31.3.06


Ode Called Where
(For those this week who have gone there)

Where do the birds go to die?
There should be great stacks,
whole pyramids of bird corpses, and others
pyramids of different kinds corresponding
to the likeness of all of them, the animals
all the sea of things that breathe,
there they are somewhere and somewhere.....
They go there to sleep in that eternity,
a statue place where monuments cover
the avenue in shade and formula, the girl
with a hoop runs towards that point
following the shadows she has learned
by touch, the man with a tall hat tipped slightly,
avoids his journey by standing like that, an arc
made of bird feathers on the cloth of bird skin
where they've all gone to simply be, flattened
into the thought that light is transparent
as much as the flight of where they go.
Watch how they go there all the time, watch
through the trees,
the descent,
the vanishing.


**Michele Canty of the US writes of a young moderator of "Shia Chat" who suddenly collapsed from heart attack at age ?21. Here in Beirut, a woman only two years older than myself died suddenly (the same day) after arriving to the ER at the American University of Beirut complaining of a "stomach ache". She is survived by one son and her husband. And this is for anyone else, on any given day of any given month that goes there. This poem is based on my favorite painting (and everyone else's) by Giorgio DeChirico, Mystery and Melancholy of a Street.

Death is the only democracy.

May they all rest in perpetual peace and freedom.

30.3.06

Yusuf Ali: O ye of Faith! Say not (to the Apostle) words of ambiguous import, but words of respect; and hearken (to him): To those without Faith is a grievous punishment.

Zohurul Hoque: O you who believe! do not say Ra'i-na, rather say: Unzur-na, and listen. And for the Unbelievers there is a painful punishment.

T. J. Irving: You who believe, do not say: "Herd us,"; and say [instead]: "Watch over us," and [then] "Listen!" Disbelievers will have painful torment

T.U. Hilali-M. Khan: O you who believe! Say not (to the Messenger Peace be upon him ) Râ'ina [] but say Unzurna (Do make us understand) and hear. And for the disbelievers there is a painful torment. (See Verse 4:46)

M. Pickthall: O ye who believe, say not (unto the Prophet): "Listen to us" but say "Look upon us," and be ye listeners. For disbelievers is a painful doom.

M.H. Shakir: O you who believe! do not say Raina and say Unzurna and listen, and for the unbelievers there is a painful chastisement.

http://www.qurantoday.com/BaqSec13.htm

My bad. The word is Unzurna. Heard that?


.....butting my cigarette out on the ground, my heel grinding into it as I casually glide away to FEED MY DOG. Vicious.
Iranian Yankee in Byzantium, a modern fable.

It was a fine day for an excursion. Me on my own and able to take the fine trains that always run on time in Istanbul. We were there for a C=O=N=V=E=N=T=I=O=N of business minded individuals, the New World Order types and all. I wasn’t invited to those thank the Locomotive of the Lord (another poet's words, not mine), thank that! No, I, like all ‘business wives’ was allowed to hook up with one of the other poor sods left behind in hotel rooms, or, I could take some sort of flower arranging lessons in the hotel mezzazine with the older European crowd that usually claim to have lived in Zanzibar. So I decided to Hoboken it down into Istanbul proper. I’d been there before to Istanbul, to all the gala rug shows and tea parties about ten years before when we had that awful crash near the Hittite Hideouts.

What I wanted to do was trot on down to that Topkapi Palace. Ah. One could stay in there for days and not get enough of it. Wonderbar. I took a notebook (so unlike me to do that sort of thing) and make some sketches to remind me of the visuals (like that horse in a painting which had a human face, spooky man!).

Of course, that secret policia fellow was on my trail and met me as I disembarked from the Oriental Express which is filled with more and more hijaby clad women than you can shake a stick at. They can’t attend public universities dressed like that you know so instead they ride trains to the textile factories there. There are RULES if you know what I mean and make sure if you ever go there, DO NOT MENTION KAMAL ATATURK’S RESEMBLANCE TO COUNT DRACULA. If you do, the thugs will follow you all over creation and to kingdom come. And don’t have a car accident or they’ll take you to their secret prisons to cry over the fact that the portrait of KAMAL ATATURK on the wall looks just like COUNT DRACULA. Armenians my butt. They’re all over the place here buddy, Byzantium which is a wide area encompassing some of the best real estate between the Sahara and the Gobi. They usually speak five to seven languages and some of them even live in France! Imagine the horror of that diaspora! But that is what they call, “off topic”.

So anyways, I took my time and meandered through all the tools of ancient warfare, the kitchen utensils of the ancients, the special clocks and family albums until at last I sat down outside the HAREM to make up my mind whether or not I wanted to pay the extra ten bucks it costs to go in and see how the real burqa clad crowd suffered…such exotic excesses there if you know what I mean. Diamond encrusted couches and pillow cases made of something a bit nicer than percale.

This kid was sitting out on the bench near me and I struck up a conversation with him. You know, kids will generally say the darnedest things and I usually prey on them like potato blight. Little spuds. So I asked him where he was from and he started to look really scared all of a sudden. I thought to myself, Aha, I guess the secret policia got hold of you too. He just wouldn’t spill the beans. I was about to get out my rubber hoses and smack him around a little (legal in some policia states nowdays, even if yer a kid) when all of a sudden his family showed up and eyed me real mean like. Like, What are you doin’ to my kid here?

Nice people but terribly nervous. When they told me they were from New York via Iran I said, Oh yeah. I would be too, nervous that is. Yer probably nervous ALL THE DAMN TIME.

So I went on and on as I usually do about how our Hezbollah was doing such a fine job of liberating our people down in the boondocks. You know how it is. Loud mouthed naïve that I tend to be.

They just looked at me and shook their heads. The dad looked me SQUARE in the eye and said, “We’re Jewish.”

Damn if that didn’t make me feel like an ass. But after we got that out of the way, we had a good time for five or ten minutes swapping tales of the Orient. It was a good day all in all. And then I took the train home. What a nice ride.


The Tavern, sometime in the early '80s.

One of these days I'll have to search for the pic of Ginsberg in profile, the gothic stained glass window behind and him in profile. It's a classic but I'm typically lazy. Don't even know how to use blogger you know? I think that old dude's name was "Nacho".

29.3.06

Don Schaeffer

http://www.argotistonline.co.uk/Schaeffer%20poems.htm


"..And the earth is still
a mass of worms. "

For five minutes of Don go here:

http://thejeunessedoree.libsyn.com/

Don, the hardest working guy in pobiz.
Rough Music and Violating The Norms

http://zmagsite.zmag.org/Mar2006/barsamian0306.html

Well yes. I'll say so.

Post deleted due to length. Oh, and defamation. I wouldn't want to defamate other people's characters.

28.3.06

The Twisting Sleeps

Edna stated once as she sat
in the semicircular booth
at Sambo's drinking a cup of tea:
you don't want to dream anymore.
She meant, when you are old or wise
or like me, you get to that point.

After the hounds of Ha'wab they sent
a small envoy and then a second, how
many more would come into the fray,
how many more loose ends to tie up?
There are no reasons for these recurrent
troubles, recurrent themes. There
is no reason to be forced into para-
trooping fresh out of the boot camp
of dreams where the mess is full
of ice cream machines bowling alleys
and Las Vegas lighting.
There is no reason for the envoy
to buy trinkets to take home
(standing there as they did once before)
and certainly no reason the bus
felt like an F-15 but mostly,
there was no reason for the envoy
to pay a second visit at the end
to remind the dreamer there would be
no helmut nor any special lace-ups
for one of the jumpers. Sri Lanka
or wherever we would be landing
is certainly a jungle of the worst type
and we drove by the best forests on our way,
green and dry, beds of needles, familiar.
One last look before you head off.
It is the woman from Ghana who saves
everything from falling. It is her lost
son and the memory of her slavery
which saves you. Blink, wake up,
get out, avoid the fall by missing the jump.


A snapshot of me fleeing the erudite commentary of a vague experimental numbnuts who, like George Carlin once remarked, "teaches your kids the wrong words for things."




















Good old Bill Porter, Abu Jack

You know, our father was a Monotheist.

He only said the word God once.
Ode to the Fight

We invented kickboxing, the ethical kind
where if you came home bloodier than the other guy
you weren't treated as well as the Athenians.
You took off your glasses and handed them over
to a brother or a best friend (if they weren't
your opponent), then the lions leapt
out of their cage and hair scattered
in the air while the crowd
was already thumb upping, not in your direction.
I'm reminded that if I were born a boy
they would have named me Daniel.
Sometimes, I wish it had been the case
but usually, I won anyway.
Ephesus a far away shore, the Bosphorus Blue.

