Reached in and picked a winner
from your box of stock phrases.
Finding ways
to roll zero on 2d6.
You fuckin' missed
"Shit the bed!"
I guess you're no Kenny Rogers.
Longer losing streaks familiar
to the wisdom of a betting man.
"Carpe Diem" on your calf,
laugh your way to the bank.
But put a stutter on your chuckle
'til the day they seize your wages.
If it "happens for a reason,"
fold your cards and hold your tongue in.
Hold your tongue and
clamp your teeth.
"What it is is what it is."
That's a "tautology."
See, I learned that one in college,
when I took critical theory!
If you seek an explanation,
you're just critically faulting
on your dice rolls
and your debts.
Reached in and hit the bottom
of your box of stock phrases.
Finding ways
to keep afloat on empty words.
You fuckin' missed.
"Feeling blessed?"
Turns out you're no Kenny Rogers.
Longer losing streaks familiar
to the wisdom of a betting man.
An online repository for the poetry of Kyle Kulseth © 2014-2018 Party Fowl Publishing
Friday, May 15, 2015
Old English "D"
These streets knew feet in days gone by,
bustling sidewalks, crowded storefronts,
laughter, light and dancers leaking
out of smoke-filled bars.
Cars would wind through intersections,
blood cells between neighborhoods.
From The Corner came The Roar.
He remembers how the Autumn sounded
back in '84
when Alan Trammell brought The Series home,
the arcing shot off Gibson's bat,
the rolling wave of soaring voices.
Old English
"D"
tattooed on the hearts
of a city
who's been hurting since the 50's.
Bless You Boys.
Ya did it--
went and Sparked up Michigan
and lit a dimming town again
in Corktown's widening eyes.
In 20 years, though, losses pile up.
55 and starved for signs
of trends reversing, luck upending,
impending relief or just some kind of
something.
Sickening, cloying rapid decay
as neighborhoods die.
These streets know crumbling cinderblock
walls and blistered paint coats don't
cover ribcages starting to show--
steel girder bones--and windows blown
out, like teeth lost from a well-spoken mouth,
allow the Lake Michigan wind to howl
out the tale--
through oxidized bones--
of just what it looks like
when economic war hits home.
Heartbeats still find footing
in Motor City streets, beneath
the Old English "D,"
but mind the scoreboard smart;
the Tigers lost a hundred games
in 2003.
bustling sidewalks, crowded storefronts,
laughter, light and dancers leaking
out of smoke-filled bars.
Cars would wind through intersections,
blood cells between neighborhoods.
From The Corner came The Roar.
He remembers how the Autumn sounded
back in '84
when Alan Trammell brought The Series home,
the arcing shot off Gibson's bat,
the rolling wave of soaring voices.
Old English
"D"
tattooed on the hearts
of a city
who's been hurting since the 50's.
Bless You Boys.
Ya did it--
went and Sparked up Michigan
and lit a dimming town again
in Corktown's widening eyes.
In 20 years, though, losses pile up.
55 and starved for signs
of trends reversing, luck upending,
impending relief or just some kind of
something.
Sickening, cloying rapid decay
as neighborhoods die.
These streets know crumbling cinderblock
walls and blistered paint coats don't
cover ribcages starting to show--
steel girder bones--and windows blown
out, like teeth lost from a well-spoken mouth,
allow the Lake Michigan wind to howl
out the tale--
through oxidized bones--
of just what it looks like
when economic war hits home.
Heartbeats still find footing
in Motor City streets, beneath
the Old English "D,"
but mind the scoreboard smart;
the Tigers lost a hundred games
in 2003.
Kings & Creeps
You say you spent two years sleep-
walking all around here,
past convenience stores and dead ends.
Steering blind while the suburbs blurred,
your sneering eyes grew tired
like my slurring verbage
Now with our words just circling 'round
we'll shout right into the drain
blaming newer faults on old targets...
And I can only say...
