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T M M OOOOO RRRRR PPPPP OOOOO RRRRR EEEEE V V IIIII EEEEE W W
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MM MM O O R R P P O O R R E V V I E W W
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H M M M O O RRRR PPPP O O RRRR EEE V V I EEE W W W
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M M O O R R P O O R R E V V I E WW WW
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E M M OOOOO R R P OOOOO R R EEEEE V IIIII EEEEE W W
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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Volume #1 September 15, 1994 Issue #4
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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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CONTENTS FOR VOLUME 1, ISSUE 4
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A Bob and a Matt . . . . . . Robert Fulkerson and Matthew Mason
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shard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . John Adam Kaune
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Roman Ruin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Blackbird
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words find . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Edgar Sommer
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But For the Grace of God . . . . . . . . . . . . Brett A. Thomas
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He's Returned . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Cynthia Anne Foster
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Sestina . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Susan Tefft Fitzgerald
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Elinor Rigby . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Karen Alkalay-Gut
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Twilight Dancers . . . . . . . . . . . . . William C. Burns, Jr.
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What Gets Me . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Benjamin Parzybok
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Wednesday Afternoon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Lori Kline
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monet's old studio is a gift shop . . . . . . . John Adam Kaune
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The Judge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Doctress Neutopia
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Disclaimer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Michael A. Simanoff
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You can meditate in this mess? . . . . . . . . . . Michael Stutz
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Room . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Karen Alkalay-Gut
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What lengths must my children go to rebel when I'm 50 . . . . .
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. . . . . Dave Zappala
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Between the Hiatus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Maree Anne Jaeger
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speaking of the secret . . . . . . . . . . . . Karen Alkalay-Gut
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Custer is not here . . . . . . . . . . . . . . John Adam Kaune
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Pool Night . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Leland Ray
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The Strawberry Blond . . . . . . . . . . . . . Edward J. Austin
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About the Authors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Authors
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In Their Own Words . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Authors
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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Editor + Editor
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Robert Fulkerson The Morpo Staff Matthew Mason
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rfulk@creighton.edu + mtmason@morpo.creighton.edu
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Proofreader ReadRoom Layout Editor
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Kris Kalil Fulkerson Mike Gates
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kkalil@creighton.edu tsmwg@acad1.alaska.edu
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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_The Morpo Review_. Volume 1, Issue 4. _The Morpo Review_ is published
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electronically on a bi-monthly basis. Reproduction of this magazine is
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permitted as long as the magazine is not sold and the entire text of the
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issue remains intact. Copyright 1994, Robert Fulkerson and Matthew Mason.
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The ASCII version of _The Morpo Review_ is created in part by using Lynx 2.1
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to save ASCII formatted text of the World Wide Web HyperText Markup Language
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version. All literary and artistic works are Copyright 1994 by their
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respective authors and artists.
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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A Bob and a Matt / Editors' Notes
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o _Robert Fulkerson, Editor_:
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It has been a rather busy four months since the last time I wrote one
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of these columns. Let's see if I can list off just a few of the things
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that have happened since May: I finished my first year of graduate
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school, I was an usher in a wedding for the first time, I got married
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on July 1st, I visited Colorado and the Rocky Mountains for the first
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time, I interviewed for my first real job and bought my first real
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suit, I began teaching an introduction to programming class. No wonder
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I'm always tired!
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I'd like to take a moment if I may to wax reminiscent about the honeymoon
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that my wife Kris and I took to Colorado. When we first started thinking
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about where we should go for our honeymoon, we both thought we'd like
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to see New England. So, we had grand plans to pack up the car and
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drive East for a few days, maybe visit Prince Edward Island and the
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home of Anne (you know, of _Green Gables_ fame) and then drive West
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for a few more days and end up back home.
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Well, after some thought, the idea of driving West and up and down the
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Pacific coastline (and visiting Matt, the other editor of _TMR_)
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sounded really fun, since neither of us had really visited the Western
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|
United States before. So instead of driving many days round-trip East
|
|
and back, we decided to travel even more days round-trip West and
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back.
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Then the financial realities of what we were planning on doing sank in
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and we decided that we really probably shouldn't even leave Nebraska.
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This was a depressing thought, not because Nebraska isn't a beautiful
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state but because we already _know_ that Nebraska is a beautiful state.
