Tag Archives: literature

BLESSINGS ON THE SEEMLY EARTH [12]

BLESSINGS ON THE SEEMLY EARTH

Goat eats dead grass.
“Blessed are the gentle.”
Goat eats all the host.
“Blessed are the patient.”
Goat eats the readings.
“Blessed are those with ears.”
Goat eats Jerry’s tie.
“Blessed are the naked.
The earth is fertile with God.”
Goat profanes the altar.

 

from GOAT lies down on Broadway. For more info see here.

TRANSLATED GOAT [11]

TRANSLATED GOAT

Goat lands on a cactus.
Let me help you, a voice says.
It is Jerry Falwell.

Goat: I’m hungry.
Jerry: The Lord Provideth.
Enter the wandering turkey.
Goat rips his head off.

Blood spurts on Jerry’s suit.
These are the signs I look for,
he says, wiping his face.

 

from GOAT lies down on Broadway. For more info see here.

Two unrelated haiku

After snow

wise snow shovel waits:
sun slurs the mess awash down
hill: I sit, rest, read.

*

Sometimes

up with your child, night’s
anxious middle shows its calm
underside to you

THE KICK [10]

THE KICK

Why do you walk, Troll asks.
Why can’t you live under a bridge.
Goat gets up, straw mouth, blocks
thin path. His hooves strike
dry dirt, buck tooth bite, moot
argument. Troll climbs

under a bush. God picks Goat
up by his scruff. You should
hear yourself speak, He says,
boots him, perfectly, Goat lands
like bread.

from GOAT lies down on Broadway. For more info see here.

TROLL & GOAT CREATE MANY WORLDS LIKE BRIDGES [9]

TROLL & GOAT CREATE MANY WORLDS LIKE BRIDGES

Troll: Wet moss.
Goat: Tree algae.

Troll: Dead leaves.
Goat: Rocks in Water.

Troll: Nuts on ground.
Goat: Roses in thorns.

Troll: Farm.
Goat: Whorehouse in Gibraltar.

No one’s too strong, Goat;
Nothing useful is saved.

from GOAT lies down on Broadway. For more info see here.

CONFRONTATION AT THE BRIDGE WITH TROLL [8]

GOAT_TomWilliamslino5

CONFRONTATION AT THE BRIDGE WITH TROLL

Bones stick out his fingers.
I got this from climbing, he said,
I play the guitar till I bleed.

Goat lifts his cartilage hoof,
worn, ground. Accordion, he said,
I eat anything.

He showed his yarn scars.
Troll brought him pieces
of the toll booth he had eaten.

They waited in the dark for rabbits.

 

from GOAT lies down on Broadway. For more info see here.
Lino-cut by Tom Williams.

GOATGEIST [7]

GOATGEIST

She was sleeping. She saw
velvet wet nose, thicket
whiskers, wilted ears
move across her dark room.
Was there something for her

to remember him by? Had he
left her without a footnote,
a reminder of love, yarns?
Only a laced remainder: he
ate her shoes, grinding eyelets.

 

from GOAT lies down on Broadway. For more info see here.

GOAT AT THE PARTHENON [6]

GOAT AT THE PARTHENON

Maureen and her family look up.
Goat has disturbed security
more than once; he does not
look like a dog. Pillars,
stone, design, leveling cuts
or rock, time textbooks. All
ears return to this world:

Goat has stepped on a beer can,
hoof-crushed, scrapes like a
ghost up the steps.

 

from GOAT lies down on Broadway. For more info see here.

Drop Everything

Drop Everything

An old white ash in the backyard of the abandoned house next door. It was a dry, cold, still day, weeks after the maple and walnut trees around it had lost their leaves but this tree still had hundreds which had not fallen, very large leaves bigger than your hands. I was out in my backyard with the dogs. With no cause such as a gust of wind and in the space of a few minutes, almost all the leaves of the ash tree fell to the ground. They were dry but heavy and dropped straight down like a bundle of mail or a suitcase, without the ceremony of wafting or drifting. As if the tree had just gotten the worst news in the world, perhaps that another tree it loved on the other side of the world had died, and dropped everything about itself onto its home’s floor that morning upon receiving the news. It was over in a hundred seconds. If I had not seen it I never would have noticed, or I would have noticed and not believed that something so sudden could have happened and thought simply Oh the ash tree finally lost its leaves while I was not paying attention. Not as if everything in the world had suddenly changed for it. In fact afterwards the tree essentially looked the same to me. I stood there a bit stunned  watching those leaves fall,  and then awhile longer watching the tree, still standing there, anticipating that it might shrug or even uproot itself and go marching off toward the mountain, but it looked unchanged to the rest of the world just as perhaps the rest of the world was now entirely foreign to it, and I remained there as rooted as anything in the yard, realizing how little we witness any of these moments in others, feeling that somewhere around the corner is a phone call or a letter or a conversation where we’ll each know exactly what it’s like to be that tree, and have the same chance to stay, rooted in what we most deeply are, unchanged to others even while dropping everything.