That you won't see me
playing Kings & Creeps
when the whiskey's gone
and this here card game's out of reach.
When the fingers point, it's nothing doing,
stated bluntly.
We're saying nothing again.
Now I've been eating crow with
a side of consternation
through a swelling, allergic throat.
Choking down all my dumbest thoughts.
My token frown flips up
when your smile turns caustic.
And with the tension boiling down,
bubbling up from our heads,
we'll pour it out on old targets...
It seems we've spilled again...
But you don't hear me
crying, "Kings & Creeps"
when the music dies
and we stand, staring at our feet.
With an unhinged jaw, even a snake can
swallow some things--
digest them back in the den.
We're saying nothing again.
walking all around here,
past convenience stores and dead ends.
Steering blind while the suburbs blurred,
your sneering eyes grew tired
like my slurring verbage
Now with our words just circling 'round
we'll shout right into the drain
blaming newer faults on old targets...
And I can only say...
That you won't see me
playing Kings & Creeps
when the whiskey's gone
and this here card game's out of reach.
When the fingers point, it's nothing doing,
stated bluntly.
We're saying nothing again.
Now I've been eating crow with
a side of consternation
through a swelling, allergic throat.
Choking down all my dumbest thoughts.
My token frown flips up
when your smile turns caustic.
And with the tension boiling down,
bubbling up from our heads,
we'll pour it out on old targets...
It seems we've spilled again...
But you don't hear me
crying, "Kings & Creeps"
when the music dies
and we stand, staring at our feet.
With an unhinged jaw, even a snake can
swallow some things--
digest them back in the den.
We're saying nothing again.
Holiday Creature Feature
Slack-jawed, wide-eyed
tongue-tied
and terrified
of what went left unsaid,
I froze,
a feature of the static night.
From Summer's boiling tension
to December's weary ice
we'd drive
and count the times
we thought we'd finally got it right.
But then
the weight of discount decades
wrapped our chests in dynamite--
criss-crossed trunks,
and slant-grinned garlands
blowing up the Christmas Tree.
Apologize later for fucking up the party;
we were gone already anyway
with frigid wind flaying fingertips and ears.
Back to the car.
One more drive.
One more night to half believe
we'll get it right this time.
But what's so new about a New Year?
Still can't swallow all this scary size.
Guess we'll always be here, shrugging
Slack-jawed, wide-eyed,
tongue-tied
and terrified.
tongue-tied
and terrified
of what went left unsaid,
I froze,
a feature of the static night.
From Summer's boiling tension
to December's weary ice
we'd drive
and count the times
we thought we'd finally got it right.
But then
the weight of discount decades
wrapped our chests in dynamite--
criss-crossed trunks,
and slant-grinned garlands
blowing up the Christmas Tree.
Apologize later for fucking up the party;
we were gone already anyway
with frigid wind flaying fingertips and ears.
Back to the car.
One more drive.
One more night to half believe
we'll get it right this time.
But what's so new about a New Year?
Still can't swallow all this scary size.
Guess we'll always be here, shrugging
Slack-jawed, wide-eyed,
tongue-tied
and terrified.
Ghost Ship
Plot a course through downtown doors
then drift along the concrete shores
of asphalt oceans navigated
under stars
imitating
broken curbside glass--
over crunching gravel miles
measured in half-hours
and meted out in heavy, fogging breaths
and squinting, midnight eyes...
Counted out the blocks, counted steps
and concrete squares by metered
three-four thoughts dancing across
reflected skylines, just behind the eyes.
Each step's a held breath,
each footfall a prayer on crumpled paper,
each set of shoulders, a hanger for...
coats are homes
for hands
rolling up in pockets
fishing for some solid anchor,
sinking into years of walks and silent words like these.
* * *
Listing hard, adrift for years
water-logged and pocked--
no anchor--
shredded sails and leaning masts
tell stories
of deck fires:
leaping rats,
and charred strakes
Clear deck,
empty hold,
abandoned helm.
this coat's Atlantic fog.
