The Mockingbird on the Buddha

The mockingbird on the Buddha says, Where's my seed,

                you Jezebel, where's the sunshine in my blue sky,

where's the Hittite princess, Pharaoh's temple, where's the rain

                for the misery I love so much? The mockingbird

on the Buddha scolds the tree for trying to stay straight

                in the hurricane of words blowing out of the cold north,

wind like screams, night like brandy on the dark cut of my heart.

                The mockingbird on the Buddha, music is his life,

he hears the tunes of the universe, cacophony of calypso,

                hacking cough in the black lung of desire; he's ruddy

with lust, that sweet stepping puffed-up old gray bird o’ mine.

                The mockingbird on the Buddha says, Eat up

while the night is young. Have some peach cobbler, girl,

                have some fried oysters, have some Pouligny

Montrachet, ma chère, for the night is coming, and you need meat

                on your bones to ride that wild horse. The mockingbird

on the Buddha says, It's time for a change, little missy. You've

                been in charge too long. It's time for the bird

to take over, because he stays up late, knows what night can be,

                past twelve, past two, when trouble's dark and beautiful.

You never knew what hit you, and that's the best feeling

                in the whole wide world. The mockingbird

on the Buddha makes his nest inside my brain: he looks good

                in gray, gets fat on thought, he's my enemy,

my Einstein, my ever-loving monkey boy, every monkey thought

                I blame on him, every night so sweet my body breaks

apart like a Spanish galleon raining gold on the ocean floor.