Zero

—The /tEmz/ Poetry Review, March, 2024, https://www.thetemzreview.com/bickford.html

 

Time lives

as digits on a number line.

Now is zero    and now    and now   and now

the no in now a shadow looming long

zero the hinge the holder of place

where all moments exist

before they are gone.

Melody

sequences of numbers

frequencies of waves

energy moving

through fluid in space

   zero in music lives only as silence.

Fibonacci

used the term zephyrum

the empty west wind 

in tennis we say love   

l’oeuf     the egg

pregnant

with the cipher of the future

yet nil   the empty set   signifying zilch.

Life

the tick of all the hearts that beat

at once

emerges in the moment now

fleeting harmony in forms

the endless helix-song

without attack   cadence   motive or rest.

We are

nothing that has ever been

becoming

what could never be

all

that has ever been

becoming

all that ever will

alive

in an infinite

zero.

Blank Pads

 

Taught to speak then told to be quiet,

I learned to talk and was taught to be silent,

then learned to write with no such restrictions.

Write! they said Write!     Quietly write.

 

Start with white and beige pads of blank paper

from the plant—my mom’s work, Moore Business Forms—

bound with bright red gum on top, the edges

cut smooth to fan against my lips the cheek,

hand-sized pages designed to be ink-lined

in a waitress-apron at a diner

but slightly off-square, unprinted, lopped ends

left at the chopper for Mom to bring home;

 

add pencil or pen from a coffee can,

and look like Mom when she writes a letter—

squint up and left as if trying to see thoughts

on the ceiling and walls through my eyebrows—

then, starting top left corner of the page,

draw shapes like letters scribbled into lines

that look like the words Mom sends to grandma.

 

Later on, the pads had built-in carbons.

When I was very young some blank pads

had a double-long page of carbon paper

that was pulled and inserted as the pad

was used. But in third grade Moore’s invented

NCR© paper, self-copying sheets;

and every scribbled page      self-published.

Elegy to My Roommate

—in memory of Randy Roebuck

He was as he so often said

                        a dark skin’ded dude,

but being father, son, and friend

his skin and he were more than that:

deep earth soil live and roiling from his soul

black butter onto which I pressed my heart

and felt the frail-strong softness there within

  take self-sculpted shapes

      of  body    face    mind

Allegany mud in the hands of a black Rodin,

of the person he wanted us to want him to be.

 

As strong winds stiffen up the sapling in passing

            Randy Roebuck reshaped me

                        and privileged me to see

                        the emergence of his selfhood

                                       as what was

became what could be.

 

So, what the fuck, Unca’ Buck!

Ditched us for another fishing trip?

            The obit said you battled hard.

                                    Would that I’d been witness to that war.

 

Instead I see you now as I did then—

            master of the funk, spinning in your chair

            from tape to tape, deck to deck,  

            DJing for no one and the world

            from your turret room above Bloom’s Saloon

            fronting your wall of cassettes

                        a twister in your mouth   

                        that crooked smile, long deep-shining face

                        The Voice a bari sax: Ship Oars!

Oh Noooo! We’re gonna rock down to —

Electric Avenue!

                        easy teeth, goofy grin, linty naps,

                        puffy I-ain’t-had-my-coffee-yet-this-morning eyes,

                                    Gettin’ right, gettin’ tight

Talkin’ ’bout gettin’ dem panties tonight!

Speak into the mo’fo mic!

 

Close, even at a distance, distant

even with your arm around me

rollin’ with the group home boys

scopin’ on da bugs, da purdy trees

a shadow of the little boy you’d been

alive with those felonious man-children

yet diving under the table at a back-fire,

     never trusting anything completely

   after being there in country

    never spoken of.

 

With your charm and looks

            you could have made the velvet hustle pay—

                        the happy gigolo with goo-goo cooing

                        sugar-mommas paying for the ride—

                                                but no.                  

You chose to help,

                        with an MSW you thought was bullshit,

                        the flower-hatted, ruby-lipped church ladies

                                    you mimicked mercilessly

                                                            but whom I know you loved,

the case-loads-full of group home kids,

foster families, moms, grandmas, grandkids, aunties,

generations of cousins, nephews, nieces

happier now because of you

than you could ever make yourself.

 

I don’t know who you were trying to please—

            your wife? Your sons? But it was seldom really you.

                        Like me, I’m sure they were happy to be

                                     teased    annoyed    disarmed

                                    the way you knew how to do it.

 

To a tee you played the part of

            I-don’t-give-a-fuck macho soul brother—

                        but many knew you so much better.

