Adam Henry Carriere

Weather

Here, have a tie-dye

on those stripes,

just a touch of white

trash black on those

flaming Hawaiian flowers;

It’s suffering succotash,

dear, a hard-won head

ache

a purple-headed heart

ache

every blasted throb

a 9-to-5 retail job.

There is scientific interest

in your own destabilization,

clothed to the point of suffocation;

major dope addiction

dulling a literary dullard’s

pain

with stutters of sodomophobic

relief.

Trading Cards

shy boy over there in the dark closet corner

rum and coke bought with four appropriate queens

leave the disorder and win two thousand Sahara dollars

little big smoker’s breath blond

awesome dick duel sound effects

great Vegas comp room invest­ment

baby gay behind the magazines

longing looks of solitary prom night lust

three hour naked Italian opera hug

shower and stay alone

parking lot stairway erection final act

don’t remember the buffed bald­ing name queen

cheesy client confusion luxury room moves

unrewarded fake date cab fare efforts

cheap little man boy Charlie Brown look-a-like

back of the bookstore mouth seduction

midnight friends versus reality divorce

PWA dinner fee rent-a-car scene

no drug money hostile Key trash bitch

babble drugs leftover bourbon holding on

long haired jail bait jail bird

garage hugging cracker drawl and all

bed laying stoner waiting to get laid

Alabama butt boy booze hound blow job buddy

no name Fremont welcome wagon rental

cheap train station trade

summer too hot for homos in heat

hand painted olive oil body

one sided juice without phone numbers

dirty politeness look all round later

drop dead little dumb homeless boy

overpaid with beer and a silk tie

inscrutable nip bar bitch

package showing oh so sorry

oh sexy man oh let me touch no kiss oh sexy man

smart and shrewd German rail slut

leggy long hair sweet foreskin cowboy

video booth immoderation and sophisticated conversation

named after a poet street ad­dress for special friends

let’s make a thank you for the cocktail deal

Hawaii orphan business talk

pseudo bonding psycho Tuesday boyfriend

hidden gentlemen’s shirt lure hard-on

fag friendship freak out flee­ing

ass aperitif room service

hell of an old lechered student doppelganger turn on

wee wee hour stereo enjoyment

big time new car and new house pro

eminent ad postcard and word of dick breath mouth

a Coronado beach boy to remem­ber

so desperate duckling street trade

nothing but boy trouble beer bust

same sorry faces looking for Mr. Goodbarfag

horny smoky drunk and still choosy

wound too tight how ya doin

not much pride in this kind of flex

date dick or daily darling

the dancing gypsies take the wrong angles

come to chat, leave depressed

the gulag is getting to me

Seventy Octobers

to DSCH…

I – Lament for a dead infant

In the sepia glow of hope,

we try to forgive the newborn

for one day knowing they will expire,

reminding us how fertile the dust is

that runs like cycles of the moon

beneath our quivering skin,

a malformed secret we keep from babies

lest they choose to disappear before they wake.

II – Fussy Mummy & Auntie

Fuss and fiddle, this cow licked, unparted hair,

it’s pictures today, everyone will make fun;

tuss and tangle, your freshly rumpled suit,

it’s church tomorrow, God will know you’re not freshly pressed;

bubble and squeak, the pepper in such mean boyishness,

it’s girls who cry in the playground, shameful dancing like that;

roil and rubble, our good names ruined,

it’s all those damned books, cleaving a river between us.

III – Lullaby

We tell ourselves, sing babies to sleep, caress them.

Buy flowers, say we love someone, or candy

to sweeten the pebbles rolling up the path.

It’s all indignity to want the candy store

or the garden or the bakery or the toy shop

just to smell like we’re still breathing.

We make a hobby out of sketching lieder,

to make believe our psyche won’t feel autumn,

to ignore the winter scribbled in our margins.

IV – Before a Long Separation

This lifetime of wander, thinking,

in some queer moment,

an embarrassing sleep will emerge.

No plant or animal or fish knows such,

whether they profit, unclear.

Dressing for work appears

existentially redundant, eating, sex

other than liking the taste of it,

trying to answer questions tired

wonder gets that no one asked.

All the world, crowded, badly ventilated

and we’re already bound, not speaking

from matrices of doubt

all nature has forgotten doesn’t exist.

V – A Warning

If ever an augury had graced the sky, it was some time ago.

The rest is just good manners, as the clock finds midnight

and we realize whole atlases had been inside our eyes

as we travel by now through ourselves, on the way

to a terminus we never really left in the first place.

Mothers, they knew this chime all along.

VI – The Deserted Father

The warm hand that squeezes a boy’s

shoulder never landed, the idea of it

a pilgrimage whose stomach growls.

Too much grey biography –

a manhood, a birthright, even –

seems mislaid in baggage no one

can find on the accepted blueprints.

No tears follow. Old age got to them.

VII – A Song of Poverty

The radish and onion grill our character

but is less than a withered grain of rice.

A dead cell phone cries out in tongues

but is a chorus compared to a throat’s crackle.

The traffic – the horror!

but a sniffle in a buffet of malady.

Every landscape is a masquerade, only

a burial ground truly recognize the days.

VIII – Winter

The dust of last season’s grass, tidied in frost

and yellow, unknowing mud frozen into place

as corners of forgotten leaves glisten across

the swirl of ghostly snow, breathing

with diamond finality our shared epoch,

the sleep of our remarkable compassion.

IX – The Good Life

The imprisoned revolutionaries toil in the kitchens

to feed victorious guests clamoring in the doorway.

The diseased build and rebuild the same palace, carving

over-sized furniture from the very churches that lock them out.

The useless, near extinct animals form a galloping choir

harvested to perform Wagner, poolside nightly.

Whole oceans turned brown are siphoned into canteens

owned by the lovely and the landed, as if by law, if not destiny.

X – A Girl’s Song

In a crystal parfait of jewels, a woman sparkles,

a golden nectar schooling verse

in a synthesis of every gender, where pleasure –

the irreversible binomial of all eventide

in an earth where symbiotics blend space and time.

XI – Happiness

There’s a special desk at the State Office

of Dead Letters just for me.

In my postal egotism I keep writing, on tenterhooks

I’ll one day answer myself by mistake.

But in the Ides night, an anniversary letter arrived

that sealed my imaginings with its tang.

To this I’m required new-fangled postage,

perhaps even a new domicile so that I’m sure

to receive seventy eras of new correspondence

following me, from compassion through liberation.

Adam Henry Carrière is a poet, teacher, and former NPR broadcaster. His writing has appeared in Tonopah Review, Mad Swirl, Apparatus, decomP, Alternative Reel, The Smoking Book, Counterexample Poetics, Pushing the Envelope, Mayo Review, Juked,  Zygote in My Coffee,  Chiron Review, Strip, Tattoo Highway, and The Bicycle Review. Born on the South Side of Chicago, Adam now resides in Las Vegas, where he publishes Danse Macabre, Nevada’s first online literary magazine. He serves on the Editorial Board of Popular Culture Review, and has been awarded the Literary Arts Fellowship in Poetry from the Nevada Arts Council.

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