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No need exploring what both of us already were familiar with.
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Kris then suggested that we go out to Colorado for a few days. One day
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travel there, one day travel back. Minimal driving (comparatively) and
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|
beautiful country were her arguments. I was skeptical and against the
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idea at first--see, I'd never been to Colorado, and she'd already been
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three or four times with her parents. What would be the fun for her?
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But economy of time and money won out and we _did_ go and stay in
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Estes Park, Colorado for four days.
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The first day we went hiking, it snowed. It snowed in July, one of the
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warmest months here in the United States. July 7th, to be exact. I've
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never seen snow in July before, and since I love snow, it confirmed
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that I loved Colorado and the mountains and everything else there was
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that nature had to offer. I didn't even mind the hiking that much (but
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don't tell that to Kris -- I complained a whole bunch the second day
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out just for complaining's sake).
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But what was really wonderful while we spent four of our honeymoon
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days there in Estes Park (besides, of course, spending time with my
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wife) was that the natural beauty of nature and the happiness of
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celebrating our marriage brought me around to writing again. It had
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been far too long since I'd put pencil to paper and written poetry.
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|
But, sitting there one night, the silhouettes of mountains canvassing
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the purple-black sky, I put pencil to paper and wrote. It was a
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wonderful feeling and reminded me again why I love writing and
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reading, and why other people do, too.
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So, it is with a rediscovery of my own love for writing and reading
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|
that we bring you this issue of _The Morpo Review_. You'll notice that
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this issue is rather large compared to our previous issues. This is
|
|
due to the fact that we've had four months to amass good works, and
|
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amass we have. We have three stories in this issue (_But For the Grace
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of God_ by Brett A. Thomas, _Pool Night_ by Leland Ray and _The
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Strawberry Blond_ by Edward J. Austin) as well as our first piece of
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non-fiction that we've published in _TMR_, _The Judge_ by Doctress
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Neutopia.
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Let us not forget that we also publish poetry! This issue finds us
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chock full of works from John Adam Kaune, of the _Sand River Journal_,
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with _shard_, _monet's old studio is a gift shop_ and _Custer is not
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here_. We also have some fine first appearances in _TMR_ by Benjamin
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Parzybok (_What Gets Me_) and Dave Zappala (_What lengths must my
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children go to rebel when I'm 50_). The rest of the work is also
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top-notch, and we certainly hope you enjoy it, also.
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So, hopefully we won't go four months again between issues, mainly
|
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because there's too much stuff to talk about and I keep getting tired
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because of it. Enjoy the issue, and we'll see you again ...
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o _Matthew Mason, Editor_:
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Cool. You're reading this again, something I see as a darned good
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thing. Being new to this whole editor stuff (being mainly used to
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|
sending nicely typed poems to editors at a variety of other magazines
|
|
as a way of expanding my collection of rejection letters), I'm
|
|
surprised at just how this whole literary magazine stuff goes.
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It surprises me just how much work and detail goes into putting
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out a literary magazine. So you should really admire and appreciate
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|
the work the editors here do for no monetary compensation! Well,
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|
actually you should admire and appreciate Bob, seeing as I have the
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computer skill and organizational finesse of a bag of Funyuns, so I
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basically sit around and try to find ways to foist my paltry amount of
|
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work onto Bob's shoulders.
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In any case, I'm rambling again. Welcome back to _Morpo_, we're glad
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to see you, and remember: we'll always leave the modem on for you.
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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"shard" by John Adam Kaune
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the music pauses -
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words fall into the void
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only to rise once more
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in acquisition of the soul
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the place in which my very wholeness is imparted
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pens lay silent in my plan
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the message in the palm
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I am defined in instances
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not yet definitive
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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"Roman Ruin" by Blackbird
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Last night, we were so very quiet.
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No killer stalked our apartment,
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no spy had placed bugs in the walls,
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no bombers flew overhead
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And yet,
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As if for fear our voices might bring danger,
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we were quiet as church mice.
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That's okay. Silence doesn't bother me--particularly from
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someone I trust.
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But still--the hours we spent not talking now seem to me like
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pools of water on the low wall of a Roman ruin, evaporating in
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the hot Aegean sun.