We knew the boy inside the man with arms

            so long they wrapped around you twice,

I knew the warmth inside your leather

            jacket as I clung to you on your motorcycle

                        proud that people thought I was your boyfriend,

                                    down at The Stud dancing with the boys

                                    looking for women at the end of the night

                                                ending up with Jack-n-seven, a joint,

and the long hall between us.

 

Thank you for the smile that said I see you

     and understand the spaces in our hearts

                     that we can never fill.

It’s OK to let it roll, let it ride,

     straight up, beer back,

              cribbage on the side.

You let me see the man you saw in me.

                     Thank you.

Fallowed and Becalmed

(with acknowledgements to Billie Holiday & Abel Meeropol, Jim Morrison, and Devo)

excerpted in Behind the Mask: 40 Quarantine Poems from Humboldt County, 2020

Behind the Mask

1

This fallowed field frames our time:

            the structure of our soil redefined

            untilled until the flood we know will come.

 

Well-worked before the blight

            we test its tilth in silent streets

            quiescent public spaces, empty slips.

 

But the abandonment is shallow

            only surface-bare, the harbored ships and buildings

            bleed, so thick they are with life and longing.

 

Still we shelter in our cabins, becalmed:

            the flesh retreats to salty sallow bones

            of sickness and regret. In desperation

 

we borrow the youth of our children’s lives,

            secretly reverse our parents’ mortgage,

            and pawn grandparents’ legacy for booze.

                        All to justify the past.

                        The bill is due.

2

Ironic electronic comics co-mix on the air

            virus protection severed at the head—

            logic circuits shorted-out with hairspray,

            spur a million minions on to armed denial:

                        Open up! Damn the data! Full speed ahead!

                        Yo! Gallows crooners! Sing to the rafters!

                        Appeal for more applause!

                                    as trap doors drop

and bodies twitch and sway.

 

We sail away to reap unfallowed shores,

            to use the heated tide to raise all boats,

            but though flood waters rise, there is no wind.

Lulled, we pull from dinghies, coxswain hoarse

            reshouting orders never understood

            masks cover both his ears but not his mouth

            weak wet breath fogs face shields as we row

            we squint to read the signing hands behind

            propaganda-podium performers

                        reality stars spew unreality

                        The Situation stalks the Situation Room

                        he’s been elected Captain of the World

                        the Ship of State is in his grip of doom

                                    as lemming-rats escape into their tombs

                                    shallows-sailors schoon full sail into reefs,

                                    pursuing loyalty not buoyancy

                                    they kiss the ring of commander-in-thief

                                    and set more canvas as the virus rips our hull

                        while body-bags of new Strange Fruit are hanged

                        from the pure white yardarms of Good Ship Hope,

                                    its red double-crosses spawning tent-morgues.

                                            Embalmed.    Becalmed.    Fallowed.

3

Horse Latitudes breed coarse platitudes

            still-birthed currents tiny monsters.

Flail or fallow further, dance or drown:

            legs furiously pump the volume

            cranking up confinement music

            break on through to cardio panic:

                        Keep it going! Keep it up!

                        Pant! Fetch! Roll over! Play dead!

                        Get spiritual-minded!

                        Don’t let yourself and others down!

                        Don’t fallow idle! Teach the children!

                        Spur your hobbies! Make more art!

                        Up and download! Stream and binge!

                        Zoom around your partner’s screen

                        forget to clear your history

                        schedule make-up sex, forget your makeup

                        sext your landlord by mistake

                        pandemic virtue-news is fake relief

                        relive, retrieve your life in full

                        pass-time all the time

         pass time         times past        time’s up.

4

Now the fever fills the lungs and shallow

            intubated breathing clings to life.

We cultivate, we culturate

            evacuate occult blood from our bowels

            as all around us human tallow drips

            and draws the sea-salt sorrow from our eyes.

 

Ground-fog rises to lowering sea-clouds

            the vampire-mist spreads brighter than the slate sky

            as dawn-light splits the air from blackened hills

            grey rainbows wet the backs of starving cows:

            the morning comes, yet no one wakes.

       We sleep.           Becalmed.           Fallowed.

5

These naked fields will in time be fecund;

            weeds that we call crops will intercede.

Though oceans we pretend to sail are beckoned

            to hollows in the earth to salt the seed

the earth below, slow burning, will explode.

 

Our culture is at work at home

            the culture of the loam

            the tunnels of the worms

            the nematodes of joy

            the nodes of nitro-fixing germs

            we till to live we live until

   untilled        becalmed        we fallow.

