Saturday, August 29, 2020

Visions Of Truth

 There was a time when he thought

 that he began dying at age five,

 long before he fully understood

 that none of it mattered; because living and dying

 are simultaneous pursuits that only

 seem unconnected or looped to those that deny

 the visions of truth to ever enter

 their event filled, but strangely empty lives.

 

There was a time when he thought

 that he could never find a lover

 that would understand what was trapped and

 frame-less within him. He was still harboring

 such thoughts long after he met the one who held the key.

 

 There was a time when he lived with no fear,

 loved without fear, wrote with no fear,

 but now he could not say which was the biggest fear:

 those days long gone or their return.

 

There was a time when he thought

 he held some secret power,

 a force to change the world,

 a way to make them listen,

 but the more he listened to what they said,

 the more he read what they wrote,

 the more he watched what they did,

 the more he understood that what he held

 was neither secret or power, simply something

 they would never understand.  

 

   MJC

Tuesday, May 19, 2020

On the Occasion of Turning 17 Plus 45







   You,
    you looked so fine in that uniform
    you could have been a sailor,
    but we didn’t change the world
    quite fast enough for that.
    We failed only at staying together,
    star-crossed, not stardust,
    not golden,
    more like hardened steel
    slowly rusting, yet
    still shining 45 years later.
    We already knew at 17 that life
    was a series of survivals.
    I wrote of you often that year,
    you were on every other page.
    I know this,
    I was happy when I turned 17,
    my happiness was you.

    This is the world we live in,
    separated,
    lived,
    loved with others
    all the while the age of 17
    never forgot.

    You,
    you look so fine.
   

Thursday, November 27, 2014

The Soul of Love




 
Sun swept visions of love romanced without
The reservations of limits set by
Those who think they know how loud love should shout
Live eternal beyond the deepest sigh


Yellow the rose that grows ‘neath the twilight
Of silvery silken dreamers entwined
By the enchanted blackened moonlit night
Held within the arms of love undefined


The soul of love remains long after star
Kissed nights fade into one crystal vision
A sea of sparkling diamonds drifting far
Beyond the power of death’s dominion


Within the heart there lays a truth unbound
Lives a love that even death can’t uncrown

Sunday, September 7, 2014

Sitting (in Catherine’s chair)

Loneliness is not even something I could have
conceived of, not so many years ago, I seriously thought
I was done with all that, but
I sit
in Catherine’s chair
and gaze across the landscape
at the bed we bought
with the money the lawyer from Nashville sent
and realize with sudden clarity that I sleep in
the same position I found her in on that
dark day that
brought the loneliness crashing in again
from all corners of the room,
crushing the little spirit I have left inside.

Sitting
in Catherine’s chair, I can
see Gail’s tanka that I hung on the wall
just a week or two before she died. On every wall,
a painting by Catherine’s dad.
Hand me down art and hand me down words,
hand me down chairs and hand me down sons,
hand me down cats,  they left it all behind and
left me here
sitting.

Sitting and
grieving lost friends that time has accumulated,
one more out the blue and
into the black in the time it took
to write this poem and all I can think about is
lost time and how I read his last poem and
just clicked ‘like’, like that means something and while
sitting here listening to Stravener and Young and Dylan
helps to bring Scott into focus, I can’t escape the feeling that
I’m sitting and
grieving me.

Sitting and
wondering about why Hunter
pulled the trigger, amazed by the number of
people I know who touched his world, who have
touched mine as I have touched the hearts
of many, but in the quiet of the
evening, the heat of the late August day fading away,
it remains the last great secret and yes,
you are all real and
in my head and I wouldn’t have it any
other way and this is such an awesome power and
responsibility, because you know
whose chair I am sitting in.

I grow so tired of eulogies, but no one can seem to stop
the dying, it is the last great secret Chris, but here is the thing:
there should be a law against
sitting and
fading away.
The whispers become obscene shouts after three am and
endurance requires a method of
stifling the screams, give me the blood of life
flowing again and a loud guitar, glass of wine,
endless words that hold worlds within their meaning and
perhaps I can survive, hold them all within,
live all the life that remains,
give all I have within to those that
remain trapped here in bone and flesh.
All I have to do, is simply be,
me.

