Wooden Carpets
It burns the dust, dusts the edges
Of my rotten rot, rips up ulcersize
Handfuls of insecticide, hankering,
Moth-bit, marble, like statues, hands
Happy as horticulture, crying hands
And whining spines to boot.
It’s in the starlight infrequently,
In the bleach-sized scent and
Event horizon of wooden carpets.
In the muck and the mud,
In marriage and marigold,
Meandering and eating, tossing
Curses like salad bones in the grammar,
Like picketed patchworks, pockmarked
And bleeding in and through
The bounds of the skull.
It’s in the bounds of the sky,
In the lining of my coats,
The door handles of my most
Matchstick and manly emotions
And motives and misprints.
My spirits and kickings, with cackles
In the cots, in the cords
Of my psyche, my Minerva, my paycheck,
My cache and my Medusa,
My medium and reward.
In the plastic of my oceans
And the teeth of my jaws,
In hilarity, in helldrops, in coffees
And calls.
My voice is like a parasite,
A final goodbye. Good riddance,
For when I rid me of my final red sky
Then as sly and as rabid,
Will this paper plane be,
That I will slip it and slash it
Down the stopped throat
Of a cancerous gravel,
And I’ll mock it and dress it
Down with so childlike a glee
That my fee
Could not touch upon a gavel
Or a gable,
A cable or a nape.