Showing posts with label murder ballads. Show all posts
Showing posts with label murder ballads. Show all posts

Thursday, October 28, 2021

Mystery On The Blue Train

 


 
 
 
Mystery On The Blue Train
(a 55)
 
 
There's mystery on the blue train;
Poirot's perplexed
at passion, soft skin, desire.
There's a heart of fire
burning before the snow falls
in the cemetery-silence
that flies behind eyes
in wind that plays
dead jazz in the night
in love slung over the bar
that snaps like crisp hangman's rope
when the body drops.
 
 
 
 
October 2021
 
 
 
 
The Mystery of the Blue Train First Edition Cover 1928.jpg
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 linked to dVerse Poets
 
 
 
 
A 55 for Friday, and the G-Man (Homage to Christie)
 
 
 
 
 
Images: Interior view of a party at Zelli's nightclub, 16 Rue Fontaine, Montmartre, Paris, 1920s Fair Use
First edition cover,Mystery of the Blue Train, 1928  via wikipedia   Fair use, Link

Saturday, May 19, 2018

Down Below


Down Below



A long run last night
under the Silver Eye
Blood on my hide
but not my own.

Here I lie
where the Red Eye
cannot come, where nothing comes
but Death and the turquoise tide.

Here no sound
of song or voice, no hand, alone;
coppery tongue, asleep on bones
and no one comes.

The longhouse winks
its Yellow Eyes, cruel firelight
alive inside, so many smells
a sound like bells

I cannot make
but feel its form
like dust in my throat,
conceived but unborn.

They screamed to see me,
long tongues to greet me slipped
their sharpened iron; I broke them
then, the rafters dripped---

why shouldn't they die?
Soon someone will come.




~April 2015







a monster-waiting-for-his-hero poem, reposted for
Brendan's Hero on the Road








(originally written for National Poetry Month 2015 with Magaly Guerrero
I Hear Fictional Poets:
Create a poem written from the point of view of a fictional character.)



This poem is written in the voice of Grendel,  the 'shadow-walker,'  monster from Beowulf
".. an Old English epic poem..[and].. possibly the oldest surviving long poem in Old English..It was written in England some time between the 8th and the early 11th century..."  "... Beowulf leaves [his kingdom in Sweden or Norway] to destroy Grendel, who has several times killed those asleep in the mead-hall of [the king of the Danes] after having been disturbed by the noise of the drunken revelers. After a long battle, Beowulf mortally wounds Grendel, and Grendel dies in his marsh-den..."~wikipedia

 

A favorite tale of mine, retold and filmed many many times.This is my favorite indie movie version.  




Images:Untitled, by Zdislav Beksinski     Fair use
Primitive Man Seated In Shadow, by Odilon Redon    Public domain               


Saturday, December 19, 2015

Winter Fuel




Winter Fuel

I.

The broken elm
brought down by ice
will make a winter fuel,
cells burnt to ghost-ash
in hearth's fire heart.
Birds sing in his hair no more
only the crackle of demons
whistling the jig of fitful flame.
I gave myself once
to the fire of your touch
a broken trunk, a winter fuel.
 My snapped
arms
lost their smooth skin
as the fire burned in
and the demons laughed
and the ghost-ash fell;
but still 
in the rimed December
of want and desire,
to your thickening ice
I'd rather be fire.


II.

Dead night lengthens,
 cheap lights press upon the sun.
In gaudy December,
want and desire
both need a fire.
Anger is a winter fuel,
fear its dear
disciples: the frost-marrowed bones
whiskey-rage comes to melt,
the sleet of hot bullets
fired at the dark
from behind
a clean shirt of lies,
a mask with no eyes.
The bodies fall
like broken elms
unrelated, remote
stacked on concrete;
winter fuel
that burns cold
as Hel.


~December 2015

This poem took rather opposing directions--I have decided to include both.
The words 'winter fuel' are taken from the carol 'Good King Wenceslas'




Process notes for part II:
"HYDRO, Okla -  A series of shootings along I-40 have resulted in two deaths Thursday morning.
The rampage started near Hydro and ended in Custer County where a suspect was arrested...
Authorities say he targeted one vehicle in a road rage incident, shooting several times at the car. The driver was shot and killed..A few minutes later near Weatherford, officials say the suspect shot at another vehicle, killing a woman. Around 1 a.m., [the shooter] was arrested for driving under the influence..." ~kfor news, oklahoma city

In Norse mythology, Hel was the realm where the dead went to abide with the goddess of the same name, located in Niflheim, a world below of frozen ice and cold.











posted for     real toads








Images: Winter Fuel, © joyannjones, November 2015
Footer: Vehicles at Hydro shooting incident, courtesy kfor.com No copyright infringement intended.

Saturday, October 10, 2015

Phantom Viewing




Phantom Viewing
a decastich





You see me but you don't want to feel me.
I should be the print of an Old Master, full of demanding
perspective, or views from a cabin window:

something pretty
and easy to leave.

But perhaps there's a wolf in the clearing,
a skull in the lady's silk-folded lap,
and what's that barely noticed
in the corner of the prosecutor's photo,
so bright a red behind the blowing yellow leaves?






 ~October 2015








posted for      real toads











Images: Briarmaid, © joyannjones 2013
Unknown Female Portrait, by Julius Leblanc Stewart, public domain via wikiart.org



Monday, October 6, 2014

The Walker


The Walker





I still walk 
where we met 
by the ivy tree,
he in his mask, 
his darkness, his eyes
mercury. My love
pulled down the moon
to lay with me;

while the thunder drummed,
rain sang in the leaves.
He breathed blind my eyes, he
spoke my name, 
the name no other
knew but he--
I can't tell you the things
he wanted from me.