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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"words find" by Edgar Sommer
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words find
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they risk the company of idiots
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words find and curl into her sleep
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curl up to sleep
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a home
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ridgetop brainland for looking down
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words find
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trespass the fingertips
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crisscross the countryside
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sunfold
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drops on paperscape
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tell sex and crime
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they roam
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and words find
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strife givers
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little bonny pad
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bonny in may
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the grass fields
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bonny's snowmilkwhiteness
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they find
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and alight on soft spots
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color the mind fancifold
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bound to the ceiling glueflexfully, -but.
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bound to the earth
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any earth she is to be
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words find
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and they roam
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cornerfixed and arcbound
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and flatsome by coarse
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there's tricks
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stuttertracks in the sand towards moonrise
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words find
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they risk the company of idiots
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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"But For the Grace of God" by Brett A. Thomas
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"But for the grace of God," Jeremy Rodgers' mother had taught him to
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pray, whenever he saw a person on crutches or in a wheelchair, "there
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go I." The prayer was a little ritual, not so much to thank God for
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health, but to ward off the living death of physical deformity that so
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many are frightened of.
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Twenty years after hearing that advice for the first time, Jeremy sat
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in a small apartment. His mother had died a few years before, having
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fallen out of God's good graces, herself.
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Now, the only son of Virginia Harper Rodgers, nee Virginia Marie
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Harper, sat in a small, one-room apartment in Atlanta, GA. The plaster
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walls had been white, once, but were now faded and peeling. It was
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summer, and the humidity and heat were causing misery throughout the
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city. The window in Jeremy's apartment was open, but it faced up
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against the brick wall of a neighboring building, and offered little
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relief from the heat.
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The scattered furnishings were extremely mismatched. A red secretary's
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chair was the only seat in the house, and it faced a short-legged,
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small table with an old 19" TV on it. The TV, with simulated
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wood-grain finish, was large enough that it overhung the sides. A
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single bed was stuck in the corner by the window, with twisted and
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stained sheets upon it. On the other side of the window from the bed
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stood a 1958 GE refrigerator, of the style that young children
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occasionally get trapped in.
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The only item in the room - including its occupant - that had been
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manufactured after 1976 was a small microwave that was on the short,
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faded green counter beside the refrigerator.
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Laying amongst all this urban splendor was Jeremy himself, flat on his
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back, on the bare, wooden floor. Sweat darkened his filthy blue jeans,
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and his frame was thin to the point of being unhealthy. Long, uncombed
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brown hair splayed out around him like a halo, and spilled across his
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bare shoulders, which were as white as high clouds in a blue sky.
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A practiced eye would have seen the track marks up and down both arms,
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noted the smell of stale urine, the lack of a phone, the unwashed body
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- and come up with "drug addict". An unpracticed eye could have seen
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the needle laying on the floor, and reached the same conclusion.
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Jeremy lay almost motionless on the floor for several hours, as
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morphine coursed through his system. His contact had been unable to
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get anything else that week, but morphine worked well enough. He had
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shot up the last dose of it three hours before, and was beginning to
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come down, when someone knocked on the door. Slowly, he began to move.
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He propped himself up on his elbows first, then sat up, still resting
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his weight on his arms.
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At this point, Jeremy's eyes came open. He looked around, dazedly, and
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sat the rest of the way up.
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By he time he got to the door, the person on the other side had
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knocked twice. He fumbled with the locks, and finally jerked the door
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open, still half-leaning on it for support.
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A large-bodied black woman stood on the other side of entryway.
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"Hello," she said, smiling broadly. "I'm Loretta Williams. I live on
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the third floor. Have you accepted Jesus Christ as your personal Lord
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and Savior?"
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Jeremy looked at her for a long moment. "Jesus?"
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The smile never wavered. "Yes." She began her spiel again. "Have you
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accepted him as-"
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Vague memories of Sunday school came to Jeremy. "I like Jesus," he
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decided, nodding in agreement with himself. His voice, when it finally
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came, was surprisingly deep. The way he uttered this, and anything
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else, seemed to say that the entire weight of his intellect was behind
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it. He sounded much like an over-serious child, who had finally
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decided which candy-store delicacy to purchase with his allowance.
