Each year gave us portals
each year gave us portals
dark tufts
fought their way
out of the mudhole
a storm washed
gray over
the mountain horses
fled the hillside
the grocery store baker
pulled up smoking
in the funeral-black
back parking lot
some days the ferry
burned he slit huge sacks
of flour with his knife
and poured them
in a big steel mixer
I only have the stomach
for beginnings
the spirit moving
on the face of the waters
the 767 leaning west
a belly full of gasoline
the morning
the firmament dry
land great whale
the word
*****
The Last Romantics
It's not funny anymore. He grunts
like a shaggy bear
when she turns him over in the sun
and ribs him with a playful
finger, or bides her time
plucking out his stiff gray hairs.
The boys he’s fending off are slight
and hairless like exotic pets—their skins
are taut as snares. When they dance they dance
on ecstasy and glisten—he has fantasies
of gutting them like clueless salmon.
His books are from another century.
She loves to read to him. She needs
to be on top. She's always running
out for cigarettes. He hasn't smoked in years,
except in dreams he wakes from in a panic. He runs
on treadmills now, takes a yoga class. It's still
a tragedy when she puts on her dress.
*****
After a football game
after a football game
the rollicking stars came out
and shaggy boys sat in the windows
of passing cars as if there’d been a coup.
I met up with a woman in a rowdy bar
she was going through a divorce
making sure she did it right
like a stock car going through
a retaining wall
sun-tired and hardly
talking we watched the dancing
students skew the beauty scale
she ran her hands through new
red streaks in her blonde hair
watching highlights on the angled
screen above the bar
our running back
lying face up on the field
a trainer holding both sides of
his helmet like a crystal ball
*****
Copyright © 2015 by Mark Neely. May
not be reproduced without permission.