26.3.06

Bound to Happen

I thought I was just pretending
all along, saying well, that's
bound to happen and it does and I say
well, that's bound to happen.
We all know that when we leave
the room, the room disappears.
We've known it since we were born
and sometimes we talk about it
with strangers knowing full well
that once they leave
all secrets follow
into the ether or the dark,
same thing and who can tell
time as it passes
when you are asleep,
the clocks looking you over?
It is a strange statistic
and one I am fond of until
it comes to the war zones. concentration camps.

23.3.06

From Sister Cities:

"They thought I was a tire burning.
They thought I was a Marine barracks."
Highly recommended listening, podcast central:

The Diamond At The End Of Time.

Don't miss it. Or the rest but don't miss the Diamond. EXOTIC mofo Shakespearian rant schemes combined ala Carerra. Damn Fine. Got the mojo blues? Haybaby, you no haybaby. You no more than a darling of the damn white man. Don't fear. Help is on the way. Palabra Cadabra. Es muy bien, es muy muy bien.

Poet rescue knows no gender or racial bias. Poet rescue, dial:




thejeunessedoree.libsyn.com/

Recordings solicited.

22.3.06














Muqawama Central. Colonialism. Lectures about same. Yawn is right. Time is short. It doesn't wait for your talent to show up but it does bypass you when your talent moves into the past. Poems are pictures to me. They must have balance. They must have some implications. They must have some depth of field consciously selected for its contradictions. They must have composition that makes some sort of sense. They must appeal to the dumbest person in the dumbest ways and to the intellect of the dumbest persons in the smartest ways. Furthermore they should scare the crap out of a paranoid person smart or dumb or of middling intelligence.

This dime-store effort isn't much and the back story of it is....the cop down in the "round-about" hahaha just like the traffic circle in Lowell, Bisbee which had its old name unceremoniously dumped to favor the more exotic European look: roundabout. In Riyadh we called them "death circles". But back to the game. I drove a bit further down to take that shot of a blind Palestinian monk's banner which is juxtaposed near a Coke sign and that of our very own Nabih Berri, another warlord of great renown (Coke is Imperialism they used to say around here but now they drink it, no more black marketeers like Fred Tarr the trucker of the ancients). I stood down from my mighty Range Rover (white as is usually the case with stallions) and whaddya suppose happened next? A nice French Colonial Attired officer walked towards me to get my phone number and a bit of INFO. Info like that guy who was getting INFO from me on the hill in Aramoun one day and pulled his Shia Rock out of his pocket to prove he was a Shia Info Taker (like yea right, all us Shia's carry our Sutra in our pockets nowdays, a kind of ID or something, not!). I, a bit miffed, started fumbling with my latches and locks to get back into my stallion, my Trojan Horse (at least he thought so) and whaddya think happens next? Another person of whatever designation, pokes his head through the blinder space (passenger side window) of my mount to give me a piece of his mind and get his INFO. Scared isn't the word for it. I wasn't even that scared when I went to the Police Station in Turkey and cried over Kamal Ataturk's strange resemblance to Count Dracula and drank such lovely Apple Tea....I was indeed scared. Thank god for automatic locks and latches. Shut down. Drive on. And watch that black Mercedes follow in the Rear View Mirror for a while. Stopping all the while to take poems in a camera at the various rest stops where the youngins are commemorated. He finally left, my companion. He finally gave up the chase when he knew it was impossible to go unnoticed. Somewhere around C'ana, the place of the mighty massacre of '96 (Grapes of Wrath, Israeli Massacre at UN depot Southern Lebanon). Why are people so confused about all of this? Because they don't think. They simply don't think. They ASSUME. And that is what good poets make use of. Assumptions. And time doesn't wait for you to make a decision, come to a conclusion.

Artistic decisions are usually best made at a fast pace with little use for the intellect and more use for the eyes. The eyes tell it like it is and the heart guides a person to a fondness for certain beauties, certain masterpieces of society. Not a control of the Language which is never fully understood, never fully utilized and certainly, never fully invited.

It just come on in.
Atelectasis

between winter &
watermelon
a
chequering bottom
pool, swimming
to dream
in castlists
no name
shocks and fevers
hostage dramas.

looking down just like a Pieta then
up
for planes
for birds
for kites
or stars,
airs.
tempt me.

still hurts
to breathe
wondering
wondering
why why why

the corpse
of djinn,
the old families
inside lizards,
which day it was
he got in.

away ago
through an eye
plucked
gutted
a spiritual cousin
name of splinter
stopped
in the meat
of orbits,
lodged

a piece of bramble.
you tiny things.
you tiny societies.
you tiny tin-toothed.
buzzard keepers.
curs. bunch of curs.
no magic
nor curses left.
pockets dry.
amulets useless.
natural causes
might amaze you.
There might
be a stumbling.
a deflation.

http://www.blogger.com/publish-comment.do?blogID=24698014&postID=114325294773855278&r=ok

21.3.06

UDA


Beggar at the Gates
Originally uploaded by radiann.

This Mexican man is waiting to attempt to enter the US for the third time through some of the most dangerous desert in Southern Arizona. When I asked if I could take his photo he got up and walked to the wall behind him and stood for an ID type photo because that is what he thinks the Americans do. It is how his photo was taken by the border patrol who caught him and took him a hundred miles or more away from the location of his previous attempts. He lost all his possessions the first time that happened, including the photos of his wife and children for whom he makes this sacrifice. He is compelled to do this because NAFTA has made the economics of farming unprofitable for his employer and there is no work for him in his home. His wife and family are starving and they have bet everything they have on this attempt to get him into the US so he can do work no citizen will do -harvesting tomatoes and melons in California.
Bizarro

"Tuma alludes to a companion anthology, Modern American Poetry, edited by Cary Nelson. The contents of the other half of this pincer movement are instructive. For example, Ron Silliman gets more space than Wallace Stevens and Elizabeth Bishop. The American poet and critic William Logan, writing in Parnassus, had great sport with this, pointing out that those who make such choices lack the fear of God. They also lack a sense of humour, and it's the deep blankness in that area which makes Tuma's anthology such a laugh."



http://www.poetrysociety.org.uk/review/pr91-2/tuma.htm

Well, at this rate, El Bishop would most definitely be in my school with that quip about the inferior glue there in Santo. Geez. What is hilarious is the notion of ole S stud there in his steel wool underwear.
Aubade

How could a person embarrass the lovely
white loincloth of the morning,
in the afternoon? How could disasters
like this occur if it weren't for all
the petty coats. All the lingering
pickled offerings and the jumper cables?
How could someone defer the polished oneness
for a chance at revenge? How do disasters like this
happen? Twenty four hours isn't all that long
when you consider all the days, years and decades.

So that's an aubade is it?

Long silence better than long conversation.
Steady departures line and file with the current
distractions. Everyone is ready for you,
hands posed for applause. Don't get it.
Just don't get it. Why all the streaming?
Why not just screw another soldier Lili Marlene
prop up another lamp light. Make the mutiny
a rare one, the challenge of every alabaster creed?

That's an aubade alright, a real au revoir.
I've spent my last dime in that town square.

19.3.06

You know, Radical Ann Porter, RN, BSN said something to me that made a lot of sense here. She asked, "Has anyone died here?"

I had to answer sister that no, no one died here. At first I did. But now I realize that was not the case. We know how it is, we are 'in on it' w/our peculiar sense of bi-valency and the hardships of the UDA. No one died here.

So, I found this wonderful little place that wants some things for an anthology. The proceeds will go to parents who have lost a child. To me, that sounds like good penance and perhaps someone else might find it in their time to submit QUALITY work to them so that they have a great anthology to help the people we know so well, the survivors. Those like us.

http://www.poeticacceptance.com/story.html


Ode to UDAs

You, Davy D were a mystery with a dog named BeeBee
and a grandmother who looked little, Japanese.
You were handsome with that metal plate
in your head, so they said
but you never did wrong, that metal plate
so strong. Across the way
a world-record Spanish Sword Cactus
grew in front of your old shack,
the one you moved right into without a lease.
Your no-daddy no-mommy dialect
was a kind of silence, a law
never broken. Ask me no questions
I'll tell you no lies,
with a big metal plate in your head,
so they said. But once, oh once
in my lifetime I thought of you
in the hours after a trauma call.
The little thing in 4A was screaming,
the other eight were dead.
All us nurses wondered why,
so they called me over to speak Mexican
and this is all she said:

My mommy lost her head,
nine of us in the van.

Spoken in the code on the border,
all of its transgressions.
Davy D, do you remember me?

Unfortunately, they haven't yet divised a surgery for that "ugliness is to the bone" syndrome, calling it "too invasive".

http://www.awfulplasticsurgery.com/

18.3.06

A Trip Through The Sillimania Looking Glass

Mr. Sillypants complains of "hysteria" or was it another male poster who did that? Relating of course, to the hyster-area which of course is the womb. Fake feminist poetry...ah bah!

