Home Planet News

a journal of literature & art

The Literary Review

Issue 10         Page 89

First Pedicure

Right now I’m sitting on the throne.

I’m the only client here, a man, facing a line

of Asian and Hispanic women of various ages

staring at me from across the salon.

They look at me. I look at them.  They look

at me more; I do the same. Eventually

we all look away.  One Latina comes forward

to begin my care.  The rest have gone back

to looking at their phones.  She removes my shoes,

socks, places my feet in a jet bath below me.

She miles at me, I smile at her.  There’s

no small talk or conversation.  Dressed

in a smock, her hair in a bun, she does

her job: my toe nails clipped, dead skin cleared,

cleansed with lotions, jet-bathed again, heel

and underfoot pumiced, perfumed

like an Egyptian King.  In the half hour

more clients have come in, most for manicures.

A black man in a jogging suit, chatting on

his cell, sits two seats away.  Two attendants

rush over to serve him, both hands and feet.

I pay, tip, leave thinking he must be

some kind of god.

Morning Glory

                                             (for Patsy)

Heavenly blue Morning Glory

you trumpet year after year

early spring by inching up,

unattended, the telephone pole

announcing the news while your

green vines advance skywards too.

Last year someone cruel

ripped you from the pole.

It was naked in your usual

season.  You were much missed

in the neighborhood. We thought,

like a lost soul, you were gone.

But this spring you sprang again

and rose up an even more

inhospitable metal street sign

just inches away.  Your blue

and green-ness flourishes all

the way up to the sign: No Parking.

All summer, once again, you are

our bellwether until the first

fierce frost and then you

fall away, suddenly not there.

In The Pines

                                             (for Hank)

Visiting my brother downstate

on Mystic Island, Ocean County,

on the Jersey Shore, we go  

past cranberry bogs and forests

into the Pine Barrens

in Burlingon County in search of

The Jersey Devil.

We travel dirt roads, deeper

into the Barrens.  Forks

in the road give way to even

thinner dirt roads, all without

street signs, lampposts, post boxes,

but we know there’s life. 

We stop the car so I can take

pictures in the eerie silence.

We find ourselves outside a dive bar,

The Lower Bank Tavern, where

the weather beaten sign says:

FUN, FOOD & SPIRITS—

DO IT IN THE PINES.

Little more than two shacks

combined, but the place pulls us in.

Old men, old salts, dads

and sons drink this late afternoon.

I hear their conversations: catching

tides and working the waters.

We order a couple Jack & Cokes.

They eye us suspiciously then

look away. There’s a menu board.

We order something to split

from the weather beaten woman

behind the counter who knows everybody.

‘The chef’ from the kitchen brings us

a thick liverwurst sandwich with

raw onions and hot mustard on rye.

She’s weather beaten too, mussed

hair, but offers us a genuine smile.

We baptize the ancient trough

in the Men’s Room, take no growlers,

have found no devils, but head for home,

bellies full, before full dark in this 

WiFi-dead zone.

Wind Chime

He bought a small wind chime—

petite metal pipes on a petite

lightweight string.

Secured it to the bottom

of his always-lifted shade

in his front window.

He waited to hear it chime.

Windy days, stormy days—

nothing.  He waits for a sound.

Morning breeze, evening hush—

no sweet brushing of light

metal against metal.

One afternoon, in a random gust,

a frail low flow of notes rang

out.  He was not home to hear it.

© William C. Avedon: Path

A Dozen Poets

                                             (for David Elsasser)

A dozen poets gathered in Central Park

for an Open Reading and a pop-up Book

Launch for a colleague who supplied

folding chairs, read, and sold his books.

We were on a gentle hill under

a tree, just in from Central Park West,

between an AA meeting and a birthday

party where the boys tried to steal our chairs.

We made sure to occupy them all

and listen to our host using a mic

meant for karaoke but it did the trick

if you listened intently under the falling leaves.

Police on horseback soon appeared

and singled us out among all

the other gatherings on this incline.

They asked to see our permit.  We had none.

Tempers flared and harsh words flew

when they told us to disperse.  We would

not go down off the hill so easily.

They persisted; we grew angrier.

No! we cried, we will not go gentle.

Never, no way, we will not yield.

No poets: no drums. No writers:

no trumpets announcing our news.

We began to recite from memory

the truths of Whitman and Plath,

the revelations of Rimbaud and the language

of Adrienne Rich and Langston Hughes, Ginsberg.

The cops sat dumbfounded.  Their horses

shook their heads and neighed in agreement

with us. We hurled haikus at the cops,

spit out images, catapulted metaphors.

They sat in shock.  They called us

Crazy Bastards—and moved on. 

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