Screen Dump 616
You're in a parking lot fingering your phone
directing the play by play by play
the fridge pissing off neighbors with its barking
then this mad cow parks in a handicap spot
Don't have a cow, dude! . . .
Really? . . . I mean REALLY? . . .
The subterfuged world never at a loss for
That's how we do it . . . by the witless . . .
Sputtering with malcontent you take a breather
then, a tearful delivery, a tearful moment
at the whiteboard with a invalid proof
for mathematicians-a-go-go . . .
the bartender gaslighting the hammered
who humble back to their hovel
to be set upon by octopi or octopodes
in the watery world of the socked and soaked . . .
I want to hold your hand? . . . I don't think so! . . .
The world as experienced . . . in all its flatness is so . . .
Yesterday,
all my troubles seemed so far away . . .
Glass's koyaanisqatsi (Hey, look, a q without a u!)
You enter the world of metal detectors where
fixed income instruments or bonds
follow just intonation
allowing you to nix diversification
and preserve the (High School) Principal
who is poised to flop into bed
with the School Nurse on paid leave . . .
Ba Ba Bond . . . James Bond . . .
Perhaps you should appeal to happenstance
especially after factoring everything down
to the list of pall bearers still In the Still of the Night . . .
It's time once again to head out
to the dollar store for a ramification
or a conciliation . . . or a pontification . . . or a Jorge . . .
Of course you knew him . . . he was one of many
on your to-do list . . . after deconstructing
the ins and outs of the allegorical Lord of the Flies:
Maybe there is a beast. Maybe it's . . . us? . . .
Come down from there . . . to the slots in the casino
where the real is really real
and you'll be as broke and as fit as a broken fiddle . . .
Par excellence the auteur! . . .
I had heard that you had been hobbled by the last stanza
but hey you can always deposit your ashes
in a local tributary and watch them
float downstream as we assemble according
to the directions scribbled with a foreign tongue (ouch!) . . .
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Deborah Turbeville |