I invented feminism.

http://ronsilliman.blogspot.com/2005/06/alli-warren-shes-one-of-those-poets.html

Well, imagine my UTTER surprise at discovering such a treasure trove of men AND women discussing the LOOKS of poets as opposed to their work and getting away with it. Why not me?

Because I am er...muslim? Because I was right about her mediocrity? I dunno. You be the judge.

On the multiple reasons for banishment, by Obleo

http://stinkylink.blogspot.com/



**New at the JD. View the now fully formed blossoms droop into a variety of limerick spouting ne'er do wells. Happens only once or twice a month and on St. Patrick's Day. Don't miss it.

http://p072.ezboard.com/ftheforbiddenstoryfrm7.showMessage?topicID=2445.topic

17.3.06

The Dark Side of Barbara Jane Reyes and her Pen Pals

http://stinkylink.blogspot.com/


A caution from the Pack:

"The old guys who write to me are immediately suspect."

http://mutyapower.blogspot.com/2006/02/filipinas-welcome-your-visits.html
http://stinkylink.blogspot.com/

It was getting so stinky around here so I moved the odor of the Coyote Pack and their White, Balding, Middle aged Patron to a far distant place so it would not contaminate the rosey smells here.




This is not Ron Silliman's Blogspace. This isn't even close. This is the past, the present and the future and this is Blue Tatoo. A real experienced poet who fought in a real war. She doesn't just complain about all that went on back then. She knows the curiousity of the Finely Tuned Written Word, the complexities and the hardships of the life of the poets. Not the exclamation mark, J. H. Christo! Another damn fine poem from one of the JD's starriest of starry poets:

http://p072.ezboard.com/ftheforbiddenstoryfrm7.showMessage?topicID=2436.topic

Transition

This is how it happened:

It's 1964, John F. Kennedy has been dead
a year and two weeks come Monday
and here I am, laid up in some bar
so dive I'm shooting mescal in dixie cups

listening to Clifford Brown blow
his brilliant trumpet through speakers
that crack and bleed and now there's a girl
on the stool next to mine; she wears

a flesh-colored sweater like it's skin,
tells me she's from downstate somewhere without
me asking and now she's brushing her tits
against my arm, talking about jazz and Benny Waters

and don't I just love a good sax when it rains;
then we're outside, steam lifting from the concrete
because it has rained, been raining all day and next
thing I know, she's peeling off the skin-toned

sweater in a ten dollar room while I untie my shoes,
wonder if she's going to taste like the Camels
she's been burning all night and she does;
but it's alright, it's ok, because it might not be

good sax but it's a decent lay for a thursday night
and somewhere between the push and the grind and
the sweat-wet valleys I am transformed; jolted out
of time, yanked up and carried away just like that

magic bullet yanked JFK from his black continental,
his ideas strewn across a pink chenille suit-
no transition, no time to bide, no reflections
in a half-shut eye; just the taste of smoke then

I am here.
Someplace else.
Dislocated.

It's 1966, John F. Kennedy has been dead
forever, fucked over by a Texan and here I am;
sacked out in some bamboo bar, drinking ruou from
a tin cup while women shred dog meat in a back room.


http://tattoosinblue.blogspot.com/

Take care of yerself Tams. You have a long way to go before the nincompoops notice you.

16.3.06

Proboscis

Nepal. Funny place I suppose. Little mountain climbers. Women who marry an entire family of brothers, haul their wood. That is what I know so far about that kind of place. I do know the exact opposite and in great detail. I've washed the hind end of a mutawaa, a wahhabi. You haven't lived until you've done that sort of thing only to have his monstrous Shoula Mall brother amble in the room and shout, "Witch! Burn the Witch!" That poor little man with a short thobe and a perfect crease down the center of his red and white gutra, had spinal cord cancer. The last time I saw him, he was struggling down the hall using a geriatric-stroke-walker, a trail of feces in his wake.

His brother on the other hand (must have had a different mother, certain kinds of differences can only be explained by that social setting) was over six feet tall and is what we can call, a fiery prophet type. The first time I ran into that SOB was at Shoula Shopping Center just off the old airport road, I had no head cover. The girls and I were in a pet shop (buying our lovely cat Rambo, a burglar of great renown we were soon to find out) and the boys were in the next shop looking at shoe horns or bow ties. The giant entered the pet shop so I cowered behind the mice rack and told one of the girls to run like the wind, no, faster, "Go next door and tell the boys to stay away." After all, it is the husband that will be arrested in Riyadh for the crime of sexually displaying his wife's golden locks in public. It took some pleading but the eight year old did what I told her to do. The boys came running in immediately, thinking I'd come to some great harm, perhaps I'd been bitten by a marmoset or something equally toothesome and vile. It was much worse than that. The giant had cops with him, the force. Much to my husband's dismay. He did the so-called right thing and assured the God Police that he'd buy me a hankie to cover my head right away. That was that guy. I saw him over and over and over in Riyadh, it was never pretty between me and him. And then, I washed his brother's ass in a shower for an entire week of twelve hour shifts. We were quite close so to speak.

But this is about butterflies and Nepal. When one reaches the top of the peaks, one is supposed to see roses and brocade. One does. One does see a proboscis on every flower.

******

Years later I was working in a very special capacity at the Specialist's Center. I was a specialist. A case manager. Case Management, the intimate workings of a plan and a prognosis, prophecy and clinical trickery. My reputation grew and grew until they seldom referred to me anymore as Sister but as Um-Ali our doctora. I was allowed to view the world of facial disfigurement. I was allowed to prophesize and collude with the Gods over Achilles and the Cyclops. I was, as you say, as a God. I was Hera to all the unfortunates in my path. I could make them appear as if by magic and give them lodging on the temple grounds if my spirit so willed. I could admit them to the Oracle visited once a month by all the powers that be, the invisible Gods and Godesses that answered to me, Um Ali. I could send them to their deaths as careless Gods sometimes do, and I did. I could snatch them from the Minotaur only to have them trampled by their own fathers. Like Tufla. Her name meant only, baby girl. Nothing more, just infant baby girl and she died that way, infant baby girl, starved.

Summoned one day to the room of a woman and child, I arrived to find that things were not going well at all. There was no love in the room. The air was as still as the space in a casket. In birth, someone had died. This living thing lying next to the madonna had no star shining overhead, no wise men in attendance nor any angel to smile lovingly down upon it. In days of yore, the days of midwifery, leeches and blood lettings, this would have been shoved under the bed to be thrown later into the steaming bog or sunk into the well. Ah, Jesus! It was swaddled within a suffocating hold of thermal blankets, struggling to breathe. The Madonna who sat upright in bed had a lonely pieta smile, a deadly smile like the Mona Lisa, a kind that shouldn't be taken for granted. She didn't speak.

Greetings and salutations I said. Hera the invisible greets those in the dark, those whose eyes are way-laid in the folds of their own misery in such a way.

No response. I walked to the other side to lift the babe from the rectangular glass box where she lay looking about in a kind of wonder that is notably: part blindness and part the instability of the new world. A pupa.

Two distinct clefts interupted her rosebud mouth. Her upper lip to my great honorific satisfaction, displayed one of the most beautiful probosci I'd ever seen! It curled around and up to join with the perfect sections of nare joined by a paper thin columnella. Mariposa. Frah'sha. She was, she was!

The Madonna stared forward, her nipples like stone.

*****

Zeus was summoned. Some mortals are unaware that Zeus is actually a seriously overweight Syrian plastic surgeon. Sometimes he has bad breath, sometimes he is less than congenial and he is always moral. A damned fine aesthetic type who attends major gatherings of gods and goddesses whose primary concern is Beauty. Not that damn poet Gibran-type of beauty, that cowardly interpretation of such, but a practical summation of the angulature which adequately represents the normal human face and sometimes, the lopsided nippleness of the few. There are even fewer who know or who would suggest that the Gods and Goddesses were coupling with their cousins to retain their rights of property management and gave birth to Cyclopses at frequent intervals, nothing more than mortal imposters playing vivid mind games.

Invisible Hera talked the pieta into trying a synthetic goat teet, and to concentrate on death and death particles. I had divined the consecutive losses of three other beings from the consanguinuity charts of the ancients recommending to the able bodied mortals that they let go of the pedantic mythologies of guilt and remorse. Over the course of immortal time (three to five days), the nymphette named Rose, or Zahra, was being gladly tossed about like a bag of hammers or oranges. There was joy and gratitude all around. I, Hera the invisible was invited to attend festivities in the military city of Kharj. One day yes, Rose would be able to marry a prince. Through the interventions of Zeus, her proboscus healed into the finest union of bud-bloom lips imaginable. There was no third eye or fourth tongue like some of the others. There was no six chambered heart, no dorv or truncus, the corpus collosum was an integrated whole of unanimous non confusion. She did not waste into a bag of bones like Tufla, the infant girl who had arrived to the Temple Mount hidden in a bundle of dirty scarves smelling like a dead rotten mule. No, she would return with her mortal parents season after season to offer the true good tidings of beauty to the Oracles and Ogres who lay around eating peeled grapes and sopping up date juice from the tidy corners of Utopia, waiting for Destiny to perform the chores that Destiny always performs. The ritual of mortal perversity which is revealed to the Elect yet is undecipherable to the shunning flocks. It is quite immeasurable, purity. Circuitous and boundary free. It tastes relatively good like ambrosia.

