Wren’s demise

ONCE in summer-time the bear and the wolf were walking in the forest, and the bear heard a bird singing so beautifully that he said, “Brother wolf, what bird is it that sings so well?” “That is the King of the birds,” said the wolf, “before whom we must bow down.” – Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm

Ding, dong,
The king is dead!

Just beyond the eaves
Still warm, lay a wren,
Supple as a summer breeze,
Dead as yesterday’s fires

Had there been some unseen, unheard battle
Between the soaring and the squatting?
Or some settling
Of long forgotten scores?

In a long-ago wager, it’s said,
The wren outsoared the eagle.
She rode on his back
Until he tired, then pushed off
All pumped and proud

A fine example, the ancients thought,
Of brain over brawn.

The eagle was not amused

Summer, then

Surfing the faint, tireless breeze
Music from a distant park
The last half-hearted song
Of the sparrow
Fireflies like paper lanterns
In a far-away twilight

Long before conditioned air
In the hot, moist summer
Even clocks stopped running,
Too slow to mark
The interminable hours,
The memories, the sweat

Whole eternities passed
In the too long days
Of the too short summers
So entirely gone

There is no stylus so precise
As to record the passage of a soul
From one moment to the next

Roused from a long and fitful sleep

Roused from a long and fitful sleep
I panicked

There seemed no boundaries
Or if there were
They were invisible
Devoid of meaning
As if the dance of life and death
Had no partners

At which end of non-existence
Is there true meaning?
Birth or death, equally gating
The incomprehensible, the non-void

Between the ends, torrents and eddies
Of love and fear, of slackwater
Of cascades year by year
Day by day, undimensional
Moment by moment.

Between the ends, there are no ends
Religion seared the love of life,
Cooked it from my father’s heart
Left it parched

To me, it offered a curse
Something relentless, deniable
But inescapable

I am left without excuses
Have I lived well?
Have I been an annoyance?

Up there, in the next world,
We figured,
You could barter stuff like that
What kind of deal can you make
With psychoanalysis?

These Viennese chaps
Are so clinical, you know,
Tall, cold,
Like surgical steel,
Never hungering.
A priest, at least,
Will crave your soul
To eat.

I know how to sleep,
How to wake,
How to kill
And how to live

Let that be my epitaph

The masses

The pendulum swings
Eternal
The sheep hang on
For dear life.

Haikero

A Mexican haiku for Ye Old Foole.

O Margarita
Let’s you and I go sailing
Such salty kisses!