Lawrence Hall, HSG
A Hurricane: Outer
Bands and Inner Thoughts
Sun gives way to clouds
Stillness to winds, birds circle
Searching for meaning
The former address, "reactionary drivel," was a P. G. Wodehouse gag that few ever understood to be a mildly self-deprecating joke. Drivel, perhaps, but not reactionary. Neither the Red Caps nor the Reds ever got it.
Lawrence Hall, HSG
A Hurricane: Outer
Bands and Inner Thoughts
Sun gives way to clouds
Stillness to winds, birds circle
Searching for meaning
Lawrence Hall, HSG
Reading the Magna
Carta Will Make Us Smarter
(And it bans fish weirs in the Thames)
The Kings have been subject to the law since 1215
But are American presidents? That remains to be seen
In Defense of King George | Smithsonian (smithsonianmag.com)
The President Can Now Assassinate You, Officially | The
Nation
Lawrence Hall, HSG
A Sunday Morning Church
Message: “Some Folks Need Killing”
“…disciple-makers through the power of Jesus Christ!”
-Lake Church
A lieutenant-governor strutting and yelling in church
Demanded the deaths of “some folks” unspecified
The faithful of Lake Church heard out his deadly cause
And then obediently applauded him -
The man who might someday order their executions
NC Lt. Gov. Robinson defends ‘folks need
killing’ comments (msn.com)
Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson at NC church meeting:
“Some folks need killing” (yahoo.com)
Lawrence Hall, HSG
Hurricane Track Attack Forth and Back
Spaghetti models are not
really spaghetti
But only colored lines
across electric maps
Squiggling in iridescence around
the Gulf
Slithering atop the waves,
then to your house
The weather reporters’
cliches fall from the skies
As microbursts of
bottled-water-babbles
Canned goods and fresh
radio batteries
Tune to this station as your
roof blows away
Spaghetti models are not
really spaghetti
But watch the news in the
street – he’s getting all wet-ty!
Lawrence Hall, HSG
Yes, We Are a
Republic – Much Like Haiti
As
for the men in power, they are so anxious to establish the myth of infallibility
that they do their utmost to ignore truth.
-Pasternak, Doctor Zhivago
In America every night is Kristalnacht
Everyone seems to hate everyone else
Gunfights in our parks, mass murders everywhere
Communist-made fireworks celebrate freedom
From state to state a reichskirche is on the march
Employment is down, prices are up
Vultures circle our dying President
Some in Congress promote raw genocide
The Supreme Court authorizes presidential crimes -
As St. Thomas More said to Lord Norfolk:
“I show you
the times”
Lawrence Hall, HSG
It Wasn’t the Fourth of July
That we may wander o’er this bloody field
To book our dead, and then to bury them
-Henry V IV.vii.75-76
It wasn’t the fourth of July, but it was about then
Near the Cambodian border, on the Vam Co Tay
Searching for two American airman whose machine had gone down
Down, down into the steaming green Vam Co Tay
Bloated and floating, quite still when we saw them
The sloshy prop wash bumped them about a bit
Empty eye sockets, mouths open in silent screams
We poncho-linered their bodies aboard the boat
Cigarettes of despair against the stench and rot
This was not what we sang about in school
(I don't know why this program has suddenly decided to double-space. Perhaps it is conspiring with my electric toothbrush)
Lawrence Hall, HSG
The Haunted
Electric Toothbrush
This morning
at dawn
I was alone
I heard a moan
A mysterious
groan
A ceaseless
drone
It wasn’t
the ‘phone
It was my
toothbrush
It had on
its own
Turned itself
on
My Philips Sonicare ™© and (legal protections in a peach tree) has
done me good service for years. This morning it turned itself on atop a glass
shelf with other little bottles of this and tubes of that, making an unusual
moaning / groaning / droning that took me some time to sort out. It is a great
device; when it finally hands in its lunch pail (as Bertie Wooster would say) I
will buy another just like it.
Lawrence Hall, HSG
Monsoon Coffee
The old men argue whether
we have monsoons
Or if our afternoon
thunderstorms are unworthy
Of scientific labels,
notations, or marks
To be discussed on the six
o’clock news
Each day at four I take my
coffee outside
To sit beneath the oak and
take the air
With a book, the Wordle,
or an empty mind
As thunderheads rise like
monsters in the east
Fearsome clouds menace the
sky-paling moon
And breezes wind
themselves up for the daily monsoon
Lawrence Hall, HSG
The Percolation of Our Beautiful Green Earth
Like MeeMaw’s aluminum
coffee pot
The earth percolates through
all the seasons
Of rain and drought and freeze,
of dust and mud
The ground we work gives
up its annual troves
The tiller’s tines turn up
old pocketknives
Old nails, old screws, old
bits of window glass
An unfired flash cube from
a party long ago
Gardening is also archaeology
I excavate from the
machine while sitting in the shade
Decades-old fence wire wrapped
around the blade
Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr…!
Lawrence Hall, HSG
Waiting-Room Art:
Same Old Bicycle Leaning Against the Same Old Sunlit
Wall
We’ve all seen that bicycle,
that sunlit wall
In photographs taken in Italy
And Austin (don’t forget
the bike-lock now)
In paintings from old-lady
art classes everywhere
Perhaps that bike and wall
are a Statement
About Milieu and Patina
and, like, stuff
Neoformalist New Socialist
Realism
Inverted kitsch deflating
the patriarchy
I propose a fresh vision:
what I would like
Is that old wall crumbling,
and crushing that bike!