******

After working miracles in the boundary free avenues of the police-god-state, boundary free because there is no boundary to transgress in anonymity, a goddess is free to walk about unencumbered save for the diaphanous garb usually required in such boundary free states of being, sometimes even cloaking the leopard like face of solar transmutation from weary passers-by in the finest of tulle veils, I would entertain myself by visiting one of the many Temples of Divine Engagement there in the land where graves are marked by no stones. These reminded me of the fabulous constructions at one of our more well-known temples, the Jupiter or more widely known as the Dionysian of Baalbek. Our largest creation ever which still stands to this day as a symbol of Greek Devilishness and Debauchery. We've also had a bit to do with the Orlando in the New World. Imagery combined with belief and fascination, there is nothing quite like this to take a goddess out of her worry over the destiny of mortals. Nor is there anything like it to observe mortals in their elemental forms.

In that particular TDE, the ruler-god-imposters had set up a fine array of diversions and distractions: tree logs on which to ride which rushed through sparkling streams of crystal clear cold water; gigantic caterpillars and bumble bees sculpted of the finest polyurethane available; a variety of imbibements to assuage gluttony made of USDA and potato flakes; workers to attend to all the needs of the flock. Workers to scrape urinals, workers to sweep confetti, workers to change money into tokens of the imaginary realm, workers to open and close mysterious doors, workers to forbid the transgression of gender alliances which are forbidden in the forbiddenless state of mortality in the anti-mortal sphere. All of the workers were Nepalese, tiny and fine featured gentlemen with platonic smiles and eunuch shaped buttocks. Gentle fine helpers. One of the Nepalese eunuchs noticed me watching my mortal son who was riding upon a steed of great power and integrity, steaming nostrils and bi-partate hooves. He wanted to indulge the goddess whom he recognized from his own far off land of Nepal where he had once guided a group of the Elect through the bitterest snows of realization and enlightenment. This happened sometimes, the diaphanous garb was useless to hide the Elect from the Elect. So he continued to allow my mortal son to ride on his powerful steaming steed, immortal time breeched, the token of the realm indifferent to the pleasure of a goddess.

A voice interupted the fine and free pleasure we were having. It cursed and growled, a griffin most likely, I thought to myself. God-damned griffins! There is nothing to steal here except the time of the mortal son of a Goddess! Yet he cursed and berated the eunuch until the eunuch cried. The eunuch cried the cry of lost empires and lost hopes. He cried because of his fine intentions. He cried because he hadn't been paid by the royal proprietors in years. He cried to see my eyes through the garb and that I cried too, the cry of our god-ness. We weren't stealing from the griffin, we were giving to each other out of the infinity of time, a moment of pleasure in a pleasure bound land, one of ample grace, the land of the prophets and meteors, the land of Abraham and Moses, Hera and Zeus.

Rose's father spit at the foot of the eunuch. "Rose should ride first, stop that boy from riding!" I hid my face from the light of destiny, from the perpetuity of marrying a rose to a prince, the importance of that. Several roses to one prince and vice versa. My son disembarked from the steed as all silent princes do in the land of lost temples.

The eunuch turned his eyes as I did, to the snout of the giant polyurethane caterpillar. We praised the God of this imperfect beautiful world, our tears but only a few more in the sea of the giants.
Ode to Jack & Fish

Everything happened suddenly, Jack surprised.
Jack? Jack surprised. Jack handsome.
Jack in the front seat, Jack driving.
Jack like father, Jack like Grandfather.
Jack like all Jacks. Jack of all trades
and Jack of all exiles. Jack of the St. Louis Arches.
Jack of hippy hiking across the land of Jacks.
Jack of Sailor Suits. Jack of smiles.
Jack. Just Jack that day and John, somewhere else.
Some other altar smoking cigarettes perhaps
in the tents. How did she catch that? Jack said.
No one knew. As big as her arm. As long as her pony.
Her two ponies, Apaloosa and Pinto. Those
ones they all dream of at certain times.
Come here little fishes. She said come here
little fishes, big ones too. I'll get rid of you!
Or, I'll let you go, or you will get away.
But for now, I'll catch and pull you in.
Jack pulled it in. Jack sliced the trouty guts
with his Jack Knife. Jack, just jack all over.

15.3.06

The famous Ron Silliman said:

Wednesday, March 15, 2006
A member of my immediate family has been in a health crisis for some time now. One very minor (to me) side effect of this has been that I haven’t had the time – let alone psychic energy – to focus on the blog that I would have liked, especially over the past month. One of the things I’ve haven’t done much of is to keep track of comments streams as they emerge in response to different posts. The streams have almost always felt to me a lot like the bar conversation that might occur after a talk – interesting, sometimes valuable, but also sometimes only marginally related to the post itself. Each stream seems to have a life of its own – a perception I see borne out whenever a new post elicits very few comments while some storm is raging on another stream that’s a few days old.
By the time I noticed what was happening to the stream that accompanied my note on Barbara Jane Reyes’ Poeta en San Francisco one week ago Monday, the donnybrook was in full swing. Reading through all of the posts – including several that have subsequently been deleted by their authors (especially by Eileen Tabios), I’ve concluded that the brouhaha was inevitable the instant Lilac remarked “I meant that this poet isn't very striking metaphorically compared to her exotic look,” but that what was actually going on was much more than just a response to the implicit – but unmistakable – racism within that word “exotic” and by the shift in discourse from its focus on the poem to the poet. Exotic by definition is a positional term, and whatever is characterized by that adjective is consciously placed outside of whatever circle one is drawing.
By the time the verbal riot died down – it seems to have topped out at around 100 messages – things had gotten quite a bit uglier. There were multiple strains of argument, only one of which seems to me to have focused on the initial cause – the discomfort many readers seemed to feel at Reyes’ particular conjoining of the sacred & profane in the poem “[ave maria].” I’m persuaded, as I said in my original note, that this is a powerful poem, valuable in its own right, but the vehemence with which some others disagreed made me think that it may have been more powerful than I at least had anticipated, regardless of whether or not one found value there.
There were multiple comments in the polyphony of the stream that could be interpreted as racist, especially those made by Lilac, an Anglo woman living as a Muslim in Lebanon. Few of these – I won’t say none – were directed at Reyes & none struck me as intended to intimidate, instances where I might have thought about stepping in & deleting comments. Otherwise, when people make fools of themselves in the comments stream, I think it’s useful to leave the evidence alone for all to see.
One especially embarrassing stream-within-the-stream was a shouting match between Curtis Faville & Eileen Tabios, tho it’s impossible to read it now that Eileen has redacted her comments. Both may be surprised to discover that I think each is an important & valuable contributor to the poetry scene & that I suspect that the retired federal bureaucrat & wine connoisseur and the retired stock broker & Napa Valley vineyard owner would discover that they have a lot more in common than they can imagine, if they would but shut up & read each other’s work & words with an open mind. For one thing, both have made valuable contributions to the world of small press publishing – to which each seems quite dedicated – and neither seems at all concerned with “fitting in” to any old School of Quietude frame.
Why we expect the world of poetry to be any better than larger universe, I’m never quite sure. Clearly the poem, as such, can be a model of unalienated labor in a world where such examples are few & far in between. But among poets you will find progressives (many), reactionaries (some), & every step in between, including more than a few people whose political thinking, to the degree it exists at all, is simply a mess. This should not be news.
This blog has evolved over three and one-half years. If these notes represent my thinking of whatever subject happens to be at hand, the blogroll to the left has emerged as a service. When, as happened a few days ago, I screw up a single html character and blow away some portion of the list, I hear about it fairly quickly from people who use it as a method of finding various literary blogs. The comments stream is a service of a different order – I think there can be real value in that “bar conversation” and am not terribly concerned that steams go off on tangents at times. It would be great, tho, if people would just respect one another once they’re there & act accordingly.


Apparently, he doesn't read my blog either. What an arse.
The Big Onocrotalos Mistake

http://bestiary.ca/beasts/beast244.htm

No, Mr. Wilbur you missed the point entirely in your fine poem The Pelican. Sanctimoniously so.

It goes like this:

Musa faced betrayal as they all do. He comes back and some guy has taken the dirt from the archangel's footprint (before he galloped off into the starriness) and dumped a bit of it in the alchemy. Everyone was truly impressed except for God and Musa. They were not laughing.

