2013 Challenge: One Poem a Week

51 - The Moon and the Donkey

The Moon was legend
in logger lore. Near seven foot
and bear-like, strong as an ox.
We called him The Moon
on account of his luminous
bald head.

No one knows
how the steam donkey fell
on Moon but men came running
from all over camp.

All we could see of Moon
in the muddy rut
was his bald head and it was screaming
“Off me! Off me!”
as the donkey sank, crushing,
crushing,
crushing the breath out of Moon.

We put our shoulders to the metal,
heaving until our heads throbbed.
Thirty of us seeing stars,
fallers, swampers and cook
but it budged not an inch.
All the while Moon was bawling
“Off me! Off me!”
weakening fast.

I knelt in the muck holding his head
and lying to him as his breath left
and he whispered his agony
until, in the awful silence
we stood away,
impotent,
looking down
at the wide unseeing eyes,
the blood filled mouth.

Later, after help arrived
and the donkey righted,
it dawned on us,
Moon knew he was done for.

“Off me!” was a plea
for swifter relief.
 
Epilogue

For Delmore

Kazin mistakenly thought
she saw you on Sunday lost
like a puppy dog after dark
down on Bleeker sniffing the bars
as furtively as a fido would
back alley dipsty dumpsters.

Sally cried in her Canada Dry,
who just last week wouldn't ring
her White Horse Tavern register
and deep sixed your seventh autograph,
scribbled on a White Horse napkin,
pretending to laugh when you said
you'd die on the floor in her men's room.

Indeed, some said you already were
because you cut off both of your ears
and threw them down a subway grate
night after night. "Merde!" you said
to your latest puzzled barstool friend
"at least Baudelaire had Mother's money,
trying to pierce heaven's shroud.
So what's a napkin worth to you, Buddy?"

It was, of course, your newcomer gag
all the regulars heard before,
except it was really your onion joke
you couldn't help but play on yourself,
the skins of which you had to peel
that dry, lifeless, and endless,
nonetheless stung and brought you to tears
for fear there wasn't a heaven.

Or was it, Friend, your manic state
and too many Johnny Walker Reds?
I asked the crumpled yellow sheets
on your naked bed in this naked place.
 
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52

Epilogue, in the Form of a Toast

And so, at last, a year is ended
of writing poèms off the cuff.
A few were good, some have offended
but, mostly, mine were rather rough.
I want to thank my fellow poets
whose verse inspired when at my lowest
compositional desire
to light anew my Muse's fire.
Think Fifty-Two a sort of present
for joining in my thread this year.
(Of Fifty-Three you needn't fear—
as even I'd find that unpleasant.)
May all of you write brilliantly
this coming year. Now, some Chablis.
 
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