11/2/05 10:52 PM
Untitled Prose Poem 1
Rasputin took a bite out of a salty plum. He clamped a little flap of plum skin in his front teeth, while the flesh of the plum slapped down into his beard. Rasputin spat the skin and flesh and said, “For Fuck’s sake, who salted this plum?” This was before Rasputin’s testicles had descended. This was in what they called, “The High Hat and Sax Days.” Of course, everyone in the marketplace found Rasputin’s odor to be tangy and effervescent. But holy?—p’shaw.
Untitled Prose Poem 2
While setting traps for the one they call “the God-Bear,” Grigio trapped himself. The concussion of the two [Check This] coming together fractured Grigio’s left thigh. How wonderful to be this deep in the wilderness with the ecstatic fever of shock as an unforeseen bonus. How long had he been there by now? Perhaps two Christmases had passed? Or maybe those had been the eyes of God-Raccoons lighting up the trees during those earlier winter months? No. No. They were Christmas lights. Look at how the coffee grounds of my dried blood stick to the tiny bulbs.
Untitled Prose Poem 3
I have tallied it several times and am certain that this is my third prose poem. Someone is out there where the mist meets the blocky rocks, trying to distract me from my tasks tonight. This someone is doing a pretty good rendition of Puccini’s “Vissi d.arte,” but I won’t try to follow that voice. I won’t count on that flimsy mist holding me up again. You can bet I’ve learned my lesson there.
Untitled Prose Poem 4
As far as quantum particles are concerned, I find the anti-chronoton to be most appealing. It does, after all, sweep backwards, erasing the scattered vapor trail that its positive pal, the chronoton, leaves behind it. Or was that in front of it? Must we not remember to un-undo anything?
Untitled Prose Poem 5
I am still very unsure about what the word “diaspora” means. That’s a lie. I am not just unsure. I don’t even have a guess. And yet, this “diaspora” and I love each other like a left boob loves a right boob.