One guy is laying dead somewhere else in the aftermath of it all, vengeances, etc.

So Musa tells the rabble to go sacrifice a beast of the bovine variety as a kind of thank you and folks start asking alot of stupid questions:

Folks: What kind?
Musa: A great one.
Folks: Of exactly what variety?
Musa: Perfect.
Folks: What color?
Musa: Yellow and without blemish or given to grazing.
Folks: Okay.
Musa (not finished with his rhetorical anger here): Then take a leg of it and bang it on that dead guy's head so he'll get up.

We are not exactly sure if this was tried but Musa then asks for a favor from his Almighty.

Musa: I need a favor.
Almighty: Of what variety?
Musa: Miracle.
Almighty: Okay. Take four birds and teach them to follow you. Then cut them up into quarters and place pieces on sundry mountain tops. They'll eventually come back as a whole.
Musa: Great. How do you do that?
Almighty: Wouldn't you like to know. Geez.

cholla and ice


cholla and ice
Originally uploaded by radiann.
Oh here is another one of those darn lotus blossoms. All over the place.

Here, it is the gigantic lavender explosions of Henna, a dangerous type if there ever was! The dog picks her way very carefully through the most beautiful hoary weeds. No stranger to the thorny crowns! And I sneak up behind her to remind her of the bees, bzzz bzzz and she always gives me that look of hers.

Why master, do you torture me so?

And I say, "Because I can."
On The Curious Works Of Strangers




smoke and meat

A Maze Of Conscious Unconscious Bloodletting, let's go!

WARNING: you won't know where to turn next but it is such that you are in a welkin of some definite plausibilities. Not for the faint of heart or the archaic. It isn't that type of place. There are so many brothers in the world, blood brothers, half brothers, dead brothers and Jacks. There are always the Jacks. You have the doogs and the Lanny's and the brothers of the elk which is a rhyme to the starry blisses. It is a long story of beginnings, endings, tragic and blistering comeuppances. There are no politics in this world. It might be said that Carmen is a fine place to be when one trades one's soul with sisters and mothers, darling kittens. You've got so many Mira Labs but it is only the current one that matters her eyes full of shame and contagion. You help up that dog in the rain: Pip on down through to the bassett hound with three legs moving through a steady course to the most Noble Imposters and Just Buddies. The tricks are all there but you don't know where to turn next. Is it the sea calling? What is it that is ringing? It must be the lilacs again, always ringing and the peaches falling. A rhubarb tale disguised as a hallowed pie. A baptist pie, a cherished fruit. This is the last one of its kind. The machine ex post facto of the Anchorites with the tiny windows, peeking out into freshly fallen snow....freshly fallen snow. A silent kind of reverence towards the ancients of Mogollon where in the deep hollows of summer, fresh from the fears of gypsies up near the creaks, a lonely man sells his Russian memorabilia declaring he is being chased by the wealthy landowners who know for certain Rasputin. Hunted. He is wanted. He believes this with his almighty heart. His windows are boarded up. Butterfly mimics in the flowers have utensils that listen and pray to whatever is going on up there in the lava bombs, a sister walks by because she is in on it. She is totally in on it but we've got to go. The man mentions a place called Hafr Al Batn and we agree to never meet again but only silently. Only in the perfect sun.

http://onethousandblogsbyduffyandbutler.blogspot.com/2006/02/inspecting-rivers.html

A selection fro m the opus of Gilles and Guattari:


inspecting rivers

inspecting rivers can't be taught
or traumas undone
decomposed by light

night wont be teeth
tha t hurt day
or livers cured by treatment
your second relapse in as many
weeks killed the things
we built over a bridge
of terraced songs
a neighboring lull
in the perks and the play
the drama of its greek cotillion


of tragedy and its high ass
pain the fare cost to its dull mirror
there is no play
or taste garnering its shame
its not shame sensing the
cash crop its hub of sense
and shyness of your sex


this is my son in whom you
love his body a taught cross
to lovers




.

Mona stood still an instant longer
that day. waitiign. washing.
the bending thighs of truth.




__ O come on! such lutes of somber
socks!
come off it man Anti shouted to her
high disdain of built in shades
and other super-egos
of needles and pins


Booom ! Boom went the giant of stomps
stupidly making a mute paint of
childish rumours and blongs!

....CD of Canada writes. Oh we aren't sure why he stutters but certainly we know from where, the welkin called Canadia.

14.3.06

Wallace and Ladmo

A state or rather
the condition of
mycobacterium, ruptured
in the summer one year:
poppy seeds, black small
unmanageable.
They never explained
and just disappeared one day,
sent me riding
through four hours
of farmland in Aunt Peg's Nova.
She could care less,
her silence a verdict.

Seemed weeks of watching
Gram play solitaire,
old friend crutch
lanking at her bedroom door,
eating burned meat
lots of eggs, my first
tuna fish sandwich,
good TV all day in the city.

Saturday Grandma took
me to the old ladies hair salon.
I ended up looking like my brother
who got the better end
of the deal playing trains
with Uncle Everett, ten miles across
Phoenix like an ocean.

Tuberculosis must be dark,
it must hurt
because I sure did.

Now twenty some years later
I can see all those Vets
on the respiratory wing
coughin' and laughin' it up.
Must have been a great summer,
no kids, good TV all day in the city,
cigarettes still sweet.

She used to remind me
every now and then, TB
stays with you all your life.
Yeah mom, I know.

http://www.geocities.com/hidenchef/WallaceandLadmo.html

13.3.06

The Tufla Syndrome

A highly recommended Manifesto of Starvation and Human Ignorance
Racial content/viewer advisory.

http://parts-lilac.blogspot.com/2006/03/tufla-syndrome.html
Cinderella

You remember the place...the cartoons on the wall, the orange metaphysical carpeting. The coffee and the counter.Of course, you weren't there and neither was I really...just sort of watching from on top of some pregnant woman's stomach. She kept knocking into the ketchup bottles on her way to and from the tables...bathroom, table, bathroom.

You wouldn't remember Albert either, the mathematician who would only drink the first cup from a pot (shiny Bunn machine) and only then, if you filled his cup to the brim, a pathetic meniscus. He followed me all the way over to the place on the other side of the main drag when Sambo's closed down, to Coco's. He'd offer me rides home after the bar rush. How he hated prostitution and all. It was acceptable of course until I noticed the plates from Corvalis. Wasn't the Green River up there somewhere? Beside the point I imagine.

To make a short story long it ought to be mentioned about the Black Family who used to frequent the Lyric once in a while. Not for Camelot but for things like Car Wash and Young Frankenstein. I never actually saw them there, too small to notice (I was) but I knew that they existed, the Love Family. There he is, Leon Love waiting by his Chevy Nova for Cinda. Cinda of the Michals family, the Ozarkians. They had the long house just across the ditch, an old mortuary. We'd go over there to visit Rinda, the gangliest of the girls: Rinda, Linda, Brenda, Minda, Glenda and of course, their brother Jim. Wanda Michals sure was fertile. I suppose all Ozarkians are and I suppose Cinda and Leon were a source of holy consternation. Not as much so as Mitzy the Pekinese bitch that ripped my sole from heel to toe when I ran down the ladder and across the low brow living room. We'd been peeking into the attic trying to see the fancy old coffin up there. Again, all beside the point.

There wasn't any coffin up there, just a big old box.

In about 1976 or 77 a strange thing happened in the village. Two hundred gospel singers in pleated skirts and bobby socks moved out onto a ranch in Miracle Valley. Of course the men wore Bible Thumper outfits: thin ties and small collars, dark slacks with perfect creases. I imagine they were about half and half, male and female. All I knew was that the legs on the girls against their pastel skirts reminded me of curtains at night. Carol told me she couldn't be my friend anymore because I was white. This was near the choir room and we were the only sopranoes. Then it was all about Jimmy Judd and Chuck Eads and some bomb that went off in someone's lap on their way to Sorry Vista. That's about all I know save for the memory of how it all looked on National TV. No one could see me back there near the choir room with Carol and her looking nervous as hell.

Anyways, as I always say when I'm remembering something funny.

Sunday afternoons were always dead at Sambos. Jenni was already on her bike heading home. She held a monopoly on breakfast and would pocket a hundred bucks to my twenty every single day, even though I was poor AND pregnant. Sundays though, she'd do a hundred and fifty. Just because she'd lapse into one of those mini comas of hers and start scribbling all over the order for bacon and eggs. All because she was sick. She could have taken Dilantin but she was afraid she'd give her nonexistant kids birth defects. Hmph.

