Two Laundry Poems: Folding Laundry in Rome & Brautigan’s Craft

Folding Laundry In Rome Perhaps they were songbirds squabbling outside in the trees They seem not to notice that the sun engulfs them and warms their feathers They squawk in spite of an absence of the dark and spitting clouds that until yesterday had plagued my short Roman Holiday These birds should be rejoicing, singing hosannas Instead, they peck at each other and I stand inside folding laundry before it wrinkles. Brautigan’s Laundry A dirty shirt rinsed in whiskey and put into a hot drier, then forgotten; coming out still dirty, smelling of booze, and more wrinkled than ever. I had entered Richard Brautigan's houses, cabins, hotel rooms, apartments and not only gone through his filthy laundry, but tried it all on, piece by piece Writing is laundry (is this a poem within a poem?) When all the shirts have been washed, dried, and hung. After the socks cleaned and matched put into drawe...