Sitting in Catherine’s chair, I know the real promise
to Gail is the nurture of what she left me,
that awesome hand me down son and the elfin
daughter we created, the visible ripples of the
life we lived, the love we loved.
I hereby promise to
rage,
rage,
rage,
against the dying
of the light
until my day
turns into night.



MJ Carson
8-28-2011

Monday, March 7, 2011

Displaced Light

Once there was a band of brothers and

sisters, well, several bands

linked together as chain, but there was no

wheel to turn, just mountains to move and

shadows that needed light.

The places of gathering were wondrous glittering temples that, alas,

were in constant flux and seemed to always be

in a state of disrepair. This caused the holders of the light

to move apart even

as they attempted to move together, losing

momentum for a time,

just for a time;

an infinitesimal time

as the universe goes, but enough time

for some of the lights to flicker and

go dark as the holder

of that particular light

moved beyond the grasp

of the brothers and sisters.

Never before had such a gathering

been possible and even if

few were watching,

it was and ever shall be,

of this none shall debate, such a thing never seen

in the history of mankind or even catkind or

any other kind of kind you would chose.

I tell you three times,

maybe more, this has never been done before.

We are the first

We are the first

We are the first

There are no dead poets within the collective;

one poet touched one, who

touches another, and

the flow continues, now with

no end. Once I wrote these lines all

alone and no one shined in my glow and

if I read, I read alone. Once I walked that long and lonesome

road and when the lights go out

I feel the walls close in, but then

I recall that I am never true alone,

my words and soul have

joined the flow.

Upon dawning of the night

hope left joining in the light

words left burning in the sky

the circle will never die

Love is just a four letter word

And poet just another chord

in an endless, restless ponder

for the true universal wonder

I write this for the displaced light

of Elly, but she

has joined the flow,

remains tightly within

the circle and it matters not

that they know of Elly,

it is only important that they know

of the flow and

how it circles.

M.J.Carson

3-8-2011

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Beauty Isn't


Once I knew a queen of beauty
who preferred the life of tramp,
when the navy had us practice
walking through fire and drowning,
I could have told them
I learned that long ago.


Beauty isn’t as easily seen as ugly is,
stolen dreams and bones well broken
is ugly at its very best,
never let them steal your soul;
that is where beauty truly lives.


I knew a man from Biloxi, not far from
New Orleans I’m told, the land of fun streets.
I’ve known guys and gals who walked the mean streets,
Harlem, 8 Mile, Southside, but I’ve heard
the rubber burning down the thunder road.
Do those S curves at 100 mph and
three sheets to the wind and then tell me
about the razor’s edge.
We were young once, but never free,
forever we yearned for that glory road.


Once there was a dancer whose beautiful soul
was entwined with that of a poet. As luck would have it,
they each ran as fast as they could
down roads leading out of town;
never knowing that each were bound for each.
The glory road patiently waited
for their arrival.


I have seen the lies that beauty tells and
I have walked through fire down
the glory road and I know
what beauty is and what
beauty wasn’t.


Mike Carson
11-14-2010


Monday, September 27, 2010

The Tall Dark Horse from Tennessee



He was, of course, ten feet tall.
The tall, dark horse
from Tennessee.


“Camptown ladies sing this song…” ~ Stephen Foster

Put your money down
on the tall, dark horse
from Tennessee. I have an image in my head,
of a young Charles Bukowski, age ten, 1931;
running down to the corner news stand
to get his latest copy of Street and Smith’s
Sport Story to read Sam’s latest horse racing story.
I’ll give you even money on that one. I’ll bet Papa even
sneaked a peak to read the words of this man who
beat him to the left bank by two years.


“Man, that guy can write…horse racing and ladies in red…”

He was a front runner, odds on favorite
from any position, but he made the right move
at the wrong time. October, 1929 brought him to the ground
faster than the Hindenburg.
Put your money down
on the tall, dark horse
from Tennessee.


