Two Poems by Daniel Morris

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A Rainy Day Song For Sly Stone

You know today was rained out

So inside all day just me and my

Clicker my box my many

Channels my 12- inch tube perched

On gray filing cabinet in corner

Of this lonely room I pay

For cable and I click and I click

My remote short for remote control

I guess sounds very futuristic but

Is already futile what kid today

Screens TV no they favor other devices

Other vices but I remain addicted

I need the rays the warmth the hearth

Sound on sound off

You Tube tune accompaniment

“I can feel it when you shine

On me,” I hear Sly now

In a wheelchair can’t snap

His fingers or comb grandchild

Or express gratitude except with long fingers

Signaling Sly’s still ok but for once just once

I want to be clicking the remote guide

To finally find a show worth my time

Something unlike Harry Potter Meet the Fockers

Some real reel something starring a young

Peter Falk a younger Elliott Gould

Alan Arkin Zero Mostel

Something more Cassavetes

Meets Harry Smith Meets

Stan Brakhage and so I press

Play but of course this channel requires

Special subscription so no to the one flick

I could stomach for once that not

Happening is all I am asking for

On the Day Mike Tells Alice He Will Be Switching Serials

Oh, Hello Alice! I didn’t expect to find you upstairs,

Away from your kitchen. Howdy, Mr. Brady…just putting away

Some freshly laundered towels for Jan.  She is starting

To bleed. Do you like my new miniskirt?  Twister

Polka dots become you, Mr. Brady.  How about my wig?  Too

Blond? Too Carol? Too 1969?  No, Mr. Brady.  Suits you just fine.

What about the platforms, Alice?  Careful not to twist

Your ankle at the presentation today, Mr. Brady.  Remember,

Your firm is competing with Mr. Pei’s for the Snow White

Super Slide Project.  Would you say the same to Mrs. Brady?

To Marcia? Sorry, Mr. Brady, they aren’t architects.  No Alice.

About my platforms!  About needing to be careful not to fall

In my new platforms. Sorry, Mr. Brady.  I guess I microaggressed.

Don’t do it again, or I must demand your two-week notice,

Even though you have been mine since my first wife’s suicide.

What was her name anyway?  Understood, Mr. Brady.

Oh, and Alice, thank your boyfriend, Hal, the butcher. 

Tell him I found the rack of lamb simply divine. 

His name is Herb, Mr. Brady, but I will let him know.

Yes, Mort.  And, Alice. Yes, Mr. Brady. Straighten

That rather loud tie of yours.  Yes, Mr. Brady.  The stars

And stripes on my tie honor our upcoming Bicentennial.

Amazing how far we’ve come.  Indeed.  You know, Alice,

After this season’s shooting ends, I will guest star

In a special two-part episode of Medical Center.

Oh, I thought you were an architect, Mr. Brady,

Not a physician.  That is true as far as it goes, Alice,

But this episode of Medical Center will be very revealing. 

It is about life, not art.  Robert not Mike.  In the episode,

“The Fourth Sex,”  I will undergo a sex change operation. 

No more masks, Alice.  Yes, Mr. Brady.  I’ll go tell Bobby.

He was going to make a mask of his hero, Joe Namath, to wear

To school tomorrow.  A mask?  Yes, Mr. Brady, your youngest son lied.

Bobby lied?  Yes sir, he told friends he knew Broadway Joe.

To save his face, I agreed to sign the mask on behalf of Mr. Namath,

But now with your new rule about no masks, Bobby must tell

The kids the truth. Yes indeed, Alice.  Yes indeed.

Daniel Morris is author of eight books on twentieth- and twenty-first century poetry and visual culture, editor or coeditor of five essay collections, and author of four books of poetry. Recent titles include Not Born Digital (Bloomsbury), Blue Poles (Marsh Hawk Press), a paperback reissue of his study of Nobel Laureate Louise Glück (University of Missouri Press), Essays and Interviews on Contemporary American Poets, Poetry, and Pedagogy: A Thirty-Year Creative Reading Workshop, and, as editor, The Cambridge Companion to American Poetry and Politics since 1900.  He is a professor of English at Purdue University, where he has taught since 1994.

Image: Syced, CC0, via Wikimedia Commons

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