Wednesday, April 1, 2020

George Stanley : Four poems



Mind the Gap


between mind and self.
The self enjoys

a respite of maybe
14 seconds before mind

fires its next
'thought', a death-tipped dart

hits the heart.
Then, a second, more

unforgiving, thought
strikes and lays me low. 

O that another, kinder, mind
might overwrite my mind,

or teach it mercy,
but no, my mind replies,

'I am your only mind,
you built me from the thoughts

you thought you needed
to survive.'



Poor, Lonely Prime Numbers
                                                  

Poor, lonely, prime numbers:
3, 83.

7 who was told he was lucky,
13 who was told she was not.

If they could hook up, they'd be 91 -
91, Queen of Our Fates!

Happily married couples: 6, 10, 15.
Same factor couples: 4 (best friends), 9, 16,
gay but partnered (and don't call them squares).

Same factor threesomes: 27, mixed threesomes: 30.
Polyamorous communes: 72 - a five-way!

Polynumeramory!

Poor, lonely, prime numbers:
97, only bachelor on his block.

And on the next block over, 100th St.,
four old coots: 101, 103, 107, 109.
They never get invited to the barbecues at 105.

"We're all odd,' they cry out.
'Don't that count for anything?"



Now and Then (in the fire season)


Seven sun icons in a row,
the winds' direction changes,
smoke comes over the mountains.
 A now stalled in the skies.

'Taxicabs at twilight' -
that was Elizabeth Hardwick
recalling an evening
on Central Park West
back in the ancient modern then.

Now a new now -
a weak Alaskan low
undermines our Pacific high,
& the winds take the smoke
back over the mountains.



Living & Dying
                                                              for Barry McKinnon

Riding forward facing backward on the train.
Sucked into a tunnel!  Out again!

It's a nice day, sunny Monday in October.
I'll have lunch at L & S, hopefully
Stephen Quinn will be hosting On the Coast.
Maybe tonight go to the pub for an hour or two,
though now, October, it gets dark early,
the trees invisible from the window,

but when I get downstairs, out on the sidewalk,
      they're there,
beautiful trunks and limbs, bare branches,
in front of the construction site, apartment house
going up, the site where Kidsbooks used to be.

Red, white & green lights over Broadway.
Breathing in, there's a sense of 'return to the world'.
Then to the pub.

Wearing light-coloured trousers
at night, like an American.

                               *

'He not busy being born
is busy dying'. - Bob Dylan.
There's a clear distinction.

Look, making a pot of coffee is living.
Reading is living (even when reading
about somebody dying - old Goriot).
A clear distinction.

I'm heading out to L & S again.
Four of the next seven icons are suns.
Tuesday, I believe I'll go downtown --

the thought of those bright moments -
the bright thought of those moments -
Tuesday, sun, fish & chips



A native of San Francisco, George Stanley has lived in BC since 1971, and has published ten books of poetry, including Vancouver: A Poem, After Desire, North of California St., and West Broadway (with George Bowering’s Some End) all from Vancouver's New Star Books. His chapbook Love Is not An Algorithm, from whence these poems come, was just produced via above/ground press.

Photo credit: Christine McNair

George Stanley and rob mclennan in Vancouver, February 2020



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