“Doo-da, doo-da”~ Stephen Foster


He watched his first Kentucky Derby
the year Old Rosebud came home first (1914) and
watched his last run for the roses in 1973,
Secretariat, a good enough ending, I suppose
for the man who called Grantland Rice “granny” and
Damon Runyon quiet. A sportswriter in Louisville
had to know and love his horses
and their riders.
Earl Sande on Zev, he said, was the best combo ever.
Here’s a Sam quote for you:
“It’s okay to dream, but then you gotta do.”
Put your money down
on the tall, dark horse
from Tennessee.


And it’s run for the roses, as fast as you can…”~ Dan Fogelberg

Sam played guitar and every other instrument
in the band,


“Camptown racetrack five miles long” ~ Stephen Foster

Sam painted, just because he could, just like
he attended classes at the Sorbonne
because he and they were there,
he delighted in the Left Bank,
because he could clearly see,
they were he.


“My life has been a poor attempt to imitate the man.
I’m just a living legacy to the leader of the band.” ~ Dan Fogelberg

Sam gardened at age three, gave 25 years in service
to the teachers of farmers and was still writing
a weekly column (Coffee with Carson) for a large farm newspaper
on the day he reached the finish line.


“Oh, de doo-da day.” ~ Stephen Foster

Sam was a tall teller, a tall teller of
the stories of
our lives. He owned every room
he walked into, but not to enrich himself,
his goal was first and foremost,
to enrich you.
His poet was Wordsworth,
his authors Dickens, London and Hawthorne,
his friends legion and legend, his God
known only to him.
Put your money down
on the tall, dark horse
from Tennessee.


“Goin’ to run all night
Goin’ to run all day
I bet my money on a bob-tailed nag
Somebody bet on the gray.” ~ Stephen Foster

He was a southern man who
had no time for bigotry or
suffering fools, not a popular stance in 1910. How many speak it
from the side of their mouth in 2010?
He was a champion of the underdog,
strong supporter of lost causes,
a believer until the end that
the fourth estate could rise above
pettiness.
Put your money down
on the tall, dark horse
from Tennessee.


“And much it grieved my heart to think
what man has made of man.” ~ William Wordsworth

The army put a rifle in the hands of
Mentor Watson Carson and sent
him off to see what he could do with France.
The crazy dreamer he worked for (Luke Lea) thought it fairly simple,
“Capture the Kaiser!” Bring him to justice in Paris, heads will roll.
As plans go,
it wasn’t a bad one, just suffered a bit in the
execution.
Ah, those boys from Tennessee fight fierce,
the 114th Artillary, 30th Division, all volunteer, of course.
Put your money down
on the tall, dark horse
from Tennessee.



“Another year! – another deadly blow!
Another mighty empire overthrown!” ~ William Wordsworth

I knew him as Grandfather
with a capital G:
I had Coffee with Carson
when I was just five.
He got scolded by Mergie,
but he just scoffed at her admonishments,
he knew what was really important.
I remember the days of wonder:
Hey! Come take a look at this!
Tomatoes the size of softballs,
a lifetime of knowledge behind them,
Clickity-clack, clckity-clack, clickity-clack, beep, zing,
clickity-clack, clickity-clack, clickity-clack, beep, zing, whirl,
a lifetime of knowledge leaping upon the page,
the trunk in the attic on Holbrook full of war treasures,
the ’69 Chevy doing 70 between red-lights on Broadway,
walking with him in his old home town,
selling the cookbooks in Pigeon Forge and Gatlinburg,
watching Bob Gibson dare the batters to hit his pitch,
the smell of pipe tobacco and old sweaters well worn.
I would have cut the grass for free
a thousand times.
I remember the last time and I remember
that sunset.
Put your money down
on the tall, dark horse
from Tennessee.
I’ve already bet my life on him.


“_____It seems a day
(I speak of one from many singled out)
One of those heavenly days that cannot die” ~ William Wordsworth

Mike Carson
9-27-2010