He widened his mouth
to roar out the storm
He marked on the moon
with his knife of flint
He opened his fist
for the flight of night
closed it
and the drumming was spent.

Where the ropes of ivy
hung down from the tree
where I wrapped them tight
as he whispered to me
where I kicked my feet free
to swing in the leaves
just to see him smile
under the oak:

I still walk there,
where everything broke.



~October 2014


A little All Hallows music, please...




for     real toads
Open Link Monday









Image: Untitled by Zdislav Beksinski
May be protected by copyright. Fair use via wikiart.org






Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Dead Woman's Crossing



Dead Woman's Crossing
the ghost of a night bloom, for Shay






When the moon was a witchboat small and tossing
in the fade-time where night can see day as her twin,
down the rough blacktop to Dead Woman's Crossing
came the carnival rolling on a dustbowl wind.
They spindled the midway, freakshow and toss-ring,
before they spiked twenty ripe melons with gin
for Harvest Home in the dark of September,      
so the marks can do what they won't remember.

There was Jacko the clown, stringy as a rat,
Ma's name and a snake his tattoo valentine,
Rudy the barker in a ten dollar hat,
talking apple butter, smiling turpentine.
The Doll from Philly worked the striped gypsy-tent;
her brown eyes had just the right mad dog shine.
Then night seemed to give a coyote-moon cough
that shook her gold earrings, and Katie showed up

with her deathrattle tale of carnival past,
how she, the schoolteacher, met the Fallen Dove
Miss Fannie, too red-haired, too ruined, too fast,
on a September midway, bent moon above;
how love like a cloudburst caught her at last      
a kiss-whisper in place of the stone cold shove,
a granite fist traded for a velvet hand
and a five dollar ring for her wedding band.

The Dove blew out of Texas like a broken branch            
running  from Jesus, Daddy Jim and the law.
When she hit Mrs. Hamm's Saloon and Hog Ranch
she knew she had almost no time left at all
but still more than Katie, hellbound for a ditch,
face pale through the water where the black crows caw.
Thru plugged ears Doll could hear the walking night moan,
thru shut eyes see the bridge where Katie talked on:

The heat lightning flickered as midnight slammed shut,
Katie in a nightmare where she was the wheat
waiting dry in the dirt for the thresher's cut;
too many whiskey hard times in tangled sheets,
one scar too many from a cheap White Owl blunt
while the tumbleweeds wrote her name in the street.
She put on her bonnet, she packed up her grip,
met the Dove smiling with her child on her hip.

They sat down stiff as strangers on the noon train,
the nights and the men left behind in the dust.
They got off at Clinton in the quick July rain
with the last of the wheat burning red as rust.
When the moon was a witchboat sailing the plains,
as diamond eyes came home to lily-white trust
in the carnival night, storm in the willow,
the teacher slept sweet with her red-haired pillow.

The next day at midday, two girls and a child      
left town in a buggy to laugh and laugh last.
Fannie screamed like a bobcat, the wind went wild
when Katie's man came up through the tall sawgrass.
The Dove saw the buck-knife draw a cutthroat smile;
all she knew was to make the scared horse run fast
from the man who had Katie back, all his, dead.
All the Dove had was poison and a red dirt bed.

When the moon's a hook, a witchboat, a sickle
when the last of the wheat stands brown in the ground
while Orion runs after Hecate the fickle
above the dwindling lights of a dying town,
the Dove does her dance to a penny whistle
and a dead woman calls her child with that sound.
The next fall, when Doll's carnival topped the ridge
it rolled without stopping past Dead Woman's bridge.





~September 2014






This was written as a personal challenge, issued to me by Magaly Guerrero, to write a poem dealing with a carnival taking place during the Autumn Equinox, for my favorite poetry website, Imaginary Gardens With Real Toads. More information about it appears there, and in the notes below.






Process notes: Dead Woman's Crossing, also called Dead Women Crossing, refers both to a small community by that name in Custer County, Oklahoma near Weatherford, and the nearby bridge over Deer Creek where the decapitated body of schoolteacher Katie De Witt James was found in August of 1905. The events (other than my imaginary carnival) described in this story are factual up to a point, with completely fictitious biographical details and explanations of my own invention. You can get the details (as far as actually known) of the unsolved murder of Katie De Witt James and the poisoning of Fannie Norton at the link to real toads above, and also from this wikipedia article.

 'Grip' is an archaic word for a small traveling bag. Prostitutes of that era were often referred to euphemistically as 'Soiled Doves,' while 'fast,' 'fallen' and 'ruined' were terms used to describe women who had lost their virginity, were free with their sexual favors or considered  loose morally. White Owl cigars, including 'blunts' are an inexpensive brand that has been made in the South since 1887. They have about the same place in cigar hierarchy as Swisher Sweets (once my own occasional brand.)

Fannie Norton did use the name 'Mrs Ham,' but the eponymous Saloon and Hog Ranch is a flight of my fancy taken loosely from the life of Calamity Jane, who in her youth is reputed to have been a working girl at the infamous Fort Laramie Three Mile Hog Ranch, a 19th century 'military brothel' and stage coach stop near Fort Laramie, Wyoming, also said, like Dead Woman's Crossing, to be haunted.

This poem is written in the ottava rima form, with lines of eleven syllables.




Images: Circus arriving in Seligman, Missouri, late 19th century
Public domain via wikimedia commons 
Dead Woman's Crossing, by Nathan Gunter on flick'r
Shared under a Creative Commons license