December 24, 2013

Tom C. Hunley

MOE SZYSLAK

Hello, Listen Lady? Uh yeah, this is
Moe, of Moe’s Tavern. See, I tell you
my name up front, cuz I don’t want you
to confuse me with one of them
prank callers. We got one of those
at the bar, a scum-sucking pus-ball
who makes me say stuff like
“Is there a Drew P. Weiner in the house?”
I get so mad, I want to take
a bottle opener to his veins
and then dunk him in the shark tank
at the Springfield Aquarium. Listen, lady,
I want you to teach me to give advice
like a bartender ought to be doing.
Sure, I can offer a trusty Duff,
a Flaming Moe, or the best watered-down
scotch around, but if the chaser is me
mocking the poor barhound’s necktie,
I’m not doing my job. I’m always fightin’
with myself, that’s my problem. I’m part Dutch,
part Italian, part Arab, part Polish, and
it feels like all these parts are at war
inside my bloodstream. Somehow you just gotta
surrender to your own complexities, like that poet
who said “I am large, I contain multitudes.”
I wish I’d thought to say that
to this Springfield A&M egghead who comes in
one night, back when Moe’s was a Pomo joint
called M. He tells me he’s teaching classes
in women’s literature where he and his charges
spit out the word patriarchy as if
dislodging a chicken bone, and he’s careful
not to point out that he’s the family breadwinner,
he does most of the driving, and he
spanks the kids if he gets a call
from their principal. So he’s a feminist professor
and he’s a patriarch. He can’t get along
with himself, so he drinks. Why do people turn
to barkeeps for advice, anyhow? Is this
the mug of a guy who knows what’s what?
I mean, I moved to this here burg cuz
the zip code spells “boobs” if you type it
on a calculator. My bar’s such a girl repellent
that I never even needed to put in a Ladies’ Room.
Still, they tell me their girl troubles.
Me, my last girlfriend left me, and she
was a blowup doll. Stupid helium. I don’t want
you to think I’m a bad guy or nothing, though.
Sure, I stalk my friends’ wives, and I guess
running that whale smuggling ring wasn’t
my finest hour, but I love my cat, Snookums.
That’s got to count for something, right?
Once I saved music store owner King Toot
from a burning Chevy, and on my nights off I’ve been
reading Little Women to them sweet little hospital urchins.
I’ve got a soft spot for kids when they ain’t crank yankin’,
asking if there’s a Hugh Jass on any of my barstools.
Do you ever fight with yourself, Listen Lady?
I mean maybe you’re a snake handler,
like me, but some days you just don’t
believe in nothin’. Take it from me, an ex-boxer,
when you fight with yourself,
you’re gonna lose, bet on it.

from Rattle #40, Summer 2013

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Tom C. Hunley: “When I was a teenager, I was captivated by Kevin J. O’Connor’s portrayal of a teenage beat poet in Peggy Sue Got Married. Shortly thereafter, I picked up Allen Ginsberg’s Empty Mirror and read ‘I am flesh and blood, but my mind is the focus of much lightning.’ I felt that way about myself. Every decision I’ve made since then has been impacted by my desire to hang onto that feeling.” (web)

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September 27, 2011

Tom C. Hunley

I CAN’T SLEEP SO I’LL TELL YOU A STORY

Every cricket chirping sounds, to me,
like my son’s garage band must sound
to the neighbor who calls, twice a week,
and threatens to call the cops, but never does.
You can’t call the cops on crickets.
You can’t even call their parents.
I can hear a train in the distance.
In the distance, people are making
even more distance
between themselves and this place.
Years ago, when I was teaching poetry
at a prison, miles away
from the nearest bus stop,
I used to hitchhike right in front of the prison.
I was always surprised when anyone stopped.
I wondered if my thumb screamed
“not the thumb of an escaped convict!”
Once a blonde picked me up
on her way back from visiting her husband.
She was beautiful like a sunset, if a sunset
had been raised in a trailer park.
Her husband had burned down their house
with her in it, her and her mother.
Change of heart, he rushed back in
for her, but left his mother-in-law to the flames.
The blonde shrugged that he still excited her,
said he asked her to wear skirts with no panties
on visits. I don’t know what my face said,
but she flipped her skirt up, just for a second,
said “Now you believe me.” My face
said I was embarrassed, and she laughed.
I lie here thinking of all the places
people are going where I haven’t been,
thinking of the place where that prisoner had been,
a place where I gawked at the doorway,
but didn’t knock, and never mind the moon,
never mind the stars, I lie here
in the noisy darkness, thinking
of all the places it could take a person.

from Rattle #26, Winter 2006

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Tom C. Hunley: “When I was a teenager, I was captivated by Kevin J. O’Connor’s portrayal of a teenage beat poet in Peggy Sue Got Married. Shortly thereafter, I picked up Allen Ginsberg’s Empty Mirror and read ‘I am flesh and blood, but my mind is the focus of much lightning.’ I felt that way about myself. Every decision I’ve made since then has been impacted by my desire to hang onto that feeling.” (web)

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