Tuesday, August 25

carver

by Neil Hilborn




 














Accordin to our maps
we were more than halfway there. 
My hands were frozen into claws 
around the climbing rope. The cold 
was crawlin into my legs, bitin me 
through my clothes, and I just knew
that if I let go I’d slide all the way down the mountain 
back to New York. Shiverin in the cold I opened my eyes 
and all there was was that rope 
disappearin into the blizzard. 
   
Let me take you back three years. 
I was workin for Sam Carver, 
puttin up posters for his speeches: 
Sam Carver! Adventurer Extraordinare! 
Has seen all known continents of the world! Now, 
Mr. Carver said that Americans
 had a right to everything 
to the West of us–he called it Manifest Destiny 
and I just couldn’t get it out of my head 
like it was a hymn to the lord and Sam was the mouth of God, sayin 
“Go west, my son. Go west.”

So when Mr. Carver said he was going to California, 
I told him I was the kind of woodsman 
that could chop down a tree with a stick and a sharp rock.
 Hell, 
I could start a fire with a piece of wood and some wet moss. 
Y'see, I grew up in the mountains of Kentucky 
where just breathin is like pullin a tornado into your lungs 
and spittin out the debris, where sunset is like all the gunpowder in the world 
goin off in reverse on the horizon. 
Mr. Carver said the sunsets in California 
were like the Pacific closin its eyes, and when he talked 
the distances collapsed until China coulda been as close as Baltimore 
and he talked all the way from the eastern seaboard, 
shrinkin the Great Plains into a patch of dirt under our feet.

Accordin to our maps we were more than halfway there 
when Sam said that God spoke to him, 
told him to turn south, turn south. 
Some of us thought we was goin the wrong way, 
especially when we started climbin that mountain, 
but he just kept repeatin: “South. We’ve got to go south.” 
And I’d'a trusted that man as long as I still had teeth in my head, 

but then there was that rope, disappearin into the blizzard. 
Manuel yelled back through the snow: 
“Richard! There’s blood coming out of my shoes!” 
I ripped off his boots and his feet were rottin 
from the bottom up, burnt black like firewood 
with coals glowin in the center. He asked us to shoot him right there, 
but a Christian man can’t kill no one, so we built him a fire and just left him there.

I was leanin back on the rope, 
pullin Johnson up an ice shelf, 
but when he came up over the lip his leg snapped. 
I ran up to Carver and said “Charles’s leg damn near broke off!” 
but all he said was “Well, 
he’ll just have to get it put back on when we get to California.”

Then the meat ran out. 
I caught myself starin at McNabb as he laid down in the snow. 
I’d never been so hungry. 
When Sam smiled I saw the gates of heaven clangin shut 
and he said providence wanted us to eat, 
wanted us to have this 
and we bit into his raw and frozen thighs 
and his blood tasted like every single word of Manifest Destiny 
spit out in a howl from the devil. 

The last thing I saw before I passed out was Carver, 
headin west, with two human legs slung over his shoulder. 
He was just whistlin, walkin to California.





Tuesday, August 18

alone with everybody

by Charles Bukowski




the flesh covers the bone 
and they put a mind 
in there and 
sometimes a soul, 
and the women break 
vases against the walls 
and the men drink too 
much 
and nobody finds the 
one 
but keep 
looking 
crawling in and out 
of beds. 
flesh covers 
the bone and the 
flesh searches 
for more than 
flesh. 

there's no chance 
at all: 
we are all trapped 
by a singular 
fate. 

nobody ever finds 
the one. 

the city dumps fill 
the junkyards fill 
the madhouses fill 
the hospitals fill 
the graveyards fill 

nothing else 
fills. 





Monday, August 17

swims and talks





Come inside me and swim
through all the veins in my body.
From lips to lungs
to the tips of my fingers.

Take a deep breath my dear.
Then go deeper
till you reach the place
where I keep my silent secrets
scattered from here
all the way to the sea.

Never say that you'll kill me, I know-
I'll tell you my story with every small talks
we shared now and then.
Bitter or bland, I dont mind.
The road to self destruction is sweet
and paved with stubborn denial.

Swim, swim my dear before you sink
swallowed by promises and lies.
And when we reach the end
we can always look at each other's face
and say goodbye,
and light another one.




Tuesday, August 4

2am




45 minutes become two hours.
Faster means freeze.
Skies made up their mind
to shower the dark,
and the moon whispers to the stars
that its not their time tonight.

And I am the lonely one.
Drenched in regrets.
Shivering in ice
from one streetlight to the next.
Cursing cold. Praising lord
for a warp in space to dive in,
for my fingers to stop its rattle.
Wondering if its time to slide under
the galloping trucks. Roaring from hell.

But I'm too scared
of what's said in the holy verses
and being forgotten in the rain.
I just can dream
for the wind they leave behind
to sweep me off the slick road
and fly me to purgatory.




starry night





On the loud rooftop,
raindrops dance to double choruses
of a sinking bed
and why he can never leave.

On the weeping walls,
dripping made-up memories
of painters giving up
and drowning in every colour.

On the shouting speakers,
flow foreign syllables
of the wild and sedated
passion. The ''real'' life. 

On the nature of the this,
I dont really give a fuck
and I never speak of hope
and they never speak of me. 

On the sinking bed.
Sink deeper sink
to the depth of loving years.
until you find pieces of yourself
until you find nothing of me