The Innisfree Poetry Journal
www.innisfreepoetry.org
by Larry Moffi
ORIGINAL CHINTZ
The plastic eyes of the Indian maiden clock on the wall glow and click the minutes away, a cold indelible blue. She has been sneering generations of revenge down on me for hours, her pendulum's quiver of arrows tipped with steel her people forged in the fires of my dream. I remember
trying to count cubes of lamb in a stew, the tender carrots, chestnut meats, sprigs of fresh mint. It felt like New Zealand, cradle of a dell -- the green declivities and the gangly young girls dyeing wool for smocks along the river's lips. Rose was the woman beside me whose beauty those girls, in bodies they would never grow out of, could not bear. What was it we were asking that brought us to laughter? Surely
I am going to die before I dream New Zealand again. And here, God save me from the useless hours, beneath a puff-ball, pastel coverlet, in a motel room of original chintz. Still the clock tells a naive American time. The magic fingers that vibrate the bed have not yet walked off, and the box, with its clean slot for money, calls.
THE DONKEY SERENADE
February, probably . . . 1957 I would almost swear, Joe Maize and his Chordsmen playing Hartford "live onstage" and I am watching a man punch a woman bloody through the driver-side window of a green Buick Roadmaster in the parking lot behind the old State Theater. How does she hold on so long, or why, tires shrieking from the alley onto Front Street, as in the movies, though the sound registers a pain impenetrable as song itself. By the entrance marked Stage Door, above a sewer grating's indifferent warmth, a few sleepy, tuxedoed musicians huddle on break for air or to smoke. “Show business,” one of them offers. Then each of us came in from the cold and I listened from the dark wings to their signature piece, The Donkey Serenade, slight Joe himself a curious, off-beat rendition of Sinatra and Crosby combined. I won't argue they were not loved as that poor woman or stunk worse than hell as that son-of-a-bitch in the Buick. They were good enough. I wanted to know what drove them to a life turning the gift of music into a comedy act they managed to make work, even on television's more popular variety shows, Toast of the Town among them. Eventually, like every other great and mediocre combo and quartet, the Chordsmen broke apart. The music no longer held and the sight-gags died and Joe's electric guitar lost its resolute twang. One by one the happy chordsmen went away into different lives far offstage. Two, including my cousin Johnny, the one on the accordion and with the bad "rug" styled for the time, opened restaurants having learned much about food on the road. Mr. Joe Maize, I've been told, ran for mayor somewhere in Jersey and won and kept on winning. I own the record they cut forty years ago on the Decca label. A demo, it has its place among Elvis and Shirley Ellis and Jimmy Soul, among Doc Starkes and his Nite Riders, The Champs and The Crystals, Glenn Miller and Billy Eckstine and dozens of 45s I've never bothered to throw away. I play them in my head on occasion. Sweet Apple Cider, Two Faces Have I, The Donkey Serenade. What's the difference? Still the credits scroll down on all of them, somewhat cloudy and out of focus through the eight-inch tv screen, a blizzard of who's who and how and what, while a melody circles and crackles and fades, and a gay señorita gives her burro his lead and doesn't seem to care how song becomes air.
JANUARY DANDELION
You sway in the virtue of yellow today Where once you fought civility to belong.
Does it matter now you were never welcome Long after every Mum bastard turned to straw?
CHANCE
Two brown sparrows weave a nest in the rain gutter above my study. Ferocious, dedicated, they work through morning's awful heat hauling the salt hay I let go rancid through winter, spring. Ping, their beaks blast inside the worn tin trough, the effort growing round and firm and deeper by degrees. They will know when they are done.
Even as I want to rest they claw the span of drought above. Yes, torrents will break upon the cove they trust their lives within. What comes by chance does not flee, nor can we command it from the mind.
Copyright 2006-2012 by Cook Communication
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