125 lines
4.1 KiB
Plaintext
125 lines
4.1 KiB
Plaintext
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For Gwydion, page 1
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To Remember Thomas DeLong,
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Who Wrote as Gwydion Pendderwen,
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On the Second Anniversary
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Of His Going into Eternal Life
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I remember the night I first met you
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On Bernal Heights, before we knew
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The Craft would cross our paths.
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The strident horn of your flaming car
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Drew me to the street: before
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The doors of Hightower, where
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Lord Randall ruled his mad
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Court of science-fictioneers,
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Van the Dagda read an Anglican wake
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Over your still-smoking engine.
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I remember you, and I begin to let you go.
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I remember how you sang to me and Alta
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When you first visited us in Oakland,
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And how you gifted us at our wedding,
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Singing us new a wedding song
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Worthy, I think, of the kings
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We thought we were perhaps descended from.
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On the first anniversary of your death
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I heard Sally Eaton sing of you
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A wilder music than I knew she held.
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As dragonflies draw flame your voice
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Has drawn and draws forth song.
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I remember you, and so I try to let you go.
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I remember the nights I came to your circle
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Or you to ours: cautiously we reached
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Toward friendship, dialog, pursuit of the chimeras
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Of history. You praised me, friend, in print,
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To our friends, and to our enemies,
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Whether you agreed with me or not. In Nemeton you
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And Alison published more of my poems
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Than any other person ever has. We were
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Initiates in the same tradition at the end,
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And no conversion or dying or any other
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Transformation changes that. It hurt, and still
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It hurts, that you are gone.
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I remember you, and so I slowly let you go.
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I remember the nights when we drank together,
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Drank and talked and talked and drank again:
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The night I met Ed Sitch, the night we bombed
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Hans Holzer, the Sabbats at Coeden Brith.
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Especially I remember how on my last drunk
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You gave me a clew that helped lead me
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From the labyrinth: only a real Irishman,
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You said, would carry the wine jug with us
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From room to room as we rambled on
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About things earthly, unearthly, and in between.
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And you were with me that night,
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In that car with no brakes in which I drove
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Six people home, over the Bay Bridge,
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Fading in and out of blackout.
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I remember, vaguely -- but I've let that go.
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At thirty-six I got sober;
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At thirty-six you died
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Of drink and drugs and dying
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As surely as if you has
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OD'd. It is not
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Fair, it is not
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Just, it makes no
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Sense: you weren't that much
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Crazier than me. I hoped
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You'd get it too, and we'd be
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Friends again, but that was not
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Your path. Toward the end I heard
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How rapidly you were dying,
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How little song was left in you.
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You did not die of poetry.
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Now on each anniversary of my sobriety
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I remember you, and more I let you go.
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Strange that the night you died I dreamed
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I met George Cockriell, who'd lived with me
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On Bernal Heights, who died of World War Two
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In 1971. Striding down the hill, as if
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Off to something urgent, he stopped, surprised,
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Saying, "I haven't seen you recently,"
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And questioned me about what I'd been doing.
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And in the dream all our houses were one
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Communal home on Bernal Heights, handbuilt,
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Complex in its textures, vast within: perhaps
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Our work on the Craft will have results we could
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Not know.
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Yes, George could have been sent
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To get you from that ditch: he'd known who you were
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On Bernal Heights, had watched the Hightower crowd
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With his black Irish sarcasm, and God knows in France
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He'd walked through Hell already to rescue other men.
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("Why you?"
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"They've got nobody else who knew you.
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Come on, I'll explain what I've found out so far.")
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So, yes, I can see George walking with you,
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Quietly explaining the lay of the land,
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Walking with you up the hills of Heaven that look
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Much like Bernal Heights,
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Much like all our hills writ large.
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I can see you singing, with a real harp,
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Of real gold, in a robe all of white
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Except for the seven colors proper to a bard
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Embroidered in its flashing: you are
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Wreathed with mistletoe.
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I see your eyes:
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They are clear and serene: in the distance
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You can see the accommodating gods and goddesses,
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Who are both one and many. They sing to you,
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Drawing you always further in
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And further up. Now you go
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Singing ever higher into the hills:
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You are finally, utterly healed.
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I remember you, and now:
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I let you go.
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fictioneers, \WORD\POETRY\To Remember Thomas DeLong9/5/88 9/5/88
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