Poems by Denis Johnson The Boarding One of these days under the white clouds onto the white lines of the goddamn PED X-ING I shall be flattened, and I shall spill my bag of discount medicines upon the avenue, and an abruptly materializing bouquet of bums, retirees, and Mexican street-gangers will see all what kinds of diseases are enjoying me and what kind of underwear and my little old lady’s legs spidery with veins. So Mr. Young and Lovely Negro Bus Driver I care exactly this: zero, that you see these things now as I fling my shopping up by your seat, putting this left-hand foot way up on the step so this dress rides up, grabbing this metal pole like a beam of silver falling down from Heaven to my aid, thank-you, hollering, “Watch det my
medicine one second for me will you dolling, I’m four feet and det’s a tall
bus you got and it’s hot and I got every disease they are making these days, my God, Jesus Christ, I’m telling you out of my soul.”
Heat Here in the electric dusk your naked lover tips the glass high and the ice cubes fall against her
teeth. It’s beautiful Susan, her hair sticky with gin, Our Lady of Wet Glass-Rings on the Album Cover, streaming with hatred in the heat as the record falls and the snake-band chords begin to break like terrible news from the Rolling Stones, and such a last light—full of spheres and zones. August, you’re
just an erotic hallucination, just so much feverishly produced kazoo music, are you serious?—this large oven impersonating night, this exhaustion mutilated to resemble passion, the bogus moon of tenderness and magic you
hold out to each prisoner like a cup of light? The Incognito Lounge The manager lady of this apartment dwelling has a face like a baseball with glasses and pathetically repeats herself.
The man next door has a dog with a face that talks of stupidity to the night, the swimming pool has an empty, empty face. My neighbor has his underwear on tonight, standing among the parking spaces advising his friend never to show his face around here again. I go everywhere with my eyes closed and two eyeballs painted on my face. There is a woman across the court with no face at all. ---------------------------
about as unobtrusive as a storm of meteors, these questions of happiness plaguing the world. My neighbor has sent his child to to be raised by the relatives of friends. He’s out on the generous lawn again, looking like he’s made out of phosphorus. --------------------------- The manager lady has just returned from the nearby graveyard, the last ceremony for a crushed paramedic. All day, news helicopters cruised aloft, going whatwhatwhatwhatwhat. She pours me some boiled coffee that tastes like noise, warning me, once and for all, to pack up my troubles in an old kit bag and weep until the stones float away. How will I ever be able to turn from the window and feel love for her?— to see her and stop seeing this neighborhood, the towns of earth, these tables at which the saints sit down to the meal of temptations? --------------------------- And so on—nap, soup, window, say a few words into the telephone, smaller and smaller words. Some TV or maybe, I don’t know, a brisk rubber with cards nobody knows how many there are of. Couple of miserable gerbils in a tiny white cage, hysterical friends rodomontading about
goals as if having them liquefied death. Maybe invite the lady with no face over here to explain all these elections: life. --------------------------- Maybe invite the lady with no face over here to read my palm, sit out on the porch here in while she touches me. Last night, some kind of alarm went off up the street that nobody responded to. Small darling, it rang for you. Everything suffers invisibly, nothing is possible, in your face. --------------------------- The center of the world is closed. The Beehive, the 8-Ball, the Yo-Yo, the Granite and the Lightning and the Melody. Only the Incognito Lounge is open. My neighbor arrives. They have the television on. It’s a show about my neighbor in a loneliness, a light, walking the hour when every bed is a mouth. Alleys of dark trash, exhaustion shaped into residences—and what are the dogs so sure of that they shout like citizens driven from their minds in a stadium? In his fist he holds a note in his own handwriting, the same message everyone carries from place to place in the secret night, the one that nobody asks you for when you finally arrive, and the faces turn to you playing the national anthem and go blank, that’s what the show is about, that message.
--------------------------- I was raised up from tiny She reaches to the radio like St. Theresa. --------------------------- Here at the center of the world each wonderful store cherishes in its mind undeflowerable mannequins in a pale, electric light. The parking lot is full, everyone having the same dream of shopping and shopping through an afternoon that changes like a face. But these shoppers of carrying their hearts toward the bluffs of the counters like thoughtless purchases, walking home under the sea, standing in a dark house at before the open refrigerator, completely transformed in the light… --------------------------- Every bus ride is like this one, in the back the same two uniformed boy scouts de-pantsing a little girl, up front the woman whose mission is to tell the driver over and over to shut up. Maybe you permit yourself to find it beautiful on this bus as it wafts like a dirigible toward suburbia over a continent of saloons, over the robot desert that now turns purple and comes slowly through the dust. This is the moment you’ll seek the words for over the imitation and actual wood of successive tabletops indefatigably, when you watched a baby child catch a bee against the tinted glass and were married to a deep comprehension and terror.
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