Issue 32: Burgess Needle

The Man in the Black Bowler Hat

 

There’s a reason why Magritte’s man wears a black

  bowler hat and has a green apple over his face.

We, the Public, need to imagine -

  Is he: Happy? Petrified? Bored?

Need to imagine, because of the force field

  between the apple and his expression.

That space, created before the Higgs particle,

  indeed, before quarks, quivers with

the same clear glue that binds

       atoms and molecules.

The man in the black bowler hat knows

  if Otter Creek will overflow this year, if there’s

  something worse than Japanese knot weed,

      and the disappearance of orange chameleons or

         the endless fires now burning.

We, the Public, go on killing for pleasure;

  unaware that the bees have stopped dancing.

Back in caves, we sprayed dyed spit over our hands;

  our message being: We were here!

Now, we are splitting atoms, writing poems with AI

  and going splat on the moon.

Magritte’s man has no need for canary parables.

For all the bombs dropped, we’ve yet to discover

  how to pull that green apple away, revealing

  the infinite space beyond our impressive egos.

If the Man in the black bowler hat could speak,

  he would say, “You, who thought Ganesh was

  Lord of Good Fortunes, is actually Ganesh,

       remover of Obstacles.”

Which is not good, when we discover

  we are the biggest obstacles of all.

Nod to the man in the black bowler hat

  whose expression is neutral as he waves;

  we, The Oblivious Public, unaware

       he’s waving Goodbye.

 

 

 

Olivia and White Eagle


                        White Eagle

coughing blood one morning sent me skittering

  close to panic seeing the red spots appear as if from

  one of those easter masks the very blood drops of christ

from where it is said flowers grew

until finally almost bursting i wandered away

on my own passing Frank’s Place on Pima Street seeing

citizens hunched inside over morning cups along with

hash browns, ham and eggs straight from the grill

as nearby crows fought brave finches for tortilla scraps

and me seeking sugar high at the donut shop where in shock

I saw my vanilla-scented, blonde anglo tutor

behind the counter, the one who’d explained numbers

theory to me Fibonacci and all that

when I was a kid on the pascua rez

what was she doing there changed into a tattooed

scarecrow with sad wrinkled eyes and new lines

on tight skin a hardness that said meth all over 

who looked  up saw me really saw me

put her hand over her mouth and I knew

she remembered those days by saguaro shadows

but just in case I held up both hands palms

toward her not knowing what she’d show

but not expecting the sobs and tears then she

took her break joined me behind the store’s

dumpster that night feeding me donut holes

as I reminded her about the rez all the stars

on moonlit desert nights

oh we were a pair White Eagle and Miss Olivia

getting high near the steel bin where she felt

my smooth skin until we quivered in night heat

some distance from my empty trailer until the end

when we came down in a pile of stained coffee cups

greasy cardboard cartons

then I remember who I was and cut

myself with loathing

sucked my own blood until I tasted copper

 

                                Olivia

how could it have been him the smart boy

from the yaqui rez standing before me astonished

staring at me astonished what else could I do

but take him with me behind the shop and now

as he bit himself  I visualized portions

of the look-and-say sequence 1, 11, 21, 1211, 111221, 312211

then sighing trying to recall what it was about

the physical properties of gas that used to be

so exciting and wandering off dizzy and sick

at the way he looked me up and down

until I was on normal street you know the kind

with quiet homes where I wrangled my way

into some parked car on the yard side of a tall

oleander hedge but then morning brought out some dude

needing to get to work he found me knocked on the window

of his locked car Sorry i said and pushed the door wide

swung my legs around managing to sway myself erect,

hiccup, then walk past him right into those oleanders absorbed

by the primal force of a green wall

that unlike my usual circumstance

accepted me as neutral without scolding me 

being judgmental

then off I walked east on pima

a mexican jay warning all of my approach








Burgess Needle’s short stories, essays and poems have appeared in over 100 print and online journals, including: English Journal, Boston Literary Magazine, Blue Lake Review, Black Market Review (UK), Kritya (India), Zig Zag Lit Mag and The Galway Review (Ire.).From 1967 to 1969 he taught English in a Thai village for the Peace Corps. He later worked as a school librarian for 40 years in Tucson. Publications include: Every Crow in the Blue Sky (poetry); Thai Comic Books (poetry); Faded Photo Bings It Back (poetry); Family Path (play); Sit and Cry: Two Years in the Land of Smiles (memoir); Staying Behind the Blue Car (poetry); Dreams of Istalif and Other Stories. He lives in Ripton, Vermont and is currently working on a novel.


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