So one day I came around the corner, my favorite corner where I'd just poured a very tall, very cold glass of restaurant milk. Can't say poured really when you talk about a milk lever...it's more like a mechanical milking machine and froths from the huge silicon bags just like the milk is coming out of a teet. I came around that corner, scanned the empty booths lit by a four o'clock Phoenix sun through the mini-blinds and saw them pulling and pushing on the door, eight of them. Well dressed. Very black. Not just black but very black. So black that all I could see was the big orchids on their dresses.

They seated themselves, no need for uppity behavior at a Little Black Sambos and I suppose they thought they'd save the poor pregnant waitress a few steps. Even picked up their own menus.

So to make this story about the Michals, the Loves and Carol a bit shorter I'll cut to the chase. It isn't about the artwork here...it's about the curious nature of being Black. Of seeing Black for the first time. Of Niggeritis which we'll get to later if it's not lost.

The ordering started. At that time, 1981 or 82 did I say? You could order fried chicken at Little Black Sambos. Not only could you order it, but you could split it up any way you liked. Four pieces...wings, legs, backs (if one was so inclined), breasts, necks (stretching the truth here). So I got the first four orders and waited on four more before asking the question, the hundred dollar question. Four more orders of fried chicken. I wasn't thinking about Fried Chicken really, nor had I ever been told about Watermelon. I just wasn't told at all. We were Blue Eyed Mexicans down on the Arizona-Mexico border. So I asked:

"Do you want all white or black..er...brown...er dark...meat?"

The words just floated into the center of that booth like a bunch of flower petals.

Stunned Black Silence.

Bright White Teeth.

Curtains Against Night.

Boy, did they ever start laughing. Not one at a time but like a choir. Laughed and laughed and laughed.

A hundred dollar tip. After certain apologies. I suppose they understood. I didn't have to explain like Jenni did all the time about her Petit Mal.

They knew mine was a Grand.

12.3.06

I ran into an old friend of mine today, Free Will. Oh hahaha...I had forgotten about this very nice thing called Free Will Astrology. So smart and so wise old Free Will.



http://artvoice.com/issues/v5n10/free_will_astrology
In A Race, the Big Mix Ups and Clash of Civilizations


http://www.webcom.com/intvoice/emily8.html


"Enthusiasm doesn't appear to be a factor in modern-day relationships between Filipinas (and other Asian women such as Sri Lankans and Thais) and men of lighter color in the Middle East. Dozens of Asian female domestic workers in that region have reported being raped by their employers. The best-known example of such a woman is Sara Balabagan. A teenager from the Philippines working as a maid in the United Arab Emirates to support her family back home, she stabbed her eighty-four-year-old employer to death when he tried to rape her (talk about a dirty old man!). She was originally sentenced to death for the killing but later acquitted following international protest."

Well. You see what Ms. Reyes didn't do was READ me. First mistake is reading only oneself. Joe Green taught me that. Don't sit in your mirrored rooms so often...get out and do a little research. Lanny taught me to google the odd thing and the not so odd thing. He is a great friend of monumental importance to me as a writer. Always obscure and never unkind.

I've been here and there you see. Mostly here, where I am. On that weird inter-racial island, married to someone from a country that starts with an L, hahahaha. We married quite young, 18. I had no idea that I'd one day be in the epicenter of well...the epicenter of the big Clash. At 18, I didn't know Libya from Lithuania from Liberia. And my husband came to me in the desert near the Gadsden Hotel from the other hemisphere and a place called Liberia. Liberia, as some might already know, is the country "invented" to accomodate repatriated slaves and the name itself is supposed to connote Liberty. Hmm. My husband grew up there during the awfulness of Talbot and Doe and saw unrest few of us could imagine. Massacres and bloodlettings that stagger the imagination. He came to me in the desert to a small town only 4 km from Greater Mexico. I was raised on that sort of bi-valence. I was what we used to call, "a blue-eyed Mexican". I excelled the other gringos in Spanish and was the only 'colorless' student to attend the Spanish Language State Championship which kind of makes me laugh because I know how hard it is for some rednecks to say MEXICAN. I spoke Mexican, not Castillian even though good ole Ines Bidot from Cuba tried very hard to give us the vosotros. Nevermind though, it isn't important. I grew up bi-valent and married a man who spent his adolescence in Liberia and had been born, spent his early childhood on a border, like me, the Lebanese/Israeli border. It is perhaps our common tie. I'll never forget the first time he went with me to our housekeeper's home near Naco Sonora. He felt he was home with her bare concrete floors and the dolls she nailed to the walls which were still in the boxes with plastic wrappers from the factories in which they were made. Those dolls were too valuable to open for Carolina. Good ole Carolina. If only I had another daughter I'd name her accordingly. Carolina. Carolina was terrified of snakes because (as the family myth goes) she saw someone murdered by a rattlesnake once. Oh, the fun my brother and I had chasing her around the house with a plastic snake! We coulda killed her. The smell and taste and feel of home made tortillas, dozens and dozens of them that she'd stack in a huge pile on the counter under a tea towel to keep them from drying out. I make them now but the best I've ever done is five dozen and that required the help of my two daughters. Big dusty job tortilla making. A labor of love.

When I finally traveled to his hometown, a small hamlet which is almost the exact same distance from Israel as Bisbee is from Mexico, I saw the bare concrete floor of his grandparent's lowly home. I wept. No wonder he felt he could sit with Carolina in her "salon", that tattered, warm place where I spent so many hours either picking Carolina up or dropping her off, staying just a little while to eat a bowl of Menudo or a few tamales. No wonder. And no wonder that now, when we go to the south of Lebanon and sit by the old folks in their worn out old hovel, I am finally able to sleep the best sleep. The sleep of centuries. I wake up feeling loved and beautiful and surrounded by some of the best people I've ever known.

My suggestion to those that feel they have been unduly targeted by some imagined hostility to race, read the Dove's Midrash. Read it well. It is the story of the Book of Ruth and how the Clash of Civilizations might be seen from a Bird's Eye View.

http://carmenisacat.blogspot.com/2006/03/new-and-improved-but-never-finished.html
The Windsea

Sometimes the winter is fierce
and moreso lately with winds
tossing the sea in the air.
A combination of pressures.
I'm alone again in the windsea,
that connected violent force
in that sort of night called lonely,
listening to the earth's big voice.
I repeat, I am alone with it.
It isn't easy.
The clock ticking on the wall,
the angry tirades we've been through
today, the taxi I had to take home,
the unchanging force of that
as pure as the tumult of the building
as it bends imperceptibly
to the will of the windsea outside.
And we're not shaking, not really
on speaking terms but the windsea
tells the walls otherwise,
tells the screens to creak
and the windows to open
just enough to feel that one
cool stream of air, like water
that erodes the sturdiest
of mortars and leaves tracks
of moss to map the cracks
and the shiney lines of snails after it rains.
All of it trying to get in or out,
what is the difference really?
And we're not shaking in separate beds.
Not crying or apologizing, just not shaking
nor really asking except for a bit of sleep
and some relief from the togetherness
of the windsea outside and the badgering.
If only buildings were bodies
and souls had windows, I'd let you in and it'd be quiet.

11.3.06

I have decided to delete this because everyone deserves a second chance.
Andy Kaufman Get Up!

Owl Oak Press to release the poems of Hitler's Cat via the now famous podcasts but I unfortunately will be limited in what might be said of the damn **** things.

http://p072.ezboard.com/ftheforbiddenstoryfrm7.showMessage?topicID=2421.topic

I feel like a Black Argentinian Jew.

http://p214.ezboard.com/fheavenspenniesfrm4.showMessage?topicID=77.topic
Ode to Carolina
(my favorite maid of color, may she rest in peace with the fish and the Indians)

She hung never-opened dolls on walls
over a yellow B & W
and every Tuesday, each Friday
she walked off bare concrete for
two dollars of her life. Her man
a mesqual lover on short pay
from the shafts where he loaded
car to car like all the other
Mexicans, all the other brothers
and my father, all of our people.
Manuel knew only the language
of the Warren speak-easies, aqui?
Aqui? Put it here, a shovel and
lower the dynamite, borracho
en la manana, en el noche,
in the Lowell Waiting Room.
Carolina jabbered twice a week
over flat warmbread and between the sheets
and sky out back saying under our beds,
Manuel borracho tambien, to my mother
and my mother, tambien to her.
The Sonora so full of surprises, we
hounded her with toy snakes
from Ben Franklin's, me and John
chased her around mi casa,
all her hands in flour
and mother on our tail.
We'd beg for all forgivenesses.
Carolina'd open like a doll in the closet
and her 'tillas tasted good.
I liked butter and sugar,
John liked them raw. He used to say,
'tilla momma 'tilla.

Life is Hell

When Jeffrey Dahmer wanted
to love someone he really wanted
to love them internally.
His father was a high
priest of nothingness.
On a talk show Jeff's dad
commented on the outrageous
effects of the afterlife
on modern Christians.
Jeffrey was apparently gay.

