Sunday, November 15, 2020

Her Brief Candle - poem

 

Her Brief Candle

 

“Do we all holy rites…”

 

-Henry V, IV.viii.118

 

Her candle was too brief

 

But she was here

And she gave us joy

 

Conventionalities are no good now:

We are all stricken in the loss of a child

A happy child, in whom we are forever blessed

Today and forever, in happy remembrance

 

But still, it hurts

She’s not here now

 

Are we asking too much

That she should be?

 

No

 

Because if she were here

She would give meaning to our feeble words

 

“Eternal rest grant unto her, O Lord, and make perpetual Light to shine upon her.”

Saturday, November 14, 2020

You Do Not Prune an Apple Tree - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

You Do Not Prune an Apple Tree

 

You do not prune an apple tree, oh, no

You must become one with the apple tree

With saw and loppers, not unlike a surgeon

An especially conscientious one

 

The intrusions of vines must be excised

And the cancerous rubbish growths pulled away

Dead limbs must be diagnosed and sawn down

And the poor weeping ends tended with love

 

You tell the tree to take the winter off

And call you first thing in the coming spring

Friday, November 13, 2020

Cafe' Renee' - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

 

Café’ Renee’

 

Listen very carefully; I shall say this only once.

 

-Michelle of the Resistance

 

Café Renee’ is still open in Nouvion

Close to the coast, except when it isn’t

In a petit monde of possibilities

Even when the outside world is going wrong

 

Let us find a table close enough to hear

Lieutenant Geering and Colonel von Strom

Whispering conspiracies about paintings and plots

Until Madame Edith screeches out a song

 

Renee’ brings us a cognac as always

And we know the fun is about to begin

 

 

Thursday, November 12, 2020

Another Lockdown? - weekly column

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

 

Another Lockdown?

 

Another lockdown?

 

We haven’t been unlocked from the first one.

 

Masks are still required – and rightly so – as are social distancing, sheets of clear plastic in all businesses, health questions before appointments, those menacing little plastic temperature guns that gatekeepers aim at our foreheads, hand sanitizer, anti-viral aerosols, ventilation, and the good hygienic practices our parents and teachers taught us.

 

I live beneath the approach to Houston Intercontinental, and I can sit outside in the fresh autumn air in the evenings and remark on the now rare experience of seeing an airplane made brilliant in the hidden sun as it descends with its manifests of people hoping to find their hearts’ delight at their journey’s end.

 

The multi-named virus is real. The spouse-person and I can count two friends and some twelve acquaintances who have died from it in our rural county.

 

But the denials continue and the masks do not.

 

The afternoon casualty lists on the local news always end with words to the effect of, “All but one had pre-existing conditions.”

 

The slackers.

 

Some reporters have a gift of making it sounding Darwinian, as if the dead were somehow at fault.

 

Some 60,000 young Americans were killed in Viet-Nam (my frame of reference; I’m old) – no one ever thought to add, “but most of them had pre-existing conditions.”

 

There are few communities who haven’t lost some of their finest young men and women in the numerous undeclared wars so beloved of our governments for generations. Yet not even the most callous presidents and the mostly harmless members of Congress have attempted to calm the families of the dead with assurances (or accusations?) of pre-existing conditions.

 

If the remains of your child or young friend are returned home from some Whodumbideawasthisistan, there would be no comfort to the family in the chaplain saying, “but she had a pre-existing condition.”

 

But the perhaps 250,000 killed by the CV (or whatever it’s being called this month) are dismissed almost casually with the sneaky deflection of, “well, most them had pre-existing conditions.”

 

Everyone has a pre-existing health condition; there are no perfect physical specimens. 

 

The reality is that refrigerated trailers aren’t lined up at hospitals because of pre-existing conditions. People aren’t set out in crowded corridors or tents on oxygen or ventilators  because of broken legs, measles, ‘flu, colds, migraines, appendicitis, or hurt feelings.

 

They’re dying of the CV.

 

So put away the ego and the ideologies.

 

Go to work and wear your mask.

 

Wash your hands. Often.

 

Keep your distance.

 

Mind your coughing.

 

Take your temperature.

 

Slather on the hand sanitizer.

 

Keep MeeMaw and PawPaw alive.

 

Keep your children alive.

 

Keep yourself alive.

 

Peace.

 

-30-

The Cliche' is to Say That We Didn't See It Coming - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

 

The Cliché is to Say That We Didn’t See It Coming

 

A happy child, cuddling one of her pets -

That’s the picture they used for her obituary

 

We didn’t see it coming

Tuesday, November 10, 2020

for Remembrance Day / Veterans' Day - poem

 

Something About Life

 

“Live.  Just live.”

