GODD is great; GODD is good; let us thank HIM for our food.
by HIS hand we all are fed; give us now our daily dead.
ah-men!
p.s., most gracious & salacious HEAVENLY LORD, we thank YOU in advance for meals galore of loverly gore: of precious delicious sumptuous scrumptious human flesh!)
Sunday School, Faith Free Will Baptist, 1973: I sat imaging watery folds of pale silk encircling her waist.
Explicit sex was the day’s “hot” topic (how breathlessly I imagined hers) as she taught us the perils of lust fraught with inhibition.
I found her unaccountably beautiful, rolling implausible nouns off the edge of her tongue: adultery, fornication, masturbation, sodomy. Acts made suddenly plausible by the faint blush of her unrouged cheeks, by her pale lips accented only by a slight quiver, a trepidation.
What did those lustrous folds foretell of our uncommon desire? Why did she cross and uncross her legs lovely and long in their taupe sheaths? Why did her breasts rise pointedly, as if indicating a direction?
“Come unto me, (unto me),” together, we sang,
cheek to breast, lips on lips, devout, afire,
my hands up her skirt, her pants at her knees:
all night long, all night long, in the heavenly choir.
This poem is set at Faith Christian Academy, which I attended for a year during the ninth grade. Another poem, "Sex 101," was also written about my experiences at FCA that year.
That day the late spring heat steamed through the windows of a Crayola-yellow schoolbus crawling its way up the backwards slopes of Nowheresville, North Carolina ...
Where we sat exhausted from the day’s skulldrudgery and the unexpected waves of muggy, summer-like humidity ...
Giggly first graders sat two abreast behind senior high students sprouting their first sparse beards, their implausible bosoms, their stranger affections ...
The most unlikely coupling―
Lambert, 18, the only college prospect on the varsity basketball team, the proverbial talldarkhandsome swashbuckling cocksman, grinning ...
Beside him, Wanda, 13, bespectacled, in her primproper attire and pigtails, staring up at him, fawneyed, disbelieving ...
And as the bus filled with the improbable musk of her, as she twitched impaled on his finger like a dead frog jarred to life by electrodes, I knew ...
that love is a forlorn enterprise, that I would never understand it.
Styx by Michael R. Burch
Black waters, deep and dark and still . . . all men have passed this way, or will.
I wrote the poem above as a teenager in high school. The lines started out as part of a longer poem, but I thought these were the two best lines and decided to let them stand alone on the principle that "discretion is the better part of valor."
u-turn: another way to look at religion by Michael R. Burch
... u were borne orphaned from Ecstasy into this lower realm: just one of the inching worms dreaming of Beatification; u'd love to make a u-turn back to Divinity, but having misplaced ur chrysalis, can only chant magical phrases, like Circe luring ulysses back into the pigsty ...
brrExit by Michael R. Burch
what would u give to simply not exist― for a painless exit? he asked himself, uncertain.
then from behind the hospital room curtain a patient screamed― "my life!"
no foothold by Michael R. Burch
there is no hope; therefore i became invulnerable to love. now even god cannot move me: nothing to push or shove, no foothold.
so let me live out my remaining days in clarity, mine being the only nativity, my death the final crucifixion and apocalypse,
as far as the i can see …
fog by Michael R. Burch
ur just a bit of fluff drifting out over the ocean, unleashing an atom of rain, causing a minor commotion, for which u expect awesome GODS to pay u SUPREME DEVOTION! ... but ur just a smidgen of mist unlikely to be missed ... where did u get the notion?
pretty pickle by Michael R. Burch
u’d blaspheme if u could because ur God’s no good, but of course u cant: ur just a lowly ant (or so u were told by a Hierophant).
and then i was made whole by Michael R. Burch
... and then i was made whole, but not a thing entire, glued to a perch in a gilded church, strung through with a silver wire ...
singing a little of this and of that, warbling higher and higher: a thing wholly dead till I lifted my head and spat at the Lord and his choir.
grave request by Michael R. Burch
come to ur doom in Tombstone;
the stars stark and chill over Boot Hill
care nothing for ur desire;
still,
imagine they wish u no ill, that u burn with the same antique fire;
for there’s nothing to life but the thrill of living until u expire;
so come, spend ur last hardearned bill on Tombstone.
bachelorhoodwinked by Michael R. Burch
u are charming & disarming, but mostly alarming since all my resolve dissolved!
u are chic as a sheikh's harem girl in the sheets but my castle’s no longer my own and my kingdom's been overthrown!
“Cædmon’s Hymn,” composed at the Monastery of Whitby (a North Yorkshire fishing village), is one of the oldest known poems written in the English language, dating back to around 680 A.D. According to legend, Cædmon, an illiterate Anglo-Saxon cowherd, received the gift of poetic composition from an angel; he subsequently founded a school of Christian poets. Unfortunately, only nine lines of Cædmon’s verse survive, in the writings of the Venerable Bede. Whitby, tiny as it is, reappears later in the history of English literature, having been visited, in diametric contrast, by Lewis Carroll and Bram Stoker’s ghoulish yet evocative Dracula.
At the monastery of Whitby, on a day when the sun sank through the sea, and the gulls shrieked wildly, jubilant, free,
while the wind and time blew all around, I paced those dusk-enamored grounds and thought I heard the steps resound
of Carroll, Stoker and of Bede who walked there, too, their spirits freed ―perhaps by God, perhaps by need―
to write, and with each line, remember the glorious light of Cædmon’s ember, scorched tongues of flame words still engender.
Here, as darkness falls, at last we meet. I lay this pale garland of words at his feet.
Originally published by The Lyric
Cædmon's Hymn (circa 658-680 AD) loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch
Humbly now we honour heaven-kingdom's Guardian, the Measurer's might and his mind-plans, the goals of the Glory-Father. First he, the Everlasting Lord, established earth's fearful foundations. Then he, the First Scop, hoisted heaven as a roof for the sons of men: Holy Creator, mankind's great Maker! Then he, the Ever-Living Lord, afterwards made men middle-earth: Master Almighty!
Alone again as evening falls, I join gaunt shadows and we crawl up and down my room's dark walls.
Up and down and up and down, against starlight―strange, mirthless clowns― we merge, emerge, submerge . . . then drown.
We drown in shadows starker still, shadows of the somber hills, shadows of sad selves we spill,
tumbling, to the ground below. There, caked in grimy, clinging snow, we flutter feebly, moaning low
for days dreamed once an age ago when we weren't shadows, but were men . . . when we were men, or almost so.
Dream House by Michael R. Burch
I have come to the house of my fondest dreams, but the shutters are boarded; the front door is locked; the mail box leans over; and where we once walked, the path is grown over with crabgrass and clover.
I kick the trash can; it screams, topples over. The yard, weeded over, blooms white fluff, and green. The elm we once swung from leans over the stream. In the twilight I cling with both hands to the swing.
Inside, perhaps, I hear the telephone ring or watch once again as the bleary-eyed mover takes down your picture. Dejected, I hover, asking over and over, “Why didn’t you love her?”
Published as the collection "thanksgiving prayer of the parasites"