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Pantoumime
 
A producer took my pantoum to lunch. 
He's on his own now and needs a free meal -  
at least that's what he says - and he talks a lot -  
he's got this compulsion to repeat himself.
  
He's on his own now so he needs a free meal 
and someone to listen while he complains 
about his compulsion to repeat himself. 
It's hard for him to meet girls when all he wants
  
is someone to listen while he complains 
about being the river that runs beneath the river. 
It's hard to meet girls when all they want 
is a pretty boy gazing in a pool
  
where the river that runs beneath the river 
suddenly surfaces.  He wants to say, 
I'm more than a pretty boy gazing in a pool. 
I'm the shadow that refuses to lie down
  
and suddenly surfaces in what you say. 
I'm the reverses you suffer looking in a mirror, 
the shadow (there I go again) that refuses to lie down, 
the echo when you have nothing to say.
  
You suffer, don't you, when you look in the mirror 
and there's nothing to say, not even an echo. 
That's what he said he said - and he talks a lot -  
the producer who took my pantoum to lunch.
 
  
When I Lost It
 
I was crossing a glassy stretch of middle age, 
the farther shore still not quite visible, 
when my mojo quit.  My wife had turned gray, 
my daughter was angry about her breasts, 
and my son had wandered into a cornfield 
and wouldn't come out.  (I don't remember 
what actually happened, this is just how it felt.) 
I checked the gas tank, and though I'd been riding 
for days, the tank was still full.  I went to see my doctor. 
He simply took it out (my mojo, that is), put it on 
the examining table, poked it, walked around it, 
slowly as if it were a piece of modern sculpture, 
and said it looked fine to him.  I felt better 
when I left.  Having it poked.  Having the doc say 
it looked okay.  But it still didn't work. 
My wife could tell you.  Except she's too embarrassed. 
So I took it to a plumber.  He pounded it for hours. 
Sent his snake all through it, replaced a bunch of pipes 
with high-quality copper.  Again I felt better, 
like some test subject full of sugar pills. 
But still no mojo.  I called my friends, 
who gathered around my bed.  "I'm not dying," 
I said, "just . . . just . . . depleted, like a battery 
or my bank account."  Some said to eat less fat, 
more roughage.  Someone said I needed a vacation 
at one of those all-naked resorts in Jamaica. 
Judas said (there's always a Judas in every group), 
she said I never had no mojo to begin with. 
Maybe she was right.  I stood up, or tried to -- 
I wanted to shove it in her face --  
but couldn't remember where I put it. 
Thank God for TV.  Now that I've forgotten 
how to stand (I'm not speaking literally, of course, 
this is just how it feels), television is the only thing 
I'm good at.  I close my eyes and replay the story 
of my life.  I'm still editing -- adding characters, 
deleting birthdays, adding lots and lots of mojo.
 
  
Rocket 88
 
There's more than a touch of tomorrow in the Rockets of today 
- Oldsmobile marketing slogan
 
How I hated my father's unbending hardtop, 
stubborn un-covertible, 
stupid earthbound spaceship.
  
All aspiration, I ached 
to rise above water, earth, & air 
into the fiery furnace.
  
Like Icarus, like Phaeton, 
I hungered for curved vistas, 
an eagle's vision, a cosmonaut's.
  
I knew that only fire could propel me 
into the kingdom of fire where Jesus  
spoke with tongues of flame!
  
Every day, it seemed, new prophets rose, 
astronauts with their squeezable stew, 
their Tang, and anti-grav lavs,
  
untouched by their travels, 
pencils and dandruff afloat 
in dirty, recycled air,
  
while homebound I leaned on a fender 
gazing skyward, bent backward, 
a small tree snapped by Pentecostal winds.
 
  
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