 

-Yuri in Doctor Zhivago

 

The plane lifted, and the cheering was wild

And then pretty quickly the pilot said

“We are now clear of Vietnamese

Territorial waters.”  There was joy,

Even wilder cheering for most, and quiet

Joy for a few.  For me, Karamazov

To hand, peace, and infinite gratitude.

“I’m alive,” I said to myself and to God,
“Alive.  I will live, after all.”  To read, to write,

Simply to live.  Not for revolution,

Whose smoke poisons the air, not for the war,

Not to withdraw into that crippling self-pity

Which is the most evil lotus of all,

But to live.  To read, to write.

                                            But death comes,

Then up the Vam Co Tay, or now in bed,

Or bleeding in a frozen February ditch;

Death comes, scorning our frail, feeble, failing flesh,

But silent then at the edge of the grave,

For all graves will be empty, not in the end,

But in the very beginning of all.

A Catechism of Brokenness - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

A Catechism of Brokenness

 

The celebrant breaks the Body in two

The Body is broken

The celebrant is broken

The communicant is broken

 

Only the Word is whole: “This is My Body…”

 

The celebrant breaks the Body in two

That it may be shared

Broken again

And shared further along

 

Only the Word is whole: “This is My Body…”

 

The Celebrant breaks the Body in two

That in the sequenced brokenness

In all the little broken Pieces

One-ness may come

Monday, November 9, 2020

The Geometry of Intersectionality - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

The Geometry of Intersectionality

 

1. Crossroads

 

Intersections aren’t crossroads, you know

Where you can choose to stop a while and talk

With a man walking some other way in life

And learn something over a borrowed cigarette

 

2. Intersections

 

At intersections you never meet anyone

It’s all about obedience to lights and signs

And painted arrows in the road that seem

To point everywhere except where you want to go

 

3. Stop-for-awhile signs

 

There are stop signs in life. You have to stop

But then you go – a stop sign isn’t forever

Sunday, November 8, 2020

What Went Ye into the Casino to See? - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

What Went Ye into the Casino to See?

 

Shootings at a Las Vegas Casino

 

-news item

 

What went ye into the casino to see -

A numbered mandala spinning truth on red

A James Bond manque in a cartoon tee

A tatted Sylvia Trench wheezing a joint?

 

What went ye into the casino to see -

A clapped-out Toyota cruising the drag

Mysterious encounters behind the Denny’s

Getting lucky in the Lucky 7 Motel?

 

Does a man learn at last what life really means

Choking in blood among the slot machines?

 

 

Cf. St. Matthew 11:7

Saturday, November 7, 2020

Theology of the Garden Bench - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

Theology of the Garden Bench

 

God’s good, green earth is holy, and must be reverenced

As an act of His Creation, a work of His hands

And of His breath, His singing into being

This glorious epiphany in which we live

 

Our little children live close upon the earth

Laughing and tumbling through the summer grass

With kittens and puppies as their happy playmates

Sweet Eden’s innocence echoed in them all

 

And we with our weary, creaky old bones

Repose like royalty on an old wooden bench

 

And give thanks

Friday, November 6, 2020

Daddy, What Were You Doing When the World Changed Forever? - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

 

What Were You Doing When the World Changed Forever?

 

The world will change today – that is a cinch

Newspaper drama by the column inch

The vote count is over; we’ve come to the clinch

 

And I, in peace – I built a garden bench

Thursday, November 5, 2020

Guy Fawkes Day - an App Payment for the Guy?

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

Guy Fawkes Day - an App Payment for the Guy?

 

Remember, remember a good fifth of plonk

Elections, tantrums, and plot

I see no reason

This autumn season

Why this year should not be forgot!

Wednesday, November 4, 2020

Someone Said There's an Election Going Around - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

Someone Said There’s an Election Going Around

 

In much work there shall be abundance: but where there are many words, there is oftentimes want.

 

-Proverbs 14:23

 

This autumn morning I have a fence to mend

Fence. As in fence. Concrete footings, wooden planks

The rotten bits to be cut out and replaced

No metaphors will be harmed in this repair

 

Later I will harvest the last of the sunflowers

Drooping now in the fullness of life’s end

No longer following the sun, only the earth

Soon to be seeds for the winter squirrels and birds

 

Someone said there’s an election going around

Fine, fine, but the grapevines need pruning down

The Whole World is Laughing - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

 

The Whole World is Laughing

 

Two vulgar men grappling over nuclear codes

Flinging schoolyard abuse about like poo

We still don’t know who won the election

 

We only know who lost

Tuesday, November 3, 2020

The Staff Cafeteria at the Lubyanka - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

The Staff Cafeteria at the Lubyanka

 

Spaghetti again?