I thought about poor Jeffrey
there, all alone with that monster
telling him lies, ignoring reality.
As I think about my acquaintance Paul Johnson
sometimes or rather, almost every day.

His head resting on his back,
looking out over the expanse
of his orange jumpsuit;
perhaps still somehow alive;
perhaps thinking of our villas at Romaizan
on the main drag called Olaya.

Paul's father abandoned him
as well but physically and Paul
filled the little boys pockets with candy,
tried to father them
the only way he knew how.
He was very fat and his Thai wife
loved him very much.

He wanted to love everyone internally too,
himself included.

With candy and a high cholesterol diet.

In the end I think Jeff
goes to heaven but maybe
just not the best part of it.
Maybe the part where he
has to remember things sometimes.
All the others that weren't quite so bad...
never have to remember anything at all
nor see those that they treated a bit too covetously.

And Saddam there in a hell hole with a variety
of popes, poets and presidents,
some journalists and maybe
even some of the bad dogs who bit people
but probably not
and all the stuff
that makes Hell hell.
It is just like the hole they found him in.
Real deep, full of wet, shiney creatures
with peculiar smells and little hair.
Thing is, Saddam and Jeff already got theirs.

9.3.06

Notes On The Trade Deficit

Back when I needed one, could find one
I did. Lydia who couldn't hear unless
it was her friend on the phone,
the other who used to lean out the window
and make bird noises to the other Phillipinas.
There was the big Ghana girl who slept
from 8 am to 4 and managed to tidy up a bit
before we'd breeze through the door after work,
nevermind my toddler on the sixth floor
balcony overlooking Olaya and all the rest.
Luckily, she got pregnant and I dismissed her,
for her own protection, oh dear.
I was terrified of her type of outsourcing.

Then there was Saba who, like all the Africans,
had more sisters and brothers
than you could shake a stick at.
Her lover Saed was her brother
who arrived on Thursdays to take her home,
yes right and then he married a prettier girl,
perhaps his other sister, those disguises
they all wore. The rings of slave labor
were as normal as anything. Saba was tough
though and didn't steal the jam. She thought
I said she did and we abused each other.
She potty trained my son and he never wet the bed.
Oh how the two of them got along...
her out on the playground spoon feeding him
a Mussolini special, God those Eritreans
make wonderful spagetti! She was a keeper.
And minced no words when she thought she was wronged.

There was a string of them between the playground
in Malaz and September Eleventh. A half dozen
or so part-time free lancers who owed
someone something all the time. A masssive
syndicate of borrowing and thieving when possible.
One of them stole all my daughter's training panties.
Made in America and just can't find them anywhere
in the third world. No one makes training pants
like an American, no one. But then there was Yoly.

Yoly would answer the bell downstairs and I'd say,
"Abu Sayyef!" The first time Yoly was a bit shaken.
The other times we just laughed and laughed.
Yoly was too old to be a maid servant really.
As life would have it though, Yoly was married
to a good for nothing. Yoly had a late in life baby.
Yoly had to pay for college once again and travelled
from the Phillipines so I could tease her in Riyad,
Abu Sayyef!
He's down here and wants to come up
!
Ode to the Bar Code

At the Canyon Cash 'n Carry

Liquor & Penny Candy store,
between the soda pop chiller
and the other under the register
where cha ching came up 5c 10c 25c
and some dollar types

through a peek-a-boo window
was the best electric shock in town.
This was before we were grounded,
before cable TV, almost before Elvis.


One hand there, the other there
swinging for a second on the two
articles of faith -
cha ching cha ching
ooooooyeah. Felt good. But bad.
Us kids made fine lightning rods.
Myrtle Wood hung the cash up to dry
on a clothes line in the back
like a christmastree garland,
the washed and pee'd on cash
and sometimes, someone's pants.

8.3.06

A reasonable amount of time after the funeral:


http://www.leftturn.org/Articles/Viewer.aspx?id=598&type=W

Hariri's politics were not as clear as his economic project to turn Beirut into a Hong Kong with what this entails of privatization and cutting of social services. Downtown Beirut is what the city is supposed to look like: banks, cafes, restaurants, nightclubs, businessmen, a UN building where aid money is squandered, and of course more mosques and churches. Almost all of the new businesses and outlets in the area cater for the rich: visiting Lebanese émigrés and the many tourists that arrive each summer from Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and other countries. In fact, this "Disneyworld" and the tourists it attracts from the Gulf is hailed as one of the most significant contributions of Hariri to a tourist sector trickling to the economy as a whole. The exclusivity of the "new" downtown is reinforced by private security and the Lebanese army whose protection of the main square includes barring people wearing Palestinian headscarves and cars full of young people venturing from the poor suburbs to take a look at the Promised Land. The reality in Lebanon is clear: $40 billion in debt, 30% unemployment, an alarming rate of brain drain, around a million people living in crowded neighborhoods and slums, and the remainder of the country considered as peripheral. The middle class - once characterizing Lebanon's exception amongst its highly stratified Arab neighbors - has almost ceased to exist.

Not too long ago, a few hundred workers dared to demonstrate against rising fuel prices. Five demonstrators were shot and killed at point blank by the Lebanese army. Hariri was still prime minister. Nobody in the so-called opposition questioned the crime. ****

The opposition, unimaginatively called "the opposition" or the "Bristol Meeting" after the 5-star hotel where they assemble, is an odd bunch. It ranges from the Democratic Left Movement (HYD - after its Arabic acronym), a splinter from the Lebanese Communist Party and some "center-left" intellectuals who supported the US-led invasion of Iraq to the Gemayyel Phalanges. Gemayyel is the son of the former leader of the party, the Kata' eb or the Phalanges. The party itself was formed after Pierre Gemayyel Sr. visited Nazi Germany and was enthralled by the Hitler Youth in the 1936 Olympics. Continuing his grandfather's legacy, Pierre Jr. (the grandson) had insulted the Shi'a sect a few weeks ago by calling them "a quantity", basically meaning "rabble", while he represented "the quality", i.e., the Christians.

The most vocal member of the opposition is Walid Jumblatt, the leader of the Druze sect, a member of the Lebanese parliament, an ex-minister, and the head of the Progressive Socialist Party (2nd International). He is also a large property owner and one of Lebanon's multimillionaires. But perhaps he is best known as the leader of the militia that ethnically cleansed its region of Christians during the Lebanese civil war.





Not just an ordinary warlord. In DC now. Go to hell Jumblatt and take your money with you.

"Today, Walid Jumblatt is many things to many people. Dressed in his trademark blazer and jeans for this interview, he has a passion for riding Harley Davidsons, gardening and caring for the environment. “He’ll go nuts if he hears someone cut down a tree,â€‌ says Ramzi, a close aide."

Yea, I'll say! Lots of stuff he is.

http://www.tharwaproject.com/index.php?option=com_keywords&task=view&id=1895&Itemid=0

But hey, lets cut the guy a break. He likes Harley's and gardens, cares about the cruddy environment he DOESN'T live in up in his manse. Like I said Walido, go to hell in a handbasket replete with a custom made leatherette handle so as not to roughen your CHASTE hands.

But hey, they'll like you in the US. Yes. They love leaders who dress like bikers sic Kings of Jordans. We know you didn't mean to murder so many people and take away their property and NEVER restore it to them EVEN though you were forgiven for you horrid massacres and blood lettings. We know how sorry you must feel especially cuz yer in a minority and those Chalabites are always the lucky bank-frauders that get away with absolute murder (figurative speech here).

Like I said Waldo, go to hell where you might be lucky enough to run into another one of your kind, Madonna. You and her are a match made in heaven. She is sooooooooooooo like you in soooooooooo many ways, I'm feeling so gushy you know. I love how she forbids her children from watching TV because it might corrupt their tiny, pacifist little minds. I hate when children are corrupted by the truth and I hate it even more when masonryworkers likeyourselVES are accused of things they say they are really berryberrysorry for honest engine cross my heart and hope to die (SMOOCHIE!). Yes. I hope this for you...that Madonna and yerself will meet up down there and have tremendous amounts of gaity with all the popes of the Seventh Centuries including that guy in the painting who was trapped in a chair and screaming. Just a personal adecdote: that guy that lost all his family in that cement culvert tube over in Aramoun when some of your homies sealed the twenty of them inside and flamed it says hi! Go Opposition! "Er," he asks, "why didn't you complain before ole Rafic was killed and wow, it is so amazing that out of all the targets of these assassinations, yer the only one that walked out alive. Damn that's lucky!" -some guy in Aramoun may have said this or maybe not! But we aren't aiming for CONSISTENCY now are we!

Have a nice day. In Hell. Very.