Frayed rigging like cobwebs stretch
down and across
like lines on faces aged by the frost
on midnight walks.
Strike the colors, mate...
Admit you're lost.
then drift along the concrete shores
of asphalt oceans navigated
under stars
imitating
broken curbside glass--
over crunching gravel miles
measured in half-hours
and meted out in heavy, fogging breaths
and squinting, midnight eyes...
Counted out the blocks, counted steps
and concrete squares by metered
three-four thoughts dancing across
reflected skylines, just behind the eyes.
Each step's a held breath,
each footfall a prayer on crumpled paper,
each set of shoulders, a hanger for...
coats are homes
for hands
rolling up in pockets
fishing for some solid anchor,
sinking into years of walks and silent words like these.
* * *
Listing hard, adrift for years
water-logged and pocked--
no anchor--
shredded sails and leaning masts
tell stories
of deck fires:
leaping rats,
and charred strakes
Clear deck,
empty hold,
abandoned helm.
this coat's Atlantic fog.
Frayed rigging like cobwebs stretch
down and across
like lines on faces aged by the frost
on midnight walks.
Strike the colors, mate...
Admit you're lost.
Equinox
I wouldn't say I wasn't hoping--
wondering what it'd be like--
to strike the band up, strike a spark
and set your amber eyes alight.
The night was warm. I almost froze up.
You flowed through my awkward ice.
We walked home laughing,
I was fading.
Drenched...
Your voice was red wine on the night...
I'm alive;
I guess the Winter lost one.
Scraping frost off a tarnished record, now.
Spin the season.
Warming up to Springtime.
Pour out beside me under iron purple clouds.
I kept a cask of my best stories
fermenting for nights like this,
to fill your glass, distill the tension,
drown the thirst of shots we'd missed.
The night wore on. You told the Winter,
"Smiles're mine--you keep the rest."
We thawed the town out
with a buzzing
warmth
spread through our drunk and laughing chests...
Orange Street
bridge.
Melting in the dark.
Lots cast:
two stones in the Clark Fork.
Walk back,
we're
run-off from downtown.
Four sheets,
after
breezes, get turned down.
I'm alive;
I guess the Winter lost one.
Scraping frost off a tarnished record, now.
Spin the season.
Warming up to Springtime.
Pour out beside me under iron purple clouds.
Nothing gained
worth a damn's assured, so
tip a glass, tilt a grin and angle home.
A thousand lights
pinned to night, 6 blocks left.
We're catching up. Where'd our mislaid footsteps go?
Led us right here, I suppose.
wondering what it'd be like--
to strike the band up, strike a spark
and set your amber eyes alight.
The night was warm. I almost froze up.
You flowed through my awkward ice.
We walked home laughing,
I was fading.
Drenched...
Your voice was red wine on the night...
I'm alive;
I guess the Winter lost one.
Scraping frost off a tarnished record, now.
Spin the season.
Warming up to Springtime.
Pour out beside me under iron purple clouds.
I kept a cask of my best stories
fermenting for nights like this,
to fill your glass, distill the tension,
drown the thirst of shots we'd missed.
The night wore on. You told the Winter,
"Smiles're mine--you keep the rest."
We thawed the town out
with a buzzing
warmth
spread through our drunk and laughing chests...
Orange Street
bridge.
Melting in the dark.
Lots cast:
two stones in the Clark Fork.
Walk back,
we're
run-off from downtown.
Four sheets,
after
breezes, get turned down.
I'm alive;
I guess the Winter lost one.
Scraping frost off a tarnished record, now.
Spin the season.
Warming up to Springtime.
Pour out beside me under iron purple clouds.
Nothing gained
worth a damn's assured, so
tip a glass, tilt a grin and angle home.
A thousand lights
pinned to night, 6 blocks left.
We're catching up. Where'd our mislaid footsteps go?
Led us right here, I suppose.
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