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Loretta's smile widened, somehow. "Good!" She handed him a piece of
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paper, with a cross prominently centered on the top. "We're having a
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building revival tonight, the Reverend Robert Smith will be speaking."
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A frown crossed Jeremy's face. "Revival?" he asked, uncertainly.
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"Yes," she confirmed. "Tonight, in the basement, at eight. Will you
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come?"
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"To the basement?"
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The smile wavered, momentarily. "Yes. Tonight. I hope you'll be
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there."
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Jeremy watched her walk away, and it was almost five minutes after
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that before it occurred to him to close the door. Doing so took all of
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his concentration, and, when he stopped thinking about holding it, the
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leaflet fluttered softly to the floor.
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Two hours later, the visitor that Jeremy had been originally expecting
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arrived. By this time, the morphine had worn off, and Jeremy was a
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little clearer, so he was able to get to the door on the first knock.
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The visitor was a short, black man. He wore a leather jacket, blue
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pants, and an Atlanta Braves ballcap. Jeremy's face lit up at his
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arrival.
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"Ray!"
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Ray stepped in, and looked around the apartment. "Hey, man. How you
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been?"
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"What did you bring me?"
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Ray laughed. "That's what I like about you man, you get right to the
|
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point."
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Jeremy smiled happily at the perceived compliment.
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"I got the good stuff, man." He handed Jeremy a plastic bag full of
|
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heroin.
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Jeremy dug deep in his left front pocket, and pulled out a wad of
|
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bills. He extended his left hand, holding the money, and reached for
|
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the bag with his right.
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Ray laughed again, took the money, and tossed the bag to Jeremy. A
|
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less ambitious man might have robbed the addict; Ray knew that a
|
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safely addicted rich weirdo was better than a lump sum any day. Jeremy
|
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was job security to people like Ray.
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The dealer's eyes scanned around the room, as Jeremy happily took the
|
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bag over to his faded, green counter. Ray's gaze came to rest on the
|
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leaflet at his own feet, and Ray bent over to pick it up.
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"What's this, Jer?" Ray's eyes scanned the paper, and a look of
|
|
concern crossed his face, as he had visions of his best client going
|
|
religious. "Revival? Whaddya need a revival for, when you got me?"
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Jeremy looked around from preparing his needles. He seemed to think
|
|
about this statement. "I like Jesus," he decided.
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"Man, you don't need to be hanging out with them people! They're
|
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crazy."
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"I like Jesus."
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Ray threw up his hands. "Alright man, whatever. Only Jesus you need is
|
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Purple. I'll catch you next week."
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Jeremy wasn't listening; he had gone back to his smack.
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At 7:45 PM, Loretta began making her rounds. The drug addict on the
|
|
fifth floor. The welfare mother on the sixth. The drug addict on the
|
|
third floor, and the immigrant family on the second.
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|
One of the last stops she made was at Jeremy's apartment. She had
|
|
almost passed it by, but something had told her to stop, and Loretta
|
|
Williams always listened to those little voices, which she thought of
|
|
as being the true word of God.
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|
|
As before, it took several knocks before anyone answered. When Jeremy
|
|
finally came to the door, he seemed even more lethargic and out of
|
|
touch with reality than before. She brought her smile up to her face
|
|
from somewhere deep within.
|
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|
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"Are you ready to go?"
|
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He looked bewildered. "Go?"
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|
"To the revival!" she encouraged.
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|
"Revival?" Jeremy thought for a few seconds. "Jesus! I like Jesus!"
|
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|
"Then, let's go, child!"
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|
The Reverend Robert Smith looked out at the fifty or so people packed
|
|
into the small, gray basement, lined up in neat rows of folding
|
|
chairs. He'd played smaller crowds, and much bigger crowds. This group
|
|
was largely made up of lower class black families, whose only hope was
|
|
God. He could feel the energy in the room.
|
|
|
|
The murmuring in the crowd died down as the Reverend took the podium.
|
|
He reached out with both arms, each grabbing a side of it, and rested
|
|
his weight on the stand. "Good evening, brothers and sisters! Are you
|
|
ready to worship the Lord?"
|
|
|
|
The reply came back: A resounding "Yes!"
|
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|
|
"Good! Because that's what we're here tonight to do: Worship the
|
|
Lord!"