 

A busy day in the cellar.  Admin

Wants more cells cleared for Lenin’s birthday bash

They come along okay until we pass the offices

And then they know. Some of them cry. It’s rough

 

Put it on my tab

 

It’s pretty rough upstairs, too, meeting your quota

Of counter-revolutionaries and recidivists

You just drag them downstairs and then shoot them

Easy-peasey for you, but the paperwork…!

 

Two cups of tea

 

Shop-talk and gossip, who got a promotion

Budgets and schedules, and comradely devotion

Monday, November 2, 2020

All Intelligence is Artificial - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

All Intelligence is Artificial

 

No, no, we are not banks of blinking lights

And random teletype-type taps and beeps

Like Patrick McGoohan’s educational General

Or George Jetson’s mainframe at Spacely Sprockets

 

And we are not new Robby-the-Robots

Nor one with The Borg, with electric eyes

Scanning decaying humans for their flaws

Devouring a pancreas and a battery for lunch

 

We are within and through God’s intelligence -

The artificial part is that we must work it

 

Sunday, November 1, 2020

"You in the West Have No Idea..." - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

“You in the West Have No Idea…”

 

You in the West have no idea what it’s like to be ruled by peasants.

 

-Mihai in Robert D. Kaplan’s Balkan Ghosts, p. 138

 

Oh, yes

We do

Saturday, October 31, 2020

The Ministry of Clockery - Moonbeam Saving Time

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

 The Ministry of Clockery

 

Moonbeam Saving Time

 

Change for the sake of change – spare change? Spare change?

There must be a Ministry of Clockery

With Cratchit-y clerks drawing clocks at their desks

Supervised by a Scrooge of Clockery

 

They scriven at their screens and so change things

Chanting “Change is good” and “Progress is change”

“The more things change, all the more change for us”

And if nothing needs changing, yes it does

 

And once in a while at the Coke machine

One of the Cratchit-y clerks laughs, “Spare change?”

Friday, October 30, 2020

+Father Raphael Barousse, OSB

 

This is a poem I wrote for Fr. Raph’s 90th birthday this spring. Last night - 29 October 2020 - he died truly in the fullness of years, in the prayerful company of his brothers at the Abbey, and so I re-send this as my poor valedictory for him on his happiest birthday of all:

 

Father Raphael Barousse, OSB

 

Abbey St. Joseph, Covington, Louisiana

 

 Monk, Missionary, Muleskinner, Writer, Teacher,

Scholar, Raconteur, Uncle Bubby,

 

Friend

 

 

To God, Who Gives Joy to Our Youth

 

For Reverend Raphael Barousse, OSB

 

Father Raph - Uncle Bubby - on His Birthday

 

 

Introibo ad altare Dei

 

Ad Deum qui laetificat juvenitutem meam

 

 

You look into the mirror and ask yourself

“Who is that old man staring back at me?”

Your friends tell you you’re lookin’ good - for your age

And your uncooperative body in protest creaks

 

But you and all of them are wrong because

 

You still approach the Altar as a child

As you once were, and are, and will be forever

For God will have it so, will have you so -

Enchanted by His magic - a little boy

 

A little boy in Sunday shoes and shirt

Who hears his Mama whispering to him, “Don’t squirm!”

As the Mass hums through a summer morning

Until that moment when you encounter Him:

 

The universe spirals through its sunlit dance

Creation spins around, in, and down

Eternity circles the paten and cup

 

Miraculum

 

Eternity circles the paten and cup

Around and out and up, Creation spins

Through its sunlit dance the universe spirals

 

And only little children understand that

And only little children are invited

And so God gives joy to your forever-youth

And your forever-youth gives joy to God

 

On the Opening of Magic Words (and all words are magic) - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

On the Opening of Words

 

I love to open words, and so do you:

Old words growled by our fathers in the fens

Smooth words polished on the tables of the Law

Neologisms laughed into being over beer

 

Words cadenced on the bloody fields of Mars

Words whispered on the perfumed pillows of Venus

Words prayed around the Altar of our God

Words breathed in pain on the last day of all

 

I love to open words, and so do you

Our words, our holy words, both old and new

Thursday, October 29, 2020

A Saturday Morning in the Bookstore - weekly column

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

 

