Poe
Passing
from this world
Leaving
us with visions
Your
humor and scares
Live
all around us
Hear
it in the chimes
The
flight of crows
Chimneys
and aerials grow
Tearing
clouds apart
Look
how we remember
Going
on like a ghost
You
haunt the streets
Stories,
movies, memories
There
must be a curse
No
end in sight
America is still the same
Coal
drawn heart
Poe in Japan
He took a skeleton with sails over the Pacific
crashed through two bad storms when he prayed
for the end, then in a gray morning stood at
the rail
to see the skyline turn into land. Japan. Soon he
saw
the pagoda towers, the pines, the wooden houses
pennants of fish, dragons, bright creatures
that kited
on the air. When he stepped ashore, all covered
in black
he wobbled from lack of ground for so long. He
knew
he was being looked at, he felt the picture
frame on him.
He wore it awkwardly up past the fishing things
beside
the shore. He hoped to find an address someone
gave him.
The whole reason for the journey was scratched
across
in his tree branch writing on a torn scrap of
paper he kept
caught like a dove in a pocket. When looking
for somewhere
in a place like this, he was just another wind
blown off the sea
someone as poor and lonely as a ghost.
ABANDONED
TELEVISION STARS
In 2007, Edward John
Smith, the captain of the Titanic was thawed out on a live television
broadcast. The host of The Sylvan Moore Show reported each slow movement as the
ice melted. Technicians buzzed around the captain, plugging in the wires,
connecting him to a monitor.
“This is it, folks!”
Sylvan Moore grinned.
He directed a close-up
for his hand pressing the flashing button that would Frankenstein the frozen
man back to life.
All that fanfare and it didn’t work
so well.
The captain wasn’t ready for the
thrill of television.
His time had come and
gone. He walked offstage; he just wanted to get back to the water so he could
go down.
Looking for the way,
wearing his Titanic uniform around the city streets, he stands on bridges, sees
reflections, goes to the aquarium, sits in the middle of Green Lake on a rented
red rowboat, walks through carwashes, goes wading in creeks after a heavy rain.
When it snowed that night, he took
off walking in it. His footprints led off into the trees.
He walked in a dream this time.
Nothing around him made much sense after Sylvan Moore woke him up. As usual, he
looked for water.
Along the white trail came a man
familiar to him, though he could scarcely believe his eyes.
Edgar Allan Poe looked
like the charcoal illustration in his Tales
of Mystery and Imagination. He had been on Sylvan’s show another week ago,
also left and wandered through America’s future just as lost as the captain.
Edward called out to him.
Edgar turned to see the man standing
in the fountain. Running water kept it from freezing. After a grating pause,
Poe nodded and approached the soaking captain, asked him if he needed help.
“Mr. Edgar Allan Poe, I presume?”
The dark man nodded.
“I left my copy of your book back on
the Titanic.” He stepped out of the fountain, his boots landed on the cement
and water pooled. “I enjoyed it very much.”
Before the next hour, the two men
discovered The Sylvan Moore Show had unleashed more lost souls. They found
presidents, Frederick Douglass, inventors, and plenty more abandoned television
stars by the end of the day. In the evening they all gathered in front of the
studio skyscraper. Emily Dickinson wrote a note for delivery to Sylvan Moore.
Wild Bill, Annie Oakley and Sitting Bull kept an eye on the studio guards. It
was getting tense. It looked like a mob gathering, demanding their return to
another century.
These are three
things I wrote for Poe. I do think about him a lot. His language is unbelievable.
Like something you'd read carved on a moonrock. The two poems are from my
books, HOME RECORDINGS and ANOTHER LIFE. The third story will be published next
year in my next short story collection. I’ve been working on that manuscript
and it’s up to 100 pages!
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