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Drunken Bee Poems by Philip Good

I first held Drunken Bee Poems in my hands in 1987 when Philip Good gave them to me, shortly after he moved to New York to live with Bernadette Mayer and her children a few blocks away on Avenue A and 4th Street, and it has been a favorite book of mine since then. At three and half inches by four, it’s a small book, more a rectangle than a square, as large as it is small, opening up to an adventure of engaging images and sounds, beatific quips, wisdom smiled, an easy read flowing down stream a la Blake or Orlovsky or Rimbaud on an intoxicating voyage or flight, drunken bees, after all, not boats.

If you want some fun, click on each page below to enlarge and read the words. I do not steer you wrong.




A cause to
Fight
In the hot summer
Night


Over a flower?
Over a dram?
Over a bottle?
Over a power man?
Over a lover?
Over a gram?
Over a sour man?
No answer just
noise in the street
light.


Landing on my
Consciousness
Flipping though my
Mind
Letting egos err
Remembering a
Grand time


Beauty achieved
By naked thoughts
Of restless youth
In ageless summer
Days


To travel down
River
For meaningful
Measures of sublime.


We don’t write about
flowers anymore.
“Leave me out of this
We business.”


Leave the emotions in if
Wanted.
Say hello to the Blue Jays
Who say, “I love you.”
And there’s no way
To let go.


In a song freshly
Cut flowers are
Closed by landlords.
But that doesn’t
Stop Emily D.
From drinking
The more.


Nobody said, “Some more.”
When all the inventions
And constructions are
Extentions of the
Human form
Read Buckminster Fuller.


Did Little Bear
Get stung by a
Drunken Bee or
A lover of horses?


It’s not just an
Unpaved path
It’s not just sounds
Of construction and grass
Not to mention the gas
It’s not just a little
Orange cloud.
It’s the pounding of
My heart.


See the sun rise over
The city
See the back of Liberty
See a heron fly
See baby white tails
Run
All on the account of little
sleep.


Which street does
She rise above
Those empty taverns
Those empty hearts
Another day of money
Another day of progress
Another day to get a
Start.


Now hungry for peace
Hungry for no wars
Hungry not to have
Needs outweigh means
Decrease the needs
Decrease the ways
No to feel joy
Not to forget the
Darkness.


Freedom from pain
Freedom to think
Something in my pocket
Tells me
Freedom
To observe
Orange bars and triangles
Falling on the largest
Rectangles on the block.


Herbs can cure
Many are poisonous
They are used for the
Poor.


Kept in a body seeking vision
Discovered nothingness as solution
Besides outside distraction
Collective energy
Produces reflected images
Repeated through replacement


And there’s an herb on the ice
And one rose in the milk bottle
And more in the bowls he brought
Her
Finally there’s a pull from behind
Come let’s enter the empty river


Paved walking on escape
Faces grinning uptightness
Spare change Mister?
Past the welfare hotel —
Dream reality transports miles away
to isolated hills with city view


It’s not easy
To be a flower
Doing nothing all day
But waiting
Waiting to be tasted
Waiting to be another


Travelling peril fluttered
No longer flapping
But
Floating about
No longer trembling


Reality brought forth
Through noise
Recorded in silent nights
Turning slowing
Seemingly hopeless


Nothing but blue
Here over the ocean
Here in the heart
Missing a heart
Time to start
With travel.


Meanwhile many snakes sang
At the garden party
Hitting the open trail
They drank screwdrivers
Eating a cardboard cactus
The snake called Lucy
Went for a swim


Dream reality transports
Miles away to isolated hills
With city view in mind
And there’s
An Herb On The Ice
And one rose is in
The milk bottle


Ship blow that horn
Wind blow those palms
Bridge open those gates
Poet celebrate


She spent her life secluded
Expressing
Wit and sentiment
Concerned with
Immortality and nature


The fire within
Competes with
A reflection from
Below the water



Philip Good



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