 

How will the callow children of this night

begin to find their hallows of delight?

 

Egrets in a Pasture

             — North Coast Journal, December, 2018

 

gray on gray in morning

white on green at noon

glowing coral in the gloaming

gone by night

 

so many egrets in the pasture

now as winter nears feeding together

still    slow    steps

sudden spear staving hunger

indifferent in their scattered flock

swallowing frogs and gophers

or picking maggots from the dung

 

looking up I see the honkers rise

from the bottom to the dune

Aleutian cackling geese

flapping wing to wing

each a unit of the whole

as in one another’s blinds

they jostle squawk and scramble

the V taking shape then losing squadrons

coming apart at the turns

spawning smaller Ws and Ms

that surge and straighten to another V

 

but these stilted specters in the thistle

single flames atop impossible stems

do not seem to know each other

as if they are the same bird

each in a different part of its own life

then as I watch I see

that they are moving like the geese

aware without the fanfare of their place

more the space between them as they graze

they take no heed of me

I think they know the fence

a patch of safety for their quest

zoned and plotted not yet subdivided

plowed and fallowed remnant of a meadow

of which they do not know and would not care

a movement in the mud the pulsing prey

is all their flight-bred minds are focused on

but fly they will when darkness hides their quarry 

across the bottomland and bay

together mostly silent and alone

to light upon the rustling boughs of home.

 

Painting the House

—excerpted in The Humboldt Senior News, October, 2022

This is the last time we will paint the house.

                                    Up a ladder

                  staring into sun   back bent          

back,                              

hanging on to asphalt-shingled edges.

In one hand a loaded brush drips grey

            the other grips the apex of the peak

            where two long rails come together in a seam—

                        a place of moss and lichen, desiccated  

                        wood and curling paint chips—warm black-tar

                        breezes waft up the roof-pitch and blast my face.

 

I feel

            the vent breathe stale attic air

            dry heat on my groin  

            the sun on my neck

            the sweat of my fear

            the ladder leaning slightly as I work

I see

            children in the neighbor’s yard

            the street    parked cars    the pastures beyond.

I cling.   I daub.   I make no sudden moves.

 

Another spider parachutes by

            swept from her crevice

            covered in paint and doomed.  

I imagine

            falling to the concrete

            my injuries

            the ways I could land I would survive

            the ways I would not

wet fear washes over and covers me.

                                                     I will never paint this house again.

 

Now the primer coat is drying.

Twice more I’ll climb the ladder to that peak

                            then easier jobs,

            Deborah to her prep and me to siding,

                        but one more peak awaits me in the front

                                    dread drips down upon me

 

I accept the fact that I might die painting our house.

                                    I see it in my mind

                 yet climb that ladder again and again

each time feeling my unluckiest fate.

            Clear images of my destruction help

            keep my footing, reach, and breathing mindful

            center of gravity unextended

            balance held with an outward squeeze of calves,

            shins and sides of feet against the runners

                                                                                               firm my purchase.

 

Our house was built of boards milled new in ’72.

            scraping gouges show just two coats since.

We attack what little rot we find

            so it may live to see many more hues

                        before the quake the fire and the flood

                                                                      but not applied by me.

 

This death defiance is suburban testament

to how much homeowners

love their partners.

I guess I really would die for mine.

I’d do the same things as a widower. If never wed

perhaps I’d have no home.

            I know of two men who fell from ladders doing house repair

                        one died on the spot from his injuries

                                       his wife destroyed

                              the other is painfully disabled

                                          now on opioids

yet up I go and go again until

            our home’s revived with colors, trim and eves,

                        the wood preserved beyond my days.

 

Surely, I’d pitch in

            to paint the house again

                        if we were younger.

Not that my fears will get the best of me—

            I’ll never put my foot down and refuse,

and we won’t come into sudden money

            no longer feel the need to save

                        by doing it ourselves—

it’s that we will either be too feeble

            or dead by the time it needs doing.

                                    Some nights we feel almost there already

but now we’re nearly done.

 

We prop each other in our waning strength,

            proud of our deeds and dedication

                        in this seventh decade

                            but we dead ache.

Pride and the beauty of the finished job

            do not smooth the stiffness,

            clear the bruises, only serve

                to make them tolerable.

The life within upholds this roof these walls.

                                    So we laugh.

We let the ache of bones give way to mirth.

There is no better way to see this task

            begun before our time and never done;

Sisyphi who will never see the top

            will never be rolled over by our rock.