7.3.06

Ode To Mr. Salazar

She used to caution us to walk
a mile in someone else's shoes,
hers a glorious 9AAA
because she stuffed them

in 1939 with newspapers to keep
out the snow which isn't one
of those old remember when stories,
it is a real one, a real caution.
I still find it hard to buy a new pair.
My dog chewed

the Doc Martens purchased
at a Riyahd shoe shop across from the old
side of the Akarya mall after
I bought my first abaya.

A stroll through that country
without any clothes on
was like walking on the moon
only better because of all
the people there.
They are still hanging on
by a thread, I regard them
in the highest esteem,
no Nikes those and made to last
a lifetime. It might be that I'll have to go
to a Mr. Salazar down in Sidon
but he won't be there

because there is no subway street
where we used to take our old
things to be mended.
Peasants love their cobblers
almost as much as they love
their own mothers, essential
people with fine names
and special machinery to keep
a pair together. But Sidon
is a real heaven in the south.
A city like that needs
a thousand Salazars,

tons of heavy thread.
Blood pours through a Blalock-Taussig in this riveting poem by the famous Ron Silliman.
I'd say it is a damn fine poem that orders numbers by their popes and cautions strangers to avoid banging too hard on coke machines lest they are being watched by the owl-eyed Poet.

Well done Mr. Silliman, well done.

http://www.latchkey.net/poets/ron_silliman/000993.html
Who said Canadians can't write? Here is one that can:


http://www.latchkey.net/poets/jason_heroux/001175.html

These poems remind me a bit of Charles Simic and of course,
everyone knows he is a real Jude The Obscure.

6.3.06

Ode To The Gully Washer
(for James Corner)

When it came down we'd bow
our heads and utter each to each
the plain-spoken dialogue
of the deluge. A year's worth
of waiting over in a flash. Resurrection's
aisle cleaned up, mint and grass
combed out properly in three directions.
A kicked ball would turn up
near the corner in a stretch
of wild rasberry wholly out
of reach, no trespassing sign needed.
Tadpoles and water walkers,
giant red dragonflies called snakefeeders:
everything with a description
sorting origin and function, a collection
of results-specific identifiers
for the concerns of our people.
Wasps with addresses and vendettas,
rocks with names beside
bean vines and China Berries,
pop beetles and walking sticks.
A host of communion eaters
and seekers, drought prone to river wise.
Our contempt reserved for the fires.

5.3.06

The Buttoning Of The Coats

Listen to this

nothing
outside
not even a dog barking

planes not flying
off the tarmac

some kind of hum
from the freeway

not much really
but so incessant

honk

listless unimportant
as we all are
on the couches
the crematoriums.

Aleutians
where are they again?

Listen
to the buttoning

of the coats.

4.3.06

Ode to the Longer Farther

The poem that got him into heaven
with apologies to Whitman
spoke of a desert watering hole
all God's creatures, crying the same way
near a flame-red manzanita bush.
He must have eye-watered when he wrote it,
laughed when it was published
in the local rag. He must have laughed.
Not loved either but published finally.
His life story on the front page,
with apologies. Marlene Dietrich,
frozen in Aleutia,
the family part of mining.
Part one concludes.

II

Here is the day he was discharged
honorably from eight years of his life,
a wallet-sized picture of a road grater in microfiche.

III

This is the time when he leapt
like the elk over the Impala at Tonto,
my body waiting below in the gully for transport
between my sister's big breasts under
a Catholic style shirtfront which held me in c-spine.
Those were good times, a father saving a daughter.
A sister to lean on. A hospital to go to.


IV

Back over there he kept the nuts and bolts.
Jar lids screwed to the bottoms of cupboards,
nailed the latch back into place

on the back door broken from the banging.
He fixed the washer with his specs on,
perched low on his nose
his eyes peeking over them.
Spuds were for dinner.

V

Right there above his long celtic brow
was a hole that was too small to be a bullet
but it was a bull's eye and in his casket
I noticed it still. As large as ever.
The snapshot is in the special album,
the one that makes me cry,
his hair had never grayed
but his beard made us call him Ahab.

VI

She came over for a spell to sit at the dinner table
tell stories with certain embellishments.
The one where his mother had an ax to grind,
grandpa's mistress out in the valley, some other children
we are related to, the Driggers, distant cousins.
How mean grandma got over that. How she wielded that crutch.
It is strange how long one can remember, how details
hidden come to the forefront in Riyadh,
long distance sisterhood and her swollen ankles
hurting from the flight. It matters
because I never knew.

VII

Just a piece of metal, a broken one now
but you are okay, you are okay
. Driving isn't
always easy on Laundry Hill but you are okay.
The new brougham wholly dented fender to rear.
It was all a daughter ever wanted to hear, and
caught me a little off guard. Mom advised,
you've got to tell your father, not me.
It'll be good for the both of you.
I think it was our only conversation
because he saved up the rest of his talk
for that poem, to get him into heaven,
a certain kind of self confidence you get
from fighting in a war.

VIII

We were in the lumber yard,
I was holding a grape Nehi,
Red was adding up the total,
two by fours and four by fours,
good for killing rabid bats.
We tooled around town like that for a couple years
when he was sober, preparing to die.
Just a pause he was taking between drinks,
about five years of dry wall and fixing the electric,
balancing on ladders, picking stucco out of my eye.
He'd take a hit of oxygen between corners.
Sometimes I held a hammer or a jar of nails
taken from the washroom. Then, I grew up
all of a sudden and he got mean about it.
He decided to drink himself to death
instead of shoot the bastard.
And he did. May 23 to May 23
but they got it backwards at the printers,

b.1982 - d.1913

I've got it here in his mother's jewelry box,
absolute proof. I look at it sometimes
and think about the wars
and how Whitman's mother died
the same day so many years before,
her wars all over and a sun on the rise,

another on the set.

IX

His poem is somewhere else,

yellowed and out of date,
with apologies. I keep writing it,
longer, farther.
In The Mines Of Mexico They Weep

Now there shall be a man cohered out of tumult and chaos . . . . the elder encourages the younger and shows him how . . . they two shall launch off fearlessly together till the new world fits an orbit for itself and looks unabashed on the lesser orbits of the stars and sweeps through the ceaseless rings and shall never be quiet again. - Walt Whitman, in the preface to Leaves of Grass.

In a twilight pilgrimmage
via these frost cracked streets
close to the Campbell shaft
full of our fathers breath and breathing,
we unfold our own cloth on the Fourth of July,
one crease at a time on the crags
near the Vista in Warren, down from
the Loma Linda and the old mine-boss housing.
Flashlights dangle from the hands
of children. The night catches us deeply
unaware, but they don't think like that,
they are that,
think more about the starting time,
and the firemen on top of the dumps
who signal the end by waving lanterns,
how they crave that sort of thing
up there on those mountains of slag
thinking, as ours do, of the breath
of canaries and candles deep in those old holes.

A persistent and unheard whimper
fills space on this weary-
happy picnic in July or maybe
it only fills the weariness with something else.
I clasp a child tight in my arms,
a finger closes the tender wound,
hush hush, our waiting begins, we settle down.
Our Fourth of July is a sweet tortuous ruin
thrown in a trash bin of appetites lost.
We've run from one excitement to another
thankful for a gentle sun, there was no burning
and there will be few scars if any.
The miles between this and that
contract like stars in heaven where
light reaches us much too late
and we as well, get there accordingly.

This is the anniversary of all
that's happened here
for each body on this ragged weathery quilt,
each poor soul and dumbstruck
face tipped up toward the sky,
the silence between one person and the next
is only the truth where commentary has failed.
I look around me one last time
before the sun takes all the light away -
and I count the faces I own, erase what's left,
a small town thing to do on an occasion like this.

The darkness is complete and the fireworks begin.
My daughter tells me, during one of the beautiful
interims which goes like this:
ooh, aah, wonderful! then another interim and another,
one day, the sun will die. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
as copper sulphur spark comets flower dark,
my father scatters in the sky, Oh! Mufasa, talk to me.
Next To Wakoski

I sat next to Wakoski in 1979,
saw King Fahed being ushered into the ER
wrapped in a pink blanket to disguise him,
he pee'd on my friend in the ICU.
Jack Nicholson ordered coffee from me once
at the Little America Truckstop in Flag,
a pack of cigarettes rolled up
in the sleeve of his black t-shirt
(then he started marrying waitresses).
I lived next door to a man that was
beheaded for building Apaches.
My husband ran into Gene Hackman at the Taj Majal
and Elvira let him encircle her for a picture
down in Atlanta at a convention.
Someone I know told me Goldie Hawn was a real bitch
in a five star hotel and Kurt was as handsome
as he was in The Computer Wore Tennis Shoes
(which I mistakenly called, The Computer War Tennis Shoes)
and Steve Pearl told me the Dalai Lama would visit
the city park and I hoped to be able to pet him.