The Innisfree Poetry Journal www.innisfreepoetry.org by Louis McKee
THE GOOD STUFF
My friend, to prove a point, serves Black Bush, top of the line Irish, to anyone who calls. To be polite, of course, I have a taste.
If truth be known, I taught her all she knows; a picture’s worth a thousand words, but a drink — the right one — can strip them all away.
"You can't take it with you," she laughs, "unless you keep your assets liquid," and so I do, taking beauty, pleasure and the warmth of my visit
with me, although by the time I get home whiskey is merely another memory, like a woman you can only recall watching walk away.
ANECDOTE OF A DOOR
I left a door ajar in Tennessee. Bonnie, it was, blond and sweet, but lost, too, you could see it in her eyes. We only had the one afternoon.
She wasn't thrilled about having to live in Knoxville, but said she figured she would be there all her life. She's the only one I've ever known who said figured.
I can still hear the kudzu in her voice. I wasn't particularly sold on Knoxville myself, but I was young then, and a bus would be leaving soon. It seems ironic now: I left
Bonnie in Tennessee, simple, pretty, and full of wild, and I like to think of her, her sweet syrupy tongue rolling curious words, having dominion over that hard moment —
beauty, like nothing else in Tennessee.
GOING INTO THE CITY
It's been a while,
and I never thought
I'd be the one
who got caught up
in the web of suburb
silk, green lawns
and mini-malls
with drive-thru windows
for if not everything
at least with enough
to keep me off
the train and out
of the city, but the city
was there always
a thought away
behind closed eyes
in dreams but what
do I do now
on the platform waiting
the train coming
but when I can't
be sure not anymore
and the young and perfect
girls are somehow
not right anymore
and for a moment
I worry that the city
isn’t there where
the tracks go
and I'm set on going
myself after all
it's been a while. Copyright 2006-2012 by Cook Communication |