Happy Birthday to Tony S.
I was a kid in a dying america that heard the voices of the lady
I was lost in a tangled kipling jungle book of rhymey words like
a wild Mowgli taming jungle beasts as if I had forgotten my own humanity
only to fall against the sword of my ancestors just before the pearly dawn like
the dying gladiators of the lost generation
who never wrote a letter to Rimbaud
never sent Proust a birthday card
never cried for Zelda in her asylum
never drank Cuba Libres til sunrise with Papa
never were aware of their own condition
but they left behind hunks of moldy rye bread
that dropped delicious crumbs
that moved the wheels of my infant stroller
until I could walk among words of my own assemblage
Dickinson seemed terrified of future terrorists that she named with a
cunning predictability from her solitude that I always wished for her to list
them all that I might know them from my hope for future solitudes
that I secretly yearned for so nervously
as I shook hands with J.C. Oates in hopes something would rub off on me
I never knew what terrors were until I stood before the world with my own
words formed into broken lines of redemptive pleas for forgiveness
I lived during the Venice beats time, during the Temple of Man time
as I built my personal temple of doom I read their words and wept alone
because I was more deeply involved in the territorial warfare that was
blamed on gangs but won by realtors and new home buyers
I am friends with Tony's words as they comfort my travel worn soul
that finds it harder to hug the Venice shoreline than in the past
when it seemed a perfect fit even down to the decadent pier
of Pacific Ocean Park that stands gloriously intact in black and white photos
but was full color jaggedness for my youthful frame as it glided and collided
between it's mortally wounded obstacles hidden from under the late
breaking waves of the peaceful pacific ocean womb with a rocky breaker
placenta that birthed dreams into new reality new vision new voice
newest voice of an old muse that always brings me home like I have
only known homelessness and prison while the world knew something else
I am learning slowly catching up slowly healing slowly
Pacific Ocean Park is long gone beneath the jealous waves of modern conformity
My name of names no longer adorns the fallen walls of
demolished shower facilities where I would lose and regain
my faculties over and over again leaving gifts in abandoned
shopping carts owned by the real immortals of no worldliness
known on this plane of reality by talking fast to their
telephone totem pole messiahs asking for shelter
from the words that drop like truncheons on their
methadone skulls running in a primordial frenzy
like chastened goonie birds in full flight from reality
seagulls proclaiming them as kindred spirits as they
leave their mortal bodies behind like stamped out
cigarette butts clutching tattered clothing lined
with free newspapers from beyond baroque's front stoop
Scibella, Perkoff, Rios, Taylor all beat this path wide and large
as I stabbed and fumbled through drunkeness punktuated by
opiated amphetemined coca senselessness that made moments
feel better as the big picture got worse
as I won a two way ticket to the big house
more times than should be allowed
as the ghosts I left behind in
Chino, Vacaville, San Quentin, El Reno, St Cloud and Santa Rita
wonder what lottery screwed them over to give me winning parole
numbers I could not lose alone
alone is how the numbers leave me on Tony's birthday
as it is honored by S.A.'s words that honor me in unison as
Iris nurtures my manuscripts as Shira gives me shelter
as Bucky, Doug, Rafael, Al, Luis, Mike, Frank and S.A. give me support
when I was young I was told the only thing greater than friends
are pallbearers who love their burden as if it were weightless
I have so many gifts I would never dispute the existence of any god
that gives them to my atheist mind turned mad
as I walk along in the caffeinated rain
down echo park blvd to the bookstore that lies between
the temple of man and the house of spirits
I walk with the ghost of ishi as he leads me forward
as he tells me what it was like to be the very last one counted at the end of the longest line
Ishi becomes mortal as I walk
Ishi takes my hand to lead me to the truth
Ishi says "I am only the last wild Indian in books,
In truth I lived inside your heart all this time as long as you didn't deny me
because there will never be a last of anything"
together we share mashed acorn and skip stones across the echo park reservoir
from the boathouse to the duck infested island as Ishi says laurel and hardy are immortal spirits
that move silent movie pianos up and down the stairs like happy cherubs
instead of depression riddled Sisyphus symbols tortured by the new Hollywood CGI God
Ishi speaks words so good and pure they honor all the best words
of a greatness in purity ever spoken by anyone
(Ishi leaves but tells me to look for him on Dia de los Muertos on Olvera St.
Ishi says he will be the one dressed as a pre-Colombian skeleton)
I am in love with the ancient words of Ishi but they are the most modern words I have ever heard or read
it gives relief to me that I may not speak so well
I may not write so well
but if I can just pour it forth as pure as I can
then the sacrifices that you made for me might have more meaning tonight
Happy Birthday, Tony
I might have met you in person had I not driven so fast all night
across great divides with criminal intent and a trunk full of deliverance
I might have shook your hand if I had heeded
all the words that echoed off of the mountains
from Colorado to the jetty off of Venice during sunset
facing the last glow as it disappeared past purple Santa Monica's
I might have been your friend if you had lived longer, who knows?
I might be your friend now if you would have my humble words
inside your tangible spirit of eternal poems
they are all that's left of my connection
to the dying gladiators of all the lost generations before me_
1 comment:
Yeah, now I live here in Venice.
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