Bob Lucky
Dear Ron Padgett
I want you to know
that my students love
“Nothing in That Drawer”
I make them recite it
and tell them
they have to make it clear
where the volta is
without tracking lines
on their fingers as they read
This takes practice
and no one succeeds
without a little drama
One student paused
after the eighth line
and stared down into an empty drawer
It was a long pause
a pregnant pause so large
it felt like an elephant or a whale
about to give birth
When she finished reading
We were all convinced
she had seen something in that drawer
A Short Disquisition on Daydreaming
An idea is a hole
you climb out of
a hole is a depression
you climb into
to come up with something
while you stare at the sky
listen
to the whistling cry
                              of a hawk
                                             looking down to see
                                                            what pops out
                                                                           of the hole
Insomnia
What would I do if I ever went nose to nose with a proboscis monkey
               or had an elephant slap me in the face?
And what is Sandi going to do now that her husband, a miserable human being,
               has died? I think
I may have accidentally put a plastic yogurt container in the paper recycle bin
               today — is it too late
               to retrieve it? Should I call someone?
If I had dog I would walk it every day and not die of a heart attack,
               but if the dog died I would die of a broken heart. What would I name it?
Does my son love me? Does he even like me? If he died, if he fell
               off a cliff on a hike in a jungle
               or a python squeezed him to death,
               I wouldn’t have a reason to live.
Would my wife give me a reason or would we hold hands and walk
               down to the railroad tracks? I wonder
What time is it? What if I’m still awake
               when it’s time to wake up? What do I do
                              if I don’t wake up?
In the Dust
(Blackout poems based on Queen Elizabeth I’s Speech to the Troops at Tilbury, 1588)
1.
2.
Bob Lucky is the author of
Ethiopian Time (Red Bird Chapbooks, 2014),
Conversation Starters in a Language No One Speaks (SurVision Books, 2018),
My Thology: Not Always True But Always Truth (Cyberwit, 2019), and the e-chapbook
What I Say to You (proletaria.org, 2020).
previous page     contents     next page