Two Poems by Richard Collins

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UNCLE HARLAN

I always loved when Uncle Harlan came to visit
Not often but when he did I didn’t miss it

He was what I didn’t know existed
Something our women called sophisticated

Back again from Europe he treated us
To a slideshow: Madrid, London, Paris

He wasn’t an uncle really of course
But some distant cousin, third or fourth

Handsome Uncle Harlan had style and taste
All the women whispered it was such a waste

That he was a (quote/unquote) Confirmed Bachelor
Which meant in those days he either played the women

Or played the woman to other men. I didn’t care
He was tall and angular, long neck and slick black hair

Peppered his speech with French and Spanish phrases
Failed to teach me not tongues but how to tie my shoes

I tie them still with clumsy loops like cowboy lassoes
That elicit laughter, so I switched to loafers like his

Soft Italian leather like skin to touch
Buffed to perfection, that is: not too much

He didn’t want to be tied down. Convention kills
He confided. His European souvenirs were personal

Secrets to be savored, not shared as public art
But hidden in the hollow camera of the heart

To this kid, it was no one’s business what he did
He’d been to Paris, London and Madrid.

SACRED CITIES AND PROFANE

Tlachihualtepetl

From the Garden of Edinburgh
Back to the city of brotherly love

A taxi stuck in snow in Swansea
Never reaches London, much less Copenhagen

A train breaks down at Saint Pancras Station
Canceled pilgrimage to Canterbury

A blushing romance in Bath
A surrender, a seduction, a velvet rejection

Legs remembered and streets forgotten
Amsterdam, Paris, Brussels, the Hague.

***

A plane lands clumsy as an Albatross
On a hijacked Grecian runway

For a honeymoon in Cretan caves
Pink and black Santorini sand

Worship in the bay of Kythera
Deep bows to terraced Sifnos vines

Tours and detours of Istanbul
Drowned nudes in underground cisterns

Selçuk’s Cavern of the Seven Sleepers
The sickness not quite unto Ephesus

Then back to mathematical Samos
And the legends of long-legged Lesbos

That was one life; this is another
In no particular order.

***

Driven to city after profane city
Touching down in Sofia, Timișoara

Far from naked rocks in the sea
Corinth and Thessaloniki

To Budapest and Bucharest
Cities asleep without rest

This is one life; that was another
Mixed like a cocktail with bitters and ice.

***

What about the car wreck on River Road
What about the pool cue sold

And what about the train wreck on the way from Trieste
To Belgrade, the engineer spatchcocked on a flatcar

On the very day that protesters in Tiananmen Square
Faced down tanks, next morning headlines in Athens told us.

***

Fact is, I died long before that in the City of Angels’
Valley of Slow Death, ascended in a Delta jet

Looked out over the panorama of my youth
Dry sands of Cucamonga to muddy waters of Pacoima

From the islands of Balboa to the beaches of Laguna
A trip to Venice for the price of a pawned guitar

Stolen kisses, kitsch and country music cliches
Marriages and mockeries and blood-soaked clouds

Tumbled down at last dead drunk and lost
In the haze of Ciudad de México, then Puebla

Long before the more fortunate infidelities of the fall
Resurrection an empty promise, or threat.

Richard Collins has lived in Eugene and Baton Rouge, Bucharest and Timisoara, Los Angeles and London, Swansea and now in Sewanee, Tennessee. His recent work has appeared in The Plenitudes, Willows Wept, and Marrow. A memoir, In Search of the Hermaphrodite, is out from Tough Poets Press (2024).

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