The End Of Summer Camp
the blind people arriving
because summer camp ended
the tents taken down
the worker from Alaska,
smelly and heavy
who brought the camp dog
Claude the worker in mine the
last tent up, him and me
he's making the tent smelly
blindness and weight
gone is the lightness
there's a lightness of camp
it's all gone away
the coming of the blind
playing pool on the
old warped table upstairs
with a tunnel vision guy who
always misses
and has to have a bath
the camp weighs so much
love you so much much, a voice
in the gravel parking lot
Kyokusetsu On The Raquette River
kayaks take for granted bloom
on River Ellen
kyokusetsu
Old Town holds firm ashore
for lovers' tangled hair to be returned
with our roadside laces
loggers' boats petrified
by the river's deep mud and exposed
to lightning
wide shallow water offers no privacy
there's a pale shade of
the newish home, a driveway
that got its theived sedan
fated for the pressure at red Potsdam stone
The Aluminum Man
A sculpture my
father told me of
an aluminum man
at 64 East College
Avenue in Ohio.
who made his own
batteries to win
that electrolysis.
My father
made small
hobby sculptures
out of metal
being acted on in
aqueous solutions
at roadsides.
I stopped in my
father's college town,
I was in my early
twenties. I did not
think to look then
for the aluminum man.
I had rusted metal
pieces I had found
via Missouri, Oklahoma
Brought them
back. My dad's thought
acts on me as if
I am rusted metal...
Bionote
After my birth and toddler experiences in very urban in East Orange New
Jersey, my family moved when I was 4, escaping the preceding events
leading to the Newark riots of the 1960s. The apartment where we lived
when I was born would later be burned and gutted. In 1973 my father
was going to be denied his tenure at Drexel University over Vietnam War
era politics and we then moved to Potsdam, New York .I was 13. I was
to Bard College for its reputation for radicalized teaching, and loosely
structured academics. A literary magazine friends of mine and I put
together which we called Dialogue attracted some very good writers, and
brought several of us together who have since had real successes in our
writing and careers.. I had done very erratically in school, and I
flunked out of Bard College. I put my attention exclusively to writing
in a quiet farmhouse in Tivoli New York in 1980. I sent a book
collection of short stories to the Richard Brautigan library in Vermont,
at age 25, which done from 1981 to 1986 and which now is located in the
Clark County Historical Museum in Vancouver WA. I formally published
for the first time in 1990,in the William and Mary Review, while living
in San Francisco, and paying for very fruitful services for writing
guidance from Thaisa Frank. In 1998 I began writing poetry, and in
October 2001 I began choosing writing workshops for poetry, beginning
with Sandra Alcosser, including T.R. Hummer, Barry Wallenstein, Laura
Kasischke, Olga Broumas, and Bhanu Kapil. I then lived next to Naropa
University, and wrote intensely for four years. I published in a
workshop magazine at Naropa. I began putting poems onto FB, and once
again I took the outsider path. I formally published a poem in an
anthology which is sold on Amazon. The poem is called Aunt Betty, and
the anthology is called Men In The Company of Women. swisskys@gmail.com
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