Showing posts with label strangers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label strangers. Show all posts
Friday, February 2, 2018
WHAT A DRAG...
I've cornered myself.
Shorted myself.
Stuck myself up.
Outfoxed myself.
Listened
to myself
go on
for too long
saying too little.
And I'm doing it again.
A dunce-capped fetishist
thinking
I'm in a new place
just an old body;
a fool
on a fool's errand;
a squandered hedonist
loving moments
imagined, but soon,
soon enough,
this place will retch
from fears familiar
to the touch,
a mink claw
of specious need.
I will know
this place
soon enough;
it is the place
I've known
soon enough
all my life:
home--for tourists
& other strangers.
Norman Savage
Greenwich Village, 2018
Wednesday, November 15, 2017
SLAVE BLUES SERVED ON A THANKSGIVING SLAB
She absorbed
my breath
& odors
on a 270 pound frame;
she withstood
grunts
& false starts.
She felt the drip
of foul Vodka sweat
& a thick spaghetti strand
of mouth drool
pooling around her nipple.
Somewhere
far off
Sonny Boy sang
the blues
of men; his harp
pumped blood red
trapped
by women
of color
by instinct;
she, too,
trapped
by young deliveries
& aborted safety
finds America
in God's trust
& open-school nights.
Everyday,
another stranger's flesh,
everyday,
the same dinner;
everyday,
a cold,
a missing tooth;
everyday,
a cheap cologne;
everyday,
a budget
breaks: speeding ticket,
toothache, a discharge.
I finally finish,
pull out
& fish
for green slime
in a pocket that hangs
with shame
over the chair.
Here, pleasure, thanks.
She tucks it
next to the pocket knife
& pepper spray.
Anytime, she says,
just call, you're
fun. I better run.
Have a good holiday.
You, too.
Sonny sang Bird.
Norman Savage
Greenwich Village, 2017
Sunday, September 6, 2015
THE FROZEN POND
For W.H. Auden
The ice,
thick
with innocence,
began to fissure
& melt
in late
July.
Mufflers,
& gloves,
& little hats
floated
to the surface.
The old folks
clucked
their tongues;
strange
to notice
a betrayal
not
of their own
doing.
Norman Savage
Greenwich Village, 2015
The ice,
thick
with innocence,
began to fissure
& melt
in late
July.
Mufflers,
& gloves,
& little hats
floated
to the surface.
The old folks
clucked
their tongues;
strange
to notice
a betrayal
not
of their own
doing.
Norman Savage
Greenwich Village, 2015
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