3.3.18

The Dog Park (And Other Rules of Cyberspace)



You hurl out the door
sniffing for rabbits,
for the Alice in Wonderland hole,
dark in scent, stopping
to make your mark
in all of the usual places,
the parking lot covered
in candy wrappers,
the broken foolery of people
who never knew any better,
who when the black age broke
they hid from the spotlights
of the tigers hunting
for human flesh
of code that is their law

We'd get to the green embankment
and there would be a pause
and all I could think of was
getting to the ritual gate,
the tricky passage way,
the metal see-through bolt
we negotiated,
each man and animal
with their own interpretations
with their own explications
of the same light of the day
and then I would set you loose
and you would set me free
and you would run away
in that see-saw way of yours
while I sat on a bench,
had a smoke and then a prayer

Then would day the wagging whisperer
told me the multiplication tables were coming:
The organizers, the lawyers, the invisible watchers

The orange cones appeared first,
then yellow tape, spikes in the ground
mindless indicators, stunning our speech
into the silence, little hand held devices
saying you can walk here
but you can't walk there
but the shepherd
doesn't know how to read
and angels will do what angels will do
and this seemed funny to me
and my sense of anarchy,
as I shook my head,
laughing, mocking them,
living in the dream
and the nagging feeling
my brothers and sisters
would never get me,
delineated me, the vessel of
dualistic half empty
as you crossed the lines,
since dogs will do
what dogs will do

There was some beef
about grass,
the fenced-in yard
of social control,
and one day thinking
outside of the box,
looking in,
across the field the sprinklers
set the place on fire,
and all the beasts began to run and roar
and the guys with bald heads
leaned into one another,
pushing for a fight,
since the swirl of fangs
turned the blocked out space
into the wrestling cage:
Too many canine cannibals
scratching in their corners,
unyielding into the waste
of the iron-cut lawns,
the broken sprinkler heads,
the bashed in mesh of bent fences,
the spiritual need
to break through the bough

Nobody told the creek in the cave
it couldn't keep on running
or the wind to stream
through the mesh
or that amazing
radar nose of yours
giving it the sniff test

No comments: