Poetry: Selections From Howie Good

Enigma Variations

 

1

They buried Poe on a cold, wet day in a cheap coffin that lacked handles, a nameplate, cloth lining, or a cushion for his head. A total of five people, all strangers to each other, attended the burial. Given the poor turnout, the minister decided to forgo a eulogy. He pocketed his fee and departed the graveside for Ryan’s Tavern. At dark a watchman with a lame leg locked the cemetery gates. The rain had stopped. Thunder rumbled in the distance. Puddles lined the road out front, some prodigious enough to drown a small child.

 

2

There isn’t a single seagull in sight. No boats either. Even out of season, it’s an odd enough occurrence that I notice. The beach is emptier than empty – desolate. A foghorn sobs. After 30 rounds of radiation, I’m still vulnerable to a recurrence of cancer and must be periodically blood-tested and scanned. Cancer just might be the scariest word in the English language. A psychiatric social worker on my “care team” recommends I download Calm, advertised as “the #1 app for meditation and sleep.” Yeah, that’s not going to happen. No one knows the real me, including me. My wife says I yelled “Run!” in my sleep last night. It woke her up. I almost never remember my dreams. I’m lucky like that. 

 

“Sono Adanti?”, the final aria in Puccini’s opera La Bohéme, fills the apartment. My wife is an opera freak. I prefer underground music – punk, grunge, garage rock – stuff that she says sounds like the howls of a toddler who has missed his usual nap. The dying consumptive Mimi is now asking her lover Rodolfo, “Am I still beautiful?” Somehow she has found the lung power to sing   with a sort of haunted grandeur as she succumbs. I myself am uncomfortably close to the average age of death for white American men, the ecstatic whee! whee! whee! of emergency vehicle sirens. And then stars will swirl down like snowflakes

 

 

 

Under the Rubble

 

God the Father has been toppled, a decayed artifact of the ancient future. The thoughts running through my head don’t feel so much like mine as like the orphaned dreams of someone crushed to death under the rubble. I should probably ignore the AI assistant when, polite to the point of caricature, it asks, “What can I help you with today?” History rests on a foundation of many things forgotten. The name of the girl with mismatched eyes, one green, one blue, who sat behind me in homeroom. 

 

 

 

Rite of Spring

 

I’m sitting quietly in a room alone. Somewhere I have a cassette recording of an interview a cousin of mine did with our zayde about the miserable little village in czarist Russia where he grew up. “They killed plenty Jews,” I remember him grumbling on the tape in his broken English. It’s early spring, just weeks before trees bud, and bombs dropped from above are pulverizing cities and plowing up sacred ground. Death never lacks for helpers. Julius Caesar once spared the crew of a captured pirate ship the customary punishment for their crimes, the prolonged agony of death by crucifixion. He personally cut their throats instead.

 

 

 

 

 

Howie Good is a widely published but little-known poet whose latest poetry collection is True Crime from Sacred Parasite in Berlin.



























What Remains Beautiful