisse off the top of a rise, knowing I would land in sand, and curious to see if I could do it and keep going, but I was prepared to crash, and I crashed. That didn’t count. I may have been going eighty miles an hour on the MV when I realized I would not make it around the turn. I had a choice: I could throw the bike down on the highway or aim for the unplowed field straight ahead of me, as the road curved to the left. I chose the field and shot off the road and rode across the field with the bike upright, and then I hit a ditch, going quite fast still, and crashed. I was furious, embarrassed, outraged. My first act was to get the bike upright and try to start it. A passing state trooper was flagged down by someone who had seen me go off the road. The trooper was rushing a kidney-dialysis machine to another part of Vermont where it was needed in an emergency, and he certainly did not want to be held up, but when he looked at me he decided he had better get me to the nearby Ellsworth Clinic in Chester, where, when I walked in, I saw the blood drain from the face of the receptionist as she looked at me, and heard her insist to the trooper that I be rushed to Springfield Hospital. She obviously thought I had done terrible damage to myself and was about to go into shock. The trooper sped to Springfield with lights whirling and siren whooping. This same trooper was killed six months later in a high-speed crash. It turned out he had been reprimanded several times for his risk-addicted driving. At the hospital it was determined that I had broken three ribs, that was all.

“I had to explain this mortifying event to myself and to the world. When the wrecked motorcycle was examined, it was apparent that there was something not right about the foot pedal that operated the rear brake. The pedal swung loose, meaning it could move down from its position at rest but also it could move up—not normal, not desirable—and it was possible, perhaps likely, that this had been the state of affairs before the crash. A Vermont motorcycle dealer named Peter Pickett had driven down to JFK in his small red open-bed truck to pick up the MV after it cleared customs, and had taken it to Peru, Vermont, where my friend Jill Fox lived and where I spent a great deal of time. The crate was unloaded, opened, and set aside to be saved, it was so good-looking in its own right. The motorcycle, pretty much ready to be ridden, nevertheless had to be gone over to make sure everything was in order. I examined the front end while the back portion of the bike was checked by an experienced rider and sometime mechanic who lived in the village, not exactly a friend but someone friendly and eager to play a part. My immediate thought after crashing was that it couldn’t have been my fault, certainly couldn’t have been the result of my taking the wrong line in attempting to go through the corner, certainly couldn’t have been a case of not leaning the bike into the turn sufficiently because of the speed I was traveling, couldn’t have been the speed I was traveling stopping me from correctly managing the bike, couldn’t have been . . . and so forth. So it had to have been the consequence of the adjustments made to the rear brake pedal by the fellow who checked out the rear of the motorcycle. It suddenly was apparent that the lever controlling the rear brake had been set up in a manner that applied the brake when the pedal was pressed down, as is normal, or when the pedal swung up, when downward pressure was applied or when no pressure was applied, and the pedal was for whatever reason forced up, as when rounding a corner at great speed the centrifugal force pushed the lever up . . . and the back brake was applied without my foot touching the brake pedal. I believed this theory. I propounded it to all, grunting with pain from my broken ribs. I offer the theory to you now, dear reader. Believe me, that is how it happened. The brake was applied without my touching the pedal, the rear wheel locked, I felt it lock, felt that I could not possibly get around the turn, without knowing what exactly was the matter, and decided to go straight, into the field I saw there, straight ahead of me, and did so, dragging the locked rear wheel . . . and riding, if that is the right word, through the field might have made it to a safe upright stop if I had not come up against a ditch, almost a canal, too wide for the dead weight of the motorcycle to cross, and then BAM.

“For days, for months, I replayed the scene, explaining to myself what had happened, excusing myself. Anything to avoid thinking I had been an incompetent. And there is something else in this. There is a way in which feigning nearness to death risks death. Faking it at all well imitates real danger too faithfully and brings danger. I had gone into the turn too fast. I had not made it around the turn. I started playing down the danger I had put myself in and at the same time playing it up. Motorcycling is full of bravado and posing and the nearness of death. You pretend to be calmly, even coldly focused, when you ride, eyes everywhere, eyes on the job and immune to thoughts about risk. That is how one describes riding these fast motorcycles, except of course there is in addition the pleasure. You are riding beauty and you are riding speed and you are riding death. And it is a pleasure. But you offer yourself as a dashing devotee. You realize you are performing the role of yourself, and may be maimed out of existence as part of the act, as part of the character you are playing.

“The bike went back to Italy and returned, having had its bent and wounded parts rebuilt at great expense, with the latest disc brakes off the racing bike added. Again it was trucked to Vermont. It looked so glamorous. I rode it once, just to do it, like getting back on a horse that has thrown you. Eventually the MV was put on display at Luigi Chinetti’s Ferrari dealership in Greenwich, Connecticut, and was bought by a visiting English rare-car dealer to add jazz and romance to his personal collection.

“I had another shaft-drive bike at the time, the classic BMW 750cc opposed-cylinder twin, with its sober and good-looking black bodywork with white pinstripes. It was a touring bike, very comfortable and reliable, the latest version of the design in a long line of opposed twins the company had made. I rode it around Vermont, and then one day, with my young son behind me as my passenger, riding on a dirt road, I descended a very steep hill to get to the paved county road and went into a slide, a barely controlled slide down the hillside in the dirt, which I managed like a motocross racer, or a skier, touching the brakes once or twice only, and lightly, and driving safely away. That little hill thrill chill did it. Once home, I was ready to sell the bike and stop motorcycling for good.”

from “On Motorcycles” by Frederick Seidel