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Online Poems By Adrian C Louis Essay

Online Poems By Adrian C. Louis Essay, Research Paper


From Salt Hill


Manifest Destination


A hot wind curls the leaves


and chases the dogs digging


deep into the dry soil.


I live in the gut of the bright failure


called America. I live in


this hell named Nebraska.


It’s one hundred and seven today


and grasshoppers from outer


space are dancing in my brain.


The air-conditioner is broke


so I run a tub of cold water


and submerge every half hour.


There’s a wet trail from the bath


to the couch and nearby fan.


The air is heavy with grain dust.


The "wheaties" are up from Oklahoma


with their caravan of combines.


I crave winter. I want a blizzard


that blinds me to my fellow man.


These are my dark times.


Every other day I grieve for the me


that was and every man or woman


I see fills me with contempt.


Nine out of ten Skins in town are


hang-around-the-fort welfare addicts.


Every weekend their violence


and drunken wretchedness


fills the county jail, but I’m


far beyond embarrassment because


the white people are even worse.


Varied branches of that inbred, toothless


mountain trash in "Deliverance,"


settled here and now own


the bank and most businesses.


It’s undeniably true that these


white people in Cowturdville


could be hillbillies except for


the fact that these are The Plains.


Drive on, rednecks, to the edge


of your flat world and fall


down to a better hell.


Every single thing about this


town is sadly second-rate


and I haven’t been laid


in more than two years


and there’s this fat lady


with varicose veins who


calls me late at night


and begs me to come over


to her trailer for a drink.


Here, in this Panhandle town,


farm kids speed desperately up


and down the main drag wearing


baseball caps backwards and throwing


gang signs they’ve seen on the tube


and their parents, glad they’re old


and tired, truly believe that


those pictures we’re now getting


from Mars have meaning.


As far as I can tell, I’m one of the few


people in Cowturdville who’s gone


to college and I often wish I


never had, but Christ on a pogo


stick . . . I think I’m starting to like


it here in this American heartland.


Thunderheads are forming


and the sweet-ass rain


of forgiveness is in the air.


Source: http://www.hypertxt.com/sh/no5/louis.html


from The Cortland Review


Song of the Snake


Several years slithered by


and then an honor song played


on KILI-FM is how I find you


passed on to the spirit world.


First thought: the snake grew back.


There are some of us the snake will not


bite at all; we’re either lucky or cursed.


Others will get bit, punch the snake in


the eyeball, and toss it away forever.


And others of us will get bit, yank


the snake away and leave the teeth


imbedded in our inflamed flanks.


We’ll be fine for a while, then those


fangs will begin to gestate; eventually


the snake will grow back full-sized


and spitting, guiding us to stand


with shit-pants and wild, holy eyes,


hands out, begging for a cure.


Tahansi…that was you


when last we met.


source: http://www.cortlandreview.com/issuethree/poetlouis3.htm


Adios Again, My Blessed Angel


of Thunderheads and Urine


Ah, so there you are, somewhere between the


demerol and the morphine, silently emptying


my catheter jug. Don’t do that, I want to say,


but my voice is lost from two weeks on the


ventilator. Baby Girl, I want to say hello, say


I know your name, say how much I’ve always


loved you, but only a rasp comes and then you


are gone forever again.


I know I’ve got a crinkled picture of you


boxed somewhere in my shuttered house.


The image is as foreign as it is faded.


Somewhere west of Tulsa, you are leaning


against a black Bug, smiling and pointing


at a remarkable formation of thunderheads


that tower and bluster miles past heaven.


Your long, black hair dances below your waist.


Your worn Navy bell bottoms are snug against


your perfect legs, your strong, loving hips.


After I snap the photo, you tell me that


you’re going back to nurs

ing school.


Me, I’ll wander in the wilderness for thirty years


before I see you again, and then, it will be only


for a brief minute while you empty my urine


bucket and I try to cough up words that


will not come like the flashing pain beneath


my sutures that signals healing and wonder.


source: http://www.cortlandreview.com/issuethree/poetlouis3.htm


from Hanksville


Note to a Young Rez Artist


Hey, I thought they were eagles circling


above, a good luck sign for Skins, but closer


inspection revealed them to be the turkey


vultures of broken English.


Hey, I remember once you sent me


a hand-scrawled note saying you were out


of typewriter ribbons and I sent you off


fifty bucks that same day


and you wrote back saying you got


the ribbons and some Big Macs to boot.


Young brother, now I’m puzzled


down to the core of my sour-wine soul,


I’m mired in middle age


and you’re becoming famous


before your time and I’d envy you


except that I, too, thought


I knew what red pain was


in my mad-groined, goofball twenties.


? 1997 Adrian Louis. Ceremonies of the Damned, University of Nevada Press.


Online source: http://www.hanksville.org/storytellers/ALouis/poems/rezartist.html


from North Dakota Quarterly


Getting a Second Opinion


I’ve just bought you a new winter coat


and we’re temporarily sane,


cruising two blocks down the street


from K-Mart in Rapid City.


Three young Indian boys,


fourteen, maybe fifteen years


old and living the thug life


are strolling across the busy street


making cars stop and I slam on


the brakes and give them the finger


and they flash gang signs and one pulls


a small, silver gun and I stomp on the gas


and in the rearview mirror I see them


laughing and I know positively


by the fear in your eyes that


not only is the white man’s God


dead, but the Great Spirit is too.


source: http://www.und.nodak.edu/org/ndq/louis.html


from New Letters


Black is This Night of Love


"I hope we make it home


before this storm," I say.


"I hope we make it home


before this storm," you say.


Me: "It’s gonna be bad."


You: "It’s gonna be bad."


It’s incredibly black, black beyond


metaphor just before the blizzard hits.


Late March, late night in the car


near Bordeaux Creek, in the pines


between Chadron and Rushville.


The trunk of our new used LeSabre


is pregnant with supplies,


mostly TV dinners from Safeway


since I do all the cooking now


and the Blue Oyster Cult anthem


"Don’t Fear the Reaper"


is rocking the oldies station.


I reach over, pretend to muss your hair


but really I’m holding down


the dark balloon that is your head.


You wiggle your skull from my hand.


"Sometimes you really get on my nerves,"


I say and reach for your hand


thinking of the three times tonight


you wandered off in the grocery store.


"Sometimes you really get on my nerves,"


you say and squeeze my hand back.


"I love you," I say.


"I love you," you say.


"Are you just mocking me?" I ask


I can’t see your eyes, not that it would help.


"Sometimes you get on my nerves," you say.


You let go of my bloodless hand.


"What’s wrong?" I ask.


"I don’t know," you say.


"Really, what’s wrong?"


Again you say that you don’t know.


"Okay," I say, "Let’s do the tables.


How much is six times six?"


You: "Sixty-six."


"Five times five?"


You: "Ninety-five."


"That’s wrong. What’s five times five?"


"I don’t know," you answer.


"Shit," I yell, exasperated.


Searing, sizzling sad, I crank up


the Blue Oyster Cult and fill the void


until the white swirling blizzard hits.


Somewhere in the blinding snow


I feel your hand on my shoulder.


"I love you," you say.


"I doubt it," I say,


a pitiful big man pouting in darkness.


"I love you, " you say, and I shudder


and reach for your hand.


It is warm and you are wakan.


from New Letters, 64:1, 148. Online source: http://cctr.umkc.edu/~newletters/upclose2.htm

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