Poem of the Day – March 5

I sat on a bench in the hospital

Courtyard, drinking a mocha latte,

And wondering why people

Are so unhealthy, in such

Constant need of medical intervention.

I was waiting for my wife,

Who was having some kind of test,

And I began to weep, but silently,

So the man a few feet away

Wouldn’t give me a look.

Wouldn’t think there had been bad news,

Or even death.

What would my wife think if she came

At that moment, that I had

Lost control of my faculties?

That she’d have me on her hands

For how many years?

Bursting into tears over nothing.

Feeling profoundly sad every

Time I looked around.

But I was thinking about the

Woman being pushed in a wheelchair,

And the man moving slowly

Along with the aid of a cane,

And I thought about our dog,

Lying in her favorite place

On her bed in a corner of the room.

I have never heard her complain

Although she is getting old,

And the time will come when

My wife and I will look at each other and say,

Is it time? Will we arrive at that point

Through a rational process,

Through reasoned discussion,

Or will we be smothered in

Bursts of feeling, the kind

That come over you without warning,

The kind of truth that we foolishly bury,

Believing that it will never

Be dug up.
 

 © Dennis Hathaway
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Poem of the Day – March 3

You don’t know where you’re going

Unless you know where you are,

You don’t know where you’ve been,

Unless you know how you got there.

You don’t know what the story is,

Unless you know that the beginning,

May actually be the end. Or vice-versa.

 

Conundrums come in many shapes,

Some elongated, like a sausage,

Others round, like a ping pong ball,

They are something you will know,

When you see them. And vice-versa.

 

Do not despair. If you don’t know

Who you are, you may have a treatable

Condition. There is a drug for everything–

Ennui, nervous laughter, excessive

Intelligence. Just ask the pharmacist.

 

But keep your skin protected from

Full moonlight, or you will become

That which is beyond treatment.

Someone nobody likes, not even dogs,

Although your money will still be good

In the stores that no longer deal in products,

But only matters of the mind.

 
 © Dennis Hathaway
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Poem of the Day – March 2

The day I heard Elvis Presley

I was sitting behind the wheel

Of my uncle’s ’46 Mercury coupe

At the weedy edge of a cornfield

Where yellowed stalks awaited

The rain that would never come,

Where a machine swallowed

And chewed the stunted bounty

Into dross that would satisfy

The hogs and cattle but do nothing

To appease the bank, the creditors

Who joined the dubious appeals

For clouds in the hot, listless sky.

 

I had the wheel in my hands

But there would be no jostle

Over the clodded, dusty earth.

No grind of the starter bringing

The engine to ticking life.

I had come with my father

To deliver a can of gasoline

To the smoking tractor in the field.

 

My uncle was in the Navy,

Somewhere on some ocean

I had never seen although

I had imagined a landscape

Of nothing but water and sky

And I believed that the gray ship

Churning through the waves

Was a fitting escape from a life

That seemed, day by day, to shrink,

To rob the air I needed to breathe,

To surround me in darkness

Filled with whispers of doom.

 

While my father in the distance

Filled the tank, deftly, without

Slopping the volatile liquid

As I had done when I tried,

I turned on the radio in my uncle’s car

And moved the dial through

Static and voices and advertising jingles

Until there came a voice from a heaven

Much different than the one I feared

Because it couldn’t be reached

Without first dying, a heaven

Of possibility, of freedom

From the dust and smoke

And withered stitchings of corn.

Well, that’s all right, Mama,

That’s all right for you.

 

Beneath the chopping guitar chords,

The Mercury’s engine stirred,

The car lurched forward

Then lifted, climbed, and soared

High over the blistered earth,

Over the gray sheen of the sea,

Beyond the earth toward the infinite

Nothing that I dreaded in my dreams.

 

I’m leaving town baby,

I’m leaving town for sure.

 

But I was not afraid.

 

© Dennis Hathaway
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Poem of the Day – March 1

It was raining cats and dogs

On the tip of the iceberg,

And I was getting cold feet

Afraid that I may have thrown

The baby out with the bathwater.

 

Being the black sheep isn’t easy,

Not like shooting fish in a barrel,

Or getting your ducks in a row.

I need to start ruling with an iron fist,

And stop listening to those

Who are nutty as a fruitcake.

 

Although you couldn’t say,

That I’m as cute as a button,

I do have a heart of gold.

And when the ball is in my court

I won’t drop it like a hot potato.

 

And if love is a battlefield,

Then I’m in for a fight,

Although I can promise

Never to throw in the towel.

© Dennis Hathaway

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Poem of the Day – February 28

My fellow Americans, you can have justice,

Or you can have liberty, but not both.

Why, you ask? Look at the symbols,

A blindfolded woman in a clinging dress,

That slips off her shoulder, exposes her thigh,

A person about to engage in a sado-masochistic exercise.

The scales in one hand, a sword in the other–

What’s that about? Will she lop off the head

of her consort? And the symbols of liberty,

A cracked bell, another woman wearing

Layers of robes that conceal her form.

Could she be pregnant? She’s looking up,

Not down at the poor and huddled in the harbor.

And that crown. Sharp spikes warning away anyone

Wanting a closer look. Which do you want?

Justice is only as blind as the old man hunched

Above the fray, harumphing at the nonsense

Appointment has forced him to endure.

When he closes his eyes does he pluck digestible

Fact from acres of weedy fiction, or does he imagine

The young woman at the table in less seemly attire?

