Black Velvet Elvis
by Guinotte Wise
The creek runs black, unfrozen, between white
snow banks, cutting a jagged tear of chiaroscuro
the dogs stop to drink and ripple the dark water
and my mind flashes back to Tulsa and falling
through thin ice in winter creek to my waist as
a boy, maybe ten, thinking I will never be this cold
again, but I was, in Aspen, skiing in a snowstorm.
I warmed in a tub in Tulsa, in a bar in Aspen near
a firepit where a black velvet painting of a Maori
tribesman caught my eye. I’d never seen that way
of painting before, then I saw Elvis everywhere.
Clouds Through Blue Plastic
A girl and a boy, she streaked with dirt,
he has managed to stay a bit cleaner,
and he holds the raft as if it would float
away as she pumps it up laboriously
it assumes its shape if not its calm pool
use, blue in color. She pulls the bicycle
pump needle, and caps the whooshing
airhole. It’s losing all its air he says and
frowns. She ignores him, her brother,
wonders why she thought it necessary
to include him in this project. She may
push him overboard when they reach
the pond, not on their property. They
carry the raft down the gravel road and
she can see blurred clouds through its
translucent skin. She will send him back
to get her bamboo pole and bait, shove
off without him, no doubt redfaced and
screaming, but first the pond. They lay
it over the barbed wire fence but snag
the thin balloonlike plastic and it makes
a raspberry sound at them. They walk
away, dismayed but only momentarily
defeated, leaving the limp blue flag to
catch the eyes of farmers driving by as
though it was a blue coyote skin. The
boy said, it farted. And they both laugh
so hard they hiccup and become dizzy.
Organization Man
Round bales lying touching side by side
wrapped in plastic look like rockets or
giant cigar tubes. The farmer who chose
this pool table flat area and made sure
they were so meticulously laid gives me
to wonder if he laughs or plays or throws
a ball for pet or son, and does he stack
the dishes neatly after eating, does he
have a pegboard with sharpy outlines in
his workshop, where tools must stay to
wait their use. Nothing wrong with being
ordered, things in their place and a place
for things, but when he’s gone and laid
to rest, will his spirit be contained or will
it bemoan the flaking barn paint and the
slightly canted shutter with a louvre out
of place? The Jimson weed that grows
undaunted, the leaning fence, the carved
arroyo deeper after every rain, gutters
full of seedlings growing vines and trees
that will reclaim the farmhouse, conceal
it from the passing view. His hands are
clasped already but are they wringing in
impatience to get things put right again?
BIO
Guinotte Wise writes and welds steel sculpture on a farm in Resume Speed, Kansas. His short story collection (Night Train, Cold Beer) won publication by a university press and enough money to fix the soffits. Four more books since. A 4-time Pushcart nominee, his fiction and poetry have been published in numerous literary journals including Atticus, The MacGuffin, Santa Fe Writers Project, Rattle and The American Journal of Poetry. His wife has an honest job in the city and drives 100 miles a day to keep it. Some work is at http://www.wisesculpture.com