A Saturday Morning in the Bookstore

 

This is re-cycled from 2011, when a pleasant hour or two in the bookstore did not involve appointments, masks, anti-social distancing, and anti-socials sitting at the three remaining coffee tables for hours while on their computers:

 

Why are there now so many books of lists of ten things we must do before we die?  Why not nine, or eleven? And why should pay someone for a list of experiences he says you and I must fulfill before we shuffle off what Shakespeare is pleased to call this mortal coil?  Will my life be meaningless if I don’t jump out of an airplane over Scotland, see a famous statue in a Buddhist temple in Bangladesh, eat fried snake in Singapore, bicycle through Kenya, visit some snaky island off Honduras, or flush a certain Czarist toilet in St. Petersburg? 

 

The history magazines are mostly about war.  One magazine I perused featured a photograph of a Nazi general about to be executed in Italy in December of 1945.   He looks distressed.  Perhaps his “Top Ten Things to Do Before I Die” list was incomplete: “#9 – murder more Italian and American prisoners.”

 

History magazines sometimes publish articles about what a nice lad General Rommel was, a worthy opponent and all that (stuff), and kind to kittens and children.  No, it just won’t do.  Rommel was a Nazi general.  His career choice was to travel to other countries and then destroy them, killing lots of people while doing so.  But then, hey, maybe he was just trying to find himself.

 

A Nazi connection sells spy stories – any formula-plotted thriller will sell if a big ol’ swish-sticker (remember the subtle obscene gesture by the housemaid in Mrs. Miniver?) adorns the cover.  Such stories always begin on a dark, narrow, bleak, foggy, smells-of-cooking-cabbage, wartime London street where our hero (1) stumbles across a corpse bearing Secret Papers, and then (2) finds his way to an old building which discreetly houses a Special Branch of MI5, MI6, MI6 1/2,or MI7 which is more Special Branchy than any other Special Branch, and in which a mysterious Colonel Ponsonby-Snitt rules over a mysterious league of mysterious functionaries who hold the mysterious key – there’s always a key, real or metaphorical – which is going to win the war against jolly Rommel.

 

Zombies and vampires – I don’t get these genres at all.  If someone wants blood, let him order a steak, rare.   One reads in the news that some teens – obviously not the smart ones – are in imitation of vampire stories biting each other and swapping blood and, hence, bacteria and viruses.  Were they not listening to parental teachings about basic hygiene and the myriads of blood-borne diseases?  Well, no.  Over in the magazine section one can find magazines devoted to tattoos and piercings.  The book retailer could efficiently combine the books on zombies, vampires, tattoos, and piercings into one category: Disfigurement and Disease.

 

Books about the Tudors, especially Tudor queens and girlfriends, are still big.  A nice side-effect is that readers also learn a little history.

 

Eat / Pray / Love / Drink / Vomit – How many women who work at the fast-food joint or at Big Box get to leave all behind and spend a year in Italy discovering themselves?  Heck, most folks consider themselves lucky if they can take the kids to Disney once or twice before the little boogers grow up.

 

A recent fashion are books bearing covers of vapid-looking girls wearing little caps with strings hanging down from them – one infers that these books, and they are Legion, are about a beautiful but misunderstood Hutterite / Amish / Mennonite girl who finds both Jesus and true love in a buggy while a modest church steeple and some perfect trees pose picturesquely in the background.  But I sure wouldn’t know, and never will.   

 

Detective stories – Agatha Christie is still the best.  Hercule Poirot is my hero.  Well, okay, him, John Wayne, Sergeant Schultz, and Bob Newhart.

 

Poetry – just keep moving; nothin’ to read here.  That which now passes for poetry is pretty much me, me, me, my, my, my in content and free verse (which is a contradiction) in non-structure tricked out with the shabbiest sort of rhetorical bling.  If the poet doesn’t dot the i he must be really cool, right? There is neither passion nor intellect nor aesthetics in contemporary poetry, only squalid self-pity flung like a temper-tantrum onto the page.

 

Westerns – the selection is smaller than it used to be.  A current trend is to publish the books that were made into films, which is a great idea.  Anyone who thinks John Wayne was one-dimensional has never seen The Searchers, John Ford’s brilliant examination of racism and redemption.

 

Harry Potter appears to be hiding, at least until the next movie comes out.  The first book in the series was mildly interesting, but then the next forty or fifty were only the first book repackaged – cute kids scream at each other and then fight Him / He Who Must Not Be Named and then some minor character gets killed and then the cute kids reconcile with teary eyes and we learn about friendship being The Most Important Thing.  Yawn.

