Read The Collected Poems of Ted Berrigan Online
Authors: Alice Notley
Put out the cat
Take in the clothes
off of the line
Take a walk,
buy cigarettes
two teen-agers whistle
as I walk up
They say: “Only your hairdresser
knows for sure!”
Then they say,
“ulp!”
because I am closer to them.
They see I am not hippie kid, frail like Mick Jagger,
but some horrible 35 year old big guy!
The neighborhood I live in is mine!
“How’d you like a broken head, kid?”
I say fiercely.
(but I am laughing & they are not one bit scared.)
So, I go home.
Alice Clifford waits me. Soon she’ll die
at the Greenwood Nursing Home; my mother’s
mother, 79 years & 7 months old.
But first, a nap, til my mother comes home
from work, with the car.
The heart stops briefly when someone dies,
a quick pain as you hear the news, & someone passes
from your outside life to inside. Slowly the heart adjusts
to its new weight, & slowly everything continues, sanely.
Living’s a pleasure:
I’d like to take the whole trip
despite the possible indignities of growing old,
moving, to die in poverty, among strangers:
that can’t be helped.
So, everything, now
is just all right. I’m with you.
No more last night.
Friday’s great
10 o’clock morning sun is shining!
I can hear today’s key sounds fading softly
& almost see opening sleep’s epic novels.