Marvelous Marv
Throneberry!
The very name evokes
a royal jewel
and that you certainly were
to a buck-toothed, knobby-kneed
nine-year-old in that magical
summer of ’62.
You had slumps, you had stumbles,
but certainly no more than I did
in Little League, and I and
your many many little fans
lived and died with you
each time you came to the plate.
Sure, you struck out a lot,
but not nearly as much as me and
your other loyal kid fans.
And sixteen homers!
I could only dream of hitting one!
Sixteen thrills and sixteen chances to yelp
out loud as you rounded the bases,
ecstatic at any little exploit!
And how could you field at first base
the throws that hopped and skipped
or rocketed over your head?
These Mets were hapless. But lovable.
And none more so than you.
Years later, you had the humility and grace
to laugh at your foibles in a T.V. ad,
as a lesser man would not have been capable.
And that famous triple which
fed your myth? Who cares if you didn’t
touch second, or even first?
You hit a triple!
Who among us has not
made a far worse mistake?
Marv, you truly were marvelous
and a royal jewel, Mr. Throneberry.
You have lost
You have lost
the music in your eyes.
You have lost
the color in your walk.
You have lost
the flash in your talk.
Though you have improved your knowledge in
the many ways required by your new life
it is what you have forgotten that sacrifices me.
I want to send a tornado through you.
I want to switch you on like a radio, to hear the news.
I want you to melt me in the heat of your kitchen.
But I stand outside in the dining room,
wondering if dinner will come.
Fly Away
If you can fly away from yesterday, I would advise doing so. You think that you can’t do that, but I’m guessing that yesterday can’t follow if you move fast enough and change yourself enough so that it can’t recognize you. I myself have left behind so many cold days in hell that I’ve lost count of them. I suspect that you can throw off that coat now and live in the warmth of today.
Let my people go-go
I saw your hymn residing gracefully
among hidden tambourines.
Butterscotch snakes and mind spiders
saluted you in the morning.
Your missing cult traveled early miles
just to glance at your flaming majesty.
You and your hymn fought a whiskey fight
for the honor of my hand, and I
gratefully thanked you for doing your duty,
and for letting my people go-go
as my happy Hittite hotshots
played their riotous tunes
of harmonious musicality.
May I have this dance?
Full moon in a glass eye
Like a
full moon
reflecting in
a glass eye
you crowd out
all doubt.
Like a
foghorn to
a ship in
a treacherous sea
you give direction in
a troubled time.
At your birth
Your life spills out before me
like the perfect, unmarked
yolk from a cracked brown egg.
How I wish I could keep you
that way, unbroken, unsullied,
uneaten by this world,
but I can only hope
that you come through your
life, not so bruised, not so
battered, and as near perfect
as you are on this day!
And that I pray for, whether I’m
there to see it
or not!