 

Time for coffee.

 

-30-

Lady Macbeth's Cat - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

Lady Macbeth’s Cat

 

Letting “I dare not” wait upon “I would”

 

-Macbeth I.vii.48

 

Lady Macbeth wrangled with Macbeth during dinner

At cross purposes outside the banqueting hall

A privy conference as to who was the worse sinner

She thought him weak; he, that she was full of gall

 

She wanted one thing, and he another

He yelled that she was unreasonable and demanding

She screamed that he never liked her mother

And on and on, outside on the landing

 

The argument was about, as it came to pass,

What dress she should wear to the king’s funeral mass

 

Afterword:

 

Oh, and that’s all to the story, no more than that;

She had little to say about the cat

Wednesday, October 28, 2020

Q is a Letter in the Alphabet - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

Q is a Letter in the Alphabet

 

And that’s pretty much it, between P and R

Our teachers made us carve it as a curvy 2

Which is illogical because no one

Then wrote about 2uadrilaterals or 2ueens

 

A Q is not a Delphic Oracle

Nor is it The Lost Transistor of Mars

Whispering Barsoomian secrets in code

Transmitted through albino Calvinists

 

Q is a letter in the alphabet -

And we are rational children of God

Tuesday, October 27, 2020

Books are Secret Spaces - poem

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

Books are Secret Places

 

Books are secret places where words go to hide

When the world goes wrong, and children are hurt

By grownups who never learned how to read or love

Or even tell funny stories around the campfire

 

Books are secret places where stories go to hide

When there’s shooting and looting, and children are hurt

By grownups who never think of anything beyond

What their clever leaders tell them to do

 

Books are secret places where poems go to hide

When museums are looted, and children are hurt

By grownups who can see only ideologies

And never the good, the true, the beautiful

 

Books are sacred vessels: read them, love them -

They hold our civilization in trust

Monday, October 26, 2020

Indochine: An Anniversary of Sorts - three poems

 

Lawrence Hall

Mhall46184@aol.com

https://hellopoetry.com/lawrence-hall/

poeticdrivel.blogspot.com

 

Indochine - An Anniversary of Sorts

 

On the 26th of October 1970 I returned from 18th months in Viet-Nam and a brief side-trip into Cambodia. I was literally just a boy off the farm when I went, and was quite young when I wrote the following artless lines, with their conventional allusions, forced rhymes, and usage errors, on the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th anniversaries. Perhaps there is one from the 1st anniversary, but I can’t find it. Well, we are all are looking for something most days: a poem, truth, meaning, or some other trifle.

 

 

…the war – the frights…the smell of h.e., the horribly smashed men still moving like half-crushed beetles, the…corpses…all this shows rarely and faintly in memory…and often seems to have happened to someone else.

 

-C. S. Lewis, “Guns and Good Company,” Surprised by Joy

 

 

26 October 1972

 

The pecans are falling now

Onto the court-house lawn

Geese fly overhead, southbound

Misty dusk and chilly dawn

 

Two year from Viet-Nam

Two eternities from the Vam Co Tay

Elections now, and speeches

And I guess I’ll have my say

 

But the finality briefly denied me

Found many another man

And they’re not here for elections

And Autumn on the land

 

26 October 1973

 

I sit and smoke my pipe and think

Of things that I have seen

Easter seals and steering wheels

And jungle hot and green

 

I sit and smoke my pipe and ponder

The imponderable of God and man

The evening star over a flare-lit war

And souls as grains of sand

 

I sit and smoke my pipe and mourn

For the murdered

 

Many miles, and three years today

From the muddy, bloody waters

Of the Vam Co Tay

 

26 October 1974

 

Many miles

And four years today

From the muddy, bloody waters

Of the Vam Co Tay

 

All the death-hurt eases

And dreams are quieter now

But the hurting never ceases

And I can’t see when it will, or how

 

Four Octobers

Four Autumns today

From rain drizzling on the slimy banks

Of the Van Co Tay

 

“Go and make the world safe for democracy –

Like we did in 1917,” my aged ancestor said

Dear old man, he never lived to know

That sort of thing is dead

 

Grim memories

Of flare-lit nights and steaming days

Of men dying screaming

On the Vam Co Tay

 

The finality briefly denied me

Found many another man

And they’re not seeing the wild geese flying

Or Autumn on the land

 

Many miles

And four years today

From the muddy, bloody waters

Of the Vam Co Tay