we waited on the July poems until this month. ONLY TWO poem go in from each forum now. So take care on the votes. Consider if you will the judge and the strength of the poem and how it will do competing against other wonderful poems from other boards. Thx.
Burning a Hole
I never wanted to scrimp,
week by week,
month by month,
squeezing every nickel
until Jefferson screams,
saving in January
for September’s school-bright laces—
not caring how proud
I would have been
to tie them,
virgin white
with sacrifice
and unsoiled by the dirt
of summer’s maculate garden.
I wanted them then,
the whole pair of sneakers,
to squelch in the dangerous muck;
to jump high
from high places
and land in the middle
of trouble
and turgid brown water.
I wanted them soon,
and I wanted them
fast,
so I could run
like the poltergeist wind,
away from strange men
with red faces and contracts,
away from the bullies
who wanted my lunch,
my change,
my interest
compounding.
Dark Daddy
Daddy took me up in his plane,
fed me Chinese food with chopsticks,
called it dragon stew.
Daddy crashed his motorcycle,
wrapped it around a pole,
had a friend take photos of his bleeding body,
battered head, black eyes, broken nose.
Wounds so grisly that make up men at Paramount
wanted copies of the pix
for their notebook on mayhem make up.
Daddy had cars, cars, cars, forgot to put oil in,
left them rusting in the backyard.
Daddy had a plane, had a plane, had a plane,
all repossessed, taken away, never seen again.
Went higher in a glider with a loud speaker,
advertised shoe sales and used-car lot openings
until one day the police, more's the pity,
nabbed him when he landed
in a celery field just outside the city.
Daddy and the glider went to jail.
We didn't visit him.
Daddy was a sound man,
we'd see his name in movie credits,
he always worked for someone else.
Daddy wanted to be the boss,
sit behind a big desk,
with a bottle of expensive Scotch and a Cuban cigar,
cut deals and give starlets the once over twice
Producer Daddy.
Seducer Daddy.
Randy-ready Daddy.
Director Daddy,
you've never seen an erecter Daddy than mine.
Daddy sometimes got married,
and sometimes not.
Not to mama, but strung her along
until she broke,
spoke her last word,
disappeared - you take her, she said.
Daddy did,
I got to know those girlfriends and wives
whose lives Daddy wrecked,
leaving them flecked with sorrow.
For Daddy, it was always tomorrow,
never now, never here.
I learned not to fear,
but steer clear of blue-eyed men with an easy grin,
not to sin, or give in, or take to gin,
but to spin on my own,
alone, not with anyone, especially Daddy.
