newfoundpoems
I like when I find a poem that I'd forgotten writing. Like the one that follows -- I wrote it for the "Heart of the Poet" filming at the Avenue Diner. I needed a good burger poem and thought the one Maureen requested I write was too obscure. So I wrote a new one.
BECAUSE ONE THING BUMPED INTO ANOTHER
I was just a young hamburger, a hamburger
wandering from bun to bun, I did not care,
reading Proust and Beckett and Eluard,
dreaming of a tiny apartment in Paris,
while the other burgers played football and
fought in the alleys with switchblades, spilling
their condiments in their reckless wake.
At night, I nestled beneath a bed
of sautéed onions and shivered,
an orphan of ground flesh whose
visceral nightmares made sleep a world
of terror. Someone once told me
of a thing called love, and also
a thing called lightning, and I
watched the skies for both,
peered longingly through the frail wisps
of cloud that drifted amidst
the airplanes. I was a young hamburger,
and Paris was just a page in a book
that was wrenched from my grasp
by a dark-suited man with a red necktie
who said that the world had changed.
I'm reading this weekend in Vancouver at the West Coast Poetry Festival, so I'll bring this one along, as I like reading poems I've rarely read before.
Over and out.
3 Comments:
Hmmm, red neckties seem to be in the poetic air this week! first time i've seen this one.
have a great time in Vancouver, stu.
that was me. didn't mean to be silent about it.
the dark-suited man with the red necktie plays a prominent role in the fringe play i've produced; do come to see the play!!
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