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Love Poem for Leonardo da Vinci
I don’t miss the Winn Dixie or the dopey beauticians off the Lee highway
but my hankering was a yacht in high school & I do miss riding it
out of the classroom & into the hall and down the hall & into the parking lot
& through the lot into that plush & sultry biosphere
where there’d be hundreds of hummingbirds flittering around
to sup the red-faced da Vinci feeders hovering like UFOs
on the vessel in the fugitive water-air of my mind in the lab or math room there
where I’d sing to my sweet Leonardo the Jesus blasphemes my father taught
‘cause though Leonardo was long gone & long dead he took breath after breath
low inside me down by the river by the high school there
but my hankering was a yacht in high school & I do miss riding it
out of the classroom & into the hall and down the hall & into the parking lot
& through the lot into that plush & sultry biosphere
where there’d be hundreds of hummingbirds flittering around
to sup the red-faced da Vinci feeders hovering like UFOs
on the vessel in the fugitive water-air of my mind in the lab or math room there
where I’d sing to my sweet Leonardo the Jesus blasphemes my father taught
‘cause though Leonardo was long gone & long dead he took breath after breath
low inside me down by the river by the high school there
like how the color red is so alive it throbs if it’s blood in your mouth
& emits in the brain what we call the heart
when you’re just walking down the road after dinner in the fall in Maine at 53
remembering what an insurrectionist you already were in 1978
in central VA in high school vis-à-vis not wanting the status quo
of the space-time continuum to trap you in that old river valley
of math & church & cakewalks & doilies & football & date rape
& the death of deer & cheerleading & date rape & other good American things
when you & your Leonardo could hop on one of his flying machines
& crank it up & head for the love of God the motherfuck on out—
Status, Alas
I began to feel helpless & desperate in a familiar way
vis-à-vis time & space alas & where to put the hands
& feet & how not to talk to strangers & friends
& was raised American & kind of middle-class & watched
heaps of TV & got therefore an addictive personality
& a bad biochemistry & anyhow just wanted one day
to buy a few new blankets & quilts & pillows
& sheets. Plus a new rug & mugs & shirts & pants
though outside already was the beefy F150
waiting to haul my love & me to a cabin up north
where there’d be a tiny roadside store for bread & milk
though also in the driveway hovered figuratively alas, alas
a mortgage & insurance & car payments & a kid in college
& the need to eat more than bread & milk & an allergist
& a phlebotomist & the primary care physician
& lumberjack & plumber & such & such & such & such
& such. So where to put my shopping ache or whatever
as in how to stop it was really the problem like not having
Bee Balm to sniff was the problem & the fact of there being
an excellent greenhouse nearby was the problem. & though
a fox I could follow into the woods might help, the problem is
a breeder in Oklahoma selling fox puppies for $450 each
not including postage and handling & would I hold mine
& caress it like a child or set it loose is the problem
& how would I feed it or would it feed me
& what would we have to kill & how would we sleep
& can one even grow old in a hole of gnawed bones
& would I even fit & what kind of quilts would there be
& pillows & blankets & sheets?
vis-à-vis time & space alas & where to put the hands
& feet & how not to talk to strangers & friends
& was raised American & kind of middle-class & watched
heaps of TV & got therefore an addictive personality
& a bad biochemistry & anyhow just wanted one day
to buy a few new blankets & quilts & pillows
& sheets. Plus a new rug & mugs & shirts & pants
though outside already was the beefy F150
waiting to haul my love & me to a cabin up north
where there’d be a tiny roadside store for bread & milk
though also in the driveway hovered figuratively alas, alas
a mortgage & insurance & car payments & a kid in college
& the need to eat more than bread & milk & an allergist
& a phlebotomist & the primary care physician
& lumberjack & plumber & such & such & such & such
& such. So where to put my shopping ache or whatever
as in how to stop it was really the problem like not having
Bee Balm to sniff was the problem & the fact of there being
an excellent greenhouse nearby was the problem. & though
a fox I could follow into the woods might help, the problem is
a breeder in Oklahoma selling fox puppies for $450 each
not including postage and handling & would I hold mine
& caress it like a child or set it loose is the problem
& how would I feed it or would it feed me
& what would we have to kill & how would we sleep
& can one even grow old in a hole of gnawed bones
& would I even fit & what kind of quilts would there be
& pillows & blankets & sheets?
**The first line of this poem is borrowed from Mathew Klam’s Who is Rich?