Lawrence Hall, HSG
The Hanging of Jake Spoon
Nothing in his life / Became him like
the leaving it
Macbeth I.iiii.7-8
At dusk. Heat. Heat and
dust. Jake’s last slow ride
Words through a fog of
fear, last words, slow words
Old pals and dead enemies
on either side
Slow cooings and callings
from unseen prairie birds
Smooth Jake, always good
for a laugh and a drink
A ladies’ man, a gamblin’
man, a man of charm
Unreliable, yes, not one
to pause and think
Tho’ he never meant nobody
no harm
He suddenly spurred his
pacer, making amends
His moment of nobility, to
spare his friends
Lonesome
Dove can be said to
be The National Book of Texas.
Lawrence Hall, HSG
The Fairies Themselves Now Dance Sweet Summer In
My work is loving the world.
Here the sunflowers, there the hummingbird
-Mary Oliver, “Messenger”
Everything is sacramental this week:
The Strawberry Moon in the fullness of being
Midsummer magic by day and by night
The English quarter day, the Feast of St. John
And holy bonfires in honor of light
Good honeybees take Communion at every flower
Soft breezes sing hymns among the ripening corn
The woods and fields are baptized in happiness
The sun and moon bless maidens and swains
We need no clocks or calendars to tell us when –
The fairies themselves now dance sweet summer in
Lawrence Hall HSG
Mhall46184@aol.com
1957: The Year We All
Became Soviets
“…we’re
going to get science applied to social problems and backed by the whole force
of the state…”
Mark Studdock in C. S. Lewis’ That Hideous Strength
Soviet Science launched a beeping toy into space
In the name of Progress; a mass-murderer ordered it so
And a month later Science launched and killed sweet Laika
Abandoned in orbit to die alone
Brave America suffered the Aunt Pittypat vapours:
We too must launch our slide-rules into space
And set our children to study Sovietism
Send civilization into orbit to die alone
Dogs and apes and men have flamed out in crashes
And Alexandria again is but pale ashes
Lawrence Hall, HSG
Mhall46184@aol.com
Do You Miss Your Trapper-Keeper?
This is the middle of June so why
Haven’t the back-to-school sales begun?
This year’s cooler than cool styles
Have been stored in shipping containers
For months or years on Indonesian docks
Or in warehouses in Long Beach
The teeny-boppers who modelled those clothes
Might be in graduate school by now
If school were as cool as the ads
Taylor Swift would be the principal
Lawrence Hall, HSG
Old and Unselected Poems
Why do publishers entitle
volumes of verse
New and Selected Poems?
Is it the editors’ lack of
imagination?
Or is it some sort of
secular rubric
An inky “We’ve always done
it that way?”
When you finish writing a
poem it is new
It didn’t exist before
you, and now it does
And someone who reads your
poem has selected it
It wasn’t selected until
someone picked it up
Every poem is forever new
and selected
And to the joy of your
friends, so are you
Lawrence Hall, HSG
Somewhere in New Mexico I Tipped a Waitress 25%
NOT I - NOT ANYONE else, can travel that road for you. You must travel it for yourself.
-Walt Whitman
On a cool autumn morning in New Mexico
A greasy spoon along the interstate
Walt Whitman and I enjoyed breakfast together
Bacon and eggs, hash browns, coffee and toast
And it was very good – no heaves of gas
But Whitman found an errand in some other soul
And sang a different self to California
McKuen rode with me the rest of the way
Lawrence Hall HSG
Mhall46184@aol.com
Mockingbirds at Dusk in a Time of War
They might be fighting;
they might be he-ing and she-ing
Their leaf-rich oak could
be their arena
Or it might serve them as
their bower of bliss
For love in this
magnolia-scented dusk
They’re still at it,
whatever their “it” might be
But breaking off to blitz
the subtle cat
Sneaking about in quest of
a bunny or squirrel
But who from feathered
fury must now retreat
They might be fighting;
they might be he-ing and she-ing
But then
They
might be mocking the rest of us
Bower of
bliss – cf. Spenser’s The Faerie Queene
Lawrence Hall HSG
Mhall46184@aol.com
Petite Bourgeois, Personal, and Self-Indulgent
I used to admire your poetry. I shouldn't admire it now. I should find it
absurdly personal. Don't you agree? Feelings, insights, affections...
it's suddenly trivial now.
-Strelnikov to Yuri in Doctor Zhivago (film)
In the evenings I sit on my summer lawn
Slouched in an old, much-painted metal chair
That symbol of petite-bourgeois respectability
With a little table for my drink, my pipe, my book
(The cat pads by on errands of his own)
At dusk a friend or two might amble along
And join me for a glass, a smoke, a talk
We casually swat at mosquitoes and rumors
And argue about Doctor Zhivago and Lonesome Dove
(A fast-diving mockingbird mocks the cat)
In a fallen world of chaos and suffering
With fear of revolution in the air
Is it right to indulge ourselves with such trifles
As sitting and talking with old friends in the twilight?
Oh, yes
(The cat and the mockingbird continue their game)