                        We will roll on its floor in drunken glee

but we will never paint this house again.

A Marriage

               — Poets and Writers, College of the Redwoods, 2012

Creaking, groaning, both as one,
a howl of laughter, crack
of sudden grief, a deep exchange
of growling sobs, an argument of ringing
timber strings, soaring high-hoarse
baritone, then rumbling
bass to shake the forest floor—

the two madrones had long ago caressed
away their paper bark and pressed
their human-shining skins until
they strained against the heartwood at their cores,

their separate paths to light
a century in mute acceptance
of their intertwining lives, now grown
together at the mid-point of their trunks,
and joined in joy and pain, they bow
as one before the virtuous winds that bow
them each against the other’s inner grain
in spires of ascending song,
the children of their roots.

Gathering Wild Berries

                    —Toyon, vol 28, 2012

The brombeern stain that now
nut-brown will neither wash
nor wash away,
her Hessish humors mulling
with my huckleberry wine—

crimson on crimson
on passion to rust, red
the keening flow upon the ground—
whether of the vein or of the vine
the dye is set, the serum dry.

Pricking finger, wrist,
bloody juices, lick
the salt sweet wound
and feel the gritty blossom
burr across your tongue,

but hold the bleeding treasure
fast, regain the sticky grip
in pain, and squeeze the living
paint onto the page,
and press the scarlet ink to fit
the meaning of its seed.

Elegy to a Kingfisher

(In memory of Guy Kuttner)

Kingfisher. Kingfisher, where
have you gone?
Barrel chested, blue banded
boister, sharing your best,
your crop always full for us.
Upstream to the source,
to the mountain and sky?
Down to the slough,
to the marsh, to the mouth?

Kingfisher. Kingfisher, who
did you see?
Perched in your madrone
along the river, glimmers
in the dimmest water,
children in the dark,
the needs of others as your own
and love inside us all.

Kingfisher. Kingfisher, when
was it last?
I saw you late a rainy day,
wired bird, ruff against the wind,
beaky smile—Tchrrt, Tchrrt,
and I wanted to fly with you,
join your quest for light,
live on the river and the mountain,
fishing love and greatness from the land.

Kingfisher. Kingfisher, why
is it now?
Of all the nows that could be,
we are here within the darkness of your wake,
but we have been with you,
your singing, booming,
flashing glory, bear hugs with your wings,
and know our souls are deeper for your song.

Kingfisher. Kingfisher, who
are we now?
We remaining, huddled, gaudy
in our meaningless plumage,
signifying nothing but our
terror of the dark.

Kingfisher. Kingfisher, what
shall we do?
Be the ones we hope you thought we were,
your most optimistic
vision of the possible,
your laughing voice within our hearts,
and live as if it mattered to the earth.

Kingfisher. Kingfisher, where
have you gone?
I hear your call—Tchrrt, Tchrrt, echo
still against the pages of the water,
in the arch and reach of trees, intertwined
with memories, heartwood in the grain,
of beauty strong and gentle,
with a softness in the soil of your roots
that lets the lives of we remaining thrive
all the more for your having been alive;
so that we may sing, Kingfisher,
sing as we go, as we all shall go,
flying to the mountain, to the mouth,
to the delta of the sky, and out
into the open sea again.

‘Wrens and ‘Rents

               — Abandoned Mine, February, 2022

https://www.abandonedmine.org/wrens-and-rents-michael-bickford

 

A child, our little wren

and we the ‘rents

and then another

and now they are children

offered to each other from our selves

held and released breaths

let out and taken in like old genes,

a hem on a hand-me-down

 

growing as they do

like mushrooms after rain

unnoticed but for absence

how big they have become

rounder fuller

louder stronger

the tenor and texture of their voices

your voice and mine

and theirs their own from others

never heard by us as we let them go

sending them out on the lead

of our words and our love

 

yet there they are in you

in the mirror, on the screen

and in my dreams more real

than when we are together

now that we no longer stare

incredulous and smitten as we were

 

so we study each other

for their features

each of them in us and both in each

my mother’s eyes and mine

your father’s mouth and yours

 

their scents once so sweet and shared

a burst of blue bouquet

now a glancing waft in greeting

don’t smell me daddy she had said

their touch so cliché-soft,

a baby’s derriere, their hair

untousled now, apart within

their social lives

       their I’s

their very beings

offered to the world

to their lovers and their friends

   and sometimes

in these our fullest moments

to the ‘rents.