Thursday, March 12, 2015

Alan Catlin- Three Poems


What it all means

“I hear the Interzone is really nice this time of year.”

In the space for occupation
on the form he wrote: Pharmacology,
Hero: The Spaceman, Bill Lee,
Favorite Music: William Tell Overture.
Carried a worn copy of Naked Lunch
with him wherever he went as a
Rules to Live By for Dummies,
a hand book for beginners, Bible,
for opening new doors of perception,
mind control, subliminal seduction,
he craved like a new consciousness
expanding drug that broke down all
conventional boundaries of a space-time
continuum, his brain washed so clean,
no thoughts could penetrate and adhere to
what was left behind, making his mind
a kind of perfect sieve, mortal coils
slipped through with the last remaining
light, into a limbo where even time must
have a stop.  Ask him where he was going, or,
where he has been, and, he will reply
the same way, “A brave new world that
has no creatures in it.” Not even him.



Fuel Injected Dreams

They are coming down
the no-speed-limit-posted
highway, top down convertible
a blip on the radar screen,
unidentified flying objects,
trace elements on a gone-bad
nuclear reactor test, post-
apocalyptic speed freaks in
search of a hit, an alien sun
at their backs casting shadows
in a valley of death, abstract
shades that replace desert vistas,
technological dreams of lost
highways, poorly painted white
lane markers dissolving in black
pits of macadam prehistoric
creatures are struggling in;
on the road soft shoulders
are converging in a place off-
center just beyond an unseen
vanishing point.



The Grand Marshall of  Nowhere

Settling on the rickety, out of balance
bar stool, he said, “There’s a warrant
out for my arrest. On another planet.”
Most people making a statement
like that would be totally disregarded
under the assumption what he said
was just some obscure shock value,
in-the-moment thing or maybe
wishful thinking as in, “Hey, someone
out there, somewhere, wants me.”
Even if somewhere was some indefinable,
unrecognizable place in the cosmos,
and those doing the wanting were so
alien, we couldn’t begin to envision
what they were like and what they
wanted with him. Though we were
welcome, of course, to make a few
wild guesses.
Maybe it was the way he looked,
that bold attempt to achieve instant
recognition that had largely succeeded.
His look included several outstanding
features, not the least of which were:
a mostly shaved head, now patched
with stubble after inconsistent attempts
at grooming, remaining, exclamation
point waxed locks, stretched down the back
of his skull in a line, each dyed a garish
neon-like: red, blue, green, yellow.
His mascara highlighted  eyes with tattooed
tear drops at the edge leaking  red down  
his pocked marked cheeks toward  leather
vest and pants. Gothic scrolled lettering on
each forearm in black ink said : ZAK SABBATH.
His alternately gold capped and tobacco
brown stained teeth, had never been brushed
lifetime, and an unhealthy cast to his unfocused
eyes, suggested the unnatural yellow tinted
iris implants hadn’t taken and his sight
was shaky, at best, so when he spoke
it was to a moving shadow somewhere
behind the bar, “I expect they’ll be here
to pick me up soon.  Might as we have
something to drink while I wait.”
“Like a Brother from Another Planet.”
“Just like that.”
“Stay away from the jukebox, it’s been
serviced.”
“Oh, really?  What did they do to it?”
“God only knows.”
He looked over toward the wall recess
where the infernal machine sat, emitting
its timeless, neon glow.  His staring became
so fixed, so intent, you might think they
were communicating.
And maybe they were.
In their way.

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