Liberty is not just a matter of chains and shackles,

But concerns the oily machinery of the mind,

Where everything is possible until the pulleys

Try to spin and gears try to mesh and the

Cracked bell rings its inharmonious tune.

 

© Dennis Hathaway
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Poem of the Day – February 27

Doesn’t everyone lie?

The president, the senator,

The mayor, the priest,

The insurance salesman.

The prime minister,

The son and daughter

Who try to sneak into the house

Without waking the sleeper

Who is easily disturbed

By far more subtle things.

The creak of the rafters

In a bluster of wind,

The scratchings of a

Prowling animal,

The long soft moan

From the pillow beside him.

What is she dreaming?

Of being chased through a field

By a horde of madmen?

Or was it pleasure,

Provoked by the taste

Of another man’s lips,

The clasp of his arms

Around her naked body.

Will she tell the truth?

Will she say that she

Has never felt such ecstasy?

Or will she say she doesn’t recall,

Or that it doesn’t matter,

Because it was only a dream.

 

© Dennis Hathaway
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Poem of the Day – February 26

There’s nothing you can do,

If you set your mind to it,

Because the opposite of trouble,

Isn’t the peace you might expect,

But a faint ringing in the ears.

 

You must have a degree, and a license,

And the ability to distinguish

Between adjectives and verbs.

It helps to be a carnivore,

Because iron isn’t only good for skillets,

But for the blood that carries

Messages to the little rooms in the mind

Where the cleaning supplies are kept.

 

If you can’t hear you can’t listen,

Which might seem obvious enough,

But the obvious isn’t always enough,

Isn’t sufficient to the moment

That gives way to another moment,

So quickly that it’s impossible to know

If you’re in the past or present or future.

Perhaps all three at once.

 

That sounds like philosophy,

Or is it paleontology, or geography,

Or morphology, or hagiography?

Or photography, which enabled the selfie,

Which enabled the selfie stick,

Which enabled a person to look at herself,

Or himself, or itself, and be delighted,

Or disgusted, or puzzled by a resemblance

To Milton Friedman, who himself

Resembled Queen Victoria, but only

When she was asleep in her bed.

 
 © Dennis Hathaway
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Poem of the Day – February 25

Can you yodel?

Can you swim?

Can you play air guitar?

Can you speak French?

Can you do sudoku?

Can you make money?

Can you accept the fact that life consists of an infinite series of mishaps?

 

Do you save money?

Do you trust yourself?

Do you use profanity?

Do you wonder?

Do you know?

Do you have anything to say that hasn’t been said by somebody at some point in time, including yourself?

 

How are you fixed for canned tomatoes?

How many peas are in the average pod?

Will your car break down tomorrow?

Will anyone care if you don’t show up?

Did you tell your wife you love her?

Did you brush your teeth before you went to the bank?

Where is your mettle?

Where is your hair?

When will you stop smoking, or if you’ve already stopped, when will you stop drinking, or if you’ve already stopped, when you will stop wishing that the person next door who plays music too loud will have an accident and be seriously injured although not die.

 

What is art?

What is life?

 

Do you care?

 
 © Dennis Hathaway
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Poem of the Day – February 24

Life presents unpleasant and even despicable tasks,

Unstopping a plugged-up toilet, disciplining a child,

Calling customer service about almost anything.

 

But none compare with shopping for clothes.

Hyperbole? Many appear to love this onerous task.

My wife, for example. I say to each their own.

But what is a more loathesome sight than a display

Of men’s clothing? Try to find the right sizes,

Drag an armload to the dressing room,

Where the attendant and any loitering customers

Can be imagined to look askance at your dreadful sense of style.

 

Undress behind a door that may not have a lock,

Feeling exposed, as in that dream where you

Find yourself completely naked in a public place.

Trying to act nonchalant, trying to ignore the

Silent distaste that radiates from surrounding eyes .

But what if there was an earthquake, a fire?

What if you had to evacuate the place at a moment’s notice,

Run through the women’s department in your underwear,

Huddle outside in rain, or snow, or lethal cold?

 

Pull on a pair of pants festooned with tags and labels,

Stare into the vast mirror that seems to play a trick,

Turning a specimen of admirable fitness

Into an example of poor posture and bad eating habits.

The “Before” in the Before and After photographs.

 

The pants are always too long, or not long enough,

The shirts strain across the chest or balloon like tents,

Even though the label alleges that they are your size.

You are faced with this unsavory choice–

Traipse back to the racks and shelves and try again,

Or flee, hoping your haste doesn’t suggest that

You are probably a shoplifter, and are wearing

A number of pilfered garments beneath your own clothes,

As if that would even be possible.

© Dennis Hathaway

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Poem of the Day – February 23

How do you change yourself into a different person?

Stop scowling all the time and start smiling,

Say Hello to strangers on the sidewalk,

Ignore the driver who cuts you off in traffic,

Remember to tell your loved ones

That they are more important than

The game you are watching on TV.

Pat the dog on the head at least once a day.

 

You’ll still recognize yourself in the bathroom mirror.

But how will you know it’s you?

By the shirt you’ve worn three days in a row?

By the patch of whiskers you always miss

When you shave underneath your chin?

By the eyes that process the artificial light

That casts a glow on the forehead but

Fails to explain exactly what is going on?

 
 © Dennis Hathaway
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