|
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|
|
A few "Amen!"s came back at him from the crowd. "But I want everyone
|
|
to remember - worshipping the Lord isn't something you do just
|
|
tonight. You should do it every day!" He paused for the "Amen". "Every
|
|
hour! Every minute!"
|
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|
|
Reverend Smith leaned back a little, seizing up the crowd. There was
|
|
one white man, in the middle of the crowd, sitting next to one of the
|
|
women who had been on the organizing committee.
|
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|
|
"God says to us in the bible-"
|
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|
|
Suddenly, a clatter came from the area of the white boy, as folding
|
|
chairs were pushed and thrown out of position. Reverend Smith paused,
|
|
giving it a chance to clear up, but it didn't. The man had apparently
|
|
fallen out of his chair, and was laying on the floor, having some sort
|
|
of seizure. Several of the people around him had stepped back, and a
|
|
circle was forming around the man. Reverend Smith ran down the aisle,
|
|
and people unthinkingly got of his way. Thus, he was able to reach
|
|
Jeremy's prone form quickly.
|
|
|
|
"What happened?" he asked Loretta.
|
|
|
|
"I don't know, Reverend. I think he's on drugs."
|
|
|
|
Reverend Smith glanced around at the knowing, unhappy faces of those
|
|
nearby. The woman was probably right. Slowly, he leaned over the prone
|
|
young man. Jeremy's eyes were rolled back in his head, and his chest
|
|
thrust up fiercely through his dirty T-shirt.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Reverend cleared his throat, and held his right hand up into the
|
|
air. "Lord, I call on you!"
|
|
|
|
The mutterings of the congregation were silenced, as they looked at
|
|
him. He could feel them coming around to him, spiritually. "We have
|
|
here a young man who has lost his way! He has strayed from the green
|
|
pastures of Your love!" He looked around briefly at the surrounding
|
|
people. "And who amongst us has not done that before, my Lord?" There
|
|
were murmurings of agreement. "And since he cannot help himself, my
|
|
Lord, I ask you to do whatever is necessary to lead this man from the
|
|
road to hell that he has set himself upon!" As the "Amen" rose from
|
|
the congregation, Reverend Smith rode the wave of spiritually energy,
|
|
and hit Jeremy hard in the forehead.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Suddenly, everything was clear. The pain. The loss. The drugs.
|
|
Jeremy's eyes snapped open, clear for the first time in years. The
|
|
first face he saw was Reverend Smith's. Instinctively, Jeremy's right
|
|
hand snapped out and grabbed the surprised Reverend's throat. "_WHAT
|
|
HAVE YOU DONE?_" he demanded. Jeremy leapt to his feet, dragging the
|
|
preacher to the floor. His glance swung from side to side, looking for
|
|
an exit, as a cornered animal might. He saw it, and began to push
|
|
through the frightened congregation towards it, screaming all the
|
|
while.
|
|
|
|
"_WHAT HAVE YOU DONE?_"
|
|
_________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
In his apartment, Jeremy threw the door shut, and snapped the locks,
|
|
as the tears rolled down his face. He kept muttering over and over,
|
|
like a litany, "What did they do, what did they do, what did they do?"
|
|
|
|
He stumbled blindly across the room to the counter, to the needle he
|
|
had been preparing just before Loretta arrived. He did shot up
|
|
quickly, his tears spattering on the counter as he did so.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Fifteen minutes later, with the heroin numbing some of his pain,
|
|
Jeremy was able to face what had happened.
|
|
|
|
Four years before, he had been a promising young banker. He'd had a
|
|
beautiful -pregnant- he remembered, with a sob - wife, a house, a car-
|
|
|
|
Jeremy's thoughts broke off. The car had been a red convertible. He'd
|
|
loved that car almost as much as his wife, and the two of them, in her
|
|
fourth month, had decided to go on vacation. Despite what had occurred
|
|
in the basement, he had no memory of what had happened next - although
|
|
he did remember what the car looked like after being run over in a
|
|
highway accident by a tractor-trailer. He touched his head absently,
|
|
as he remembered the head injury. He cursed as he remembered the
|
|
wretched existence since - keeping himself drugged to forget the pain
|
|
of loss - of his wife, his life - and himself. That was the biggest of
|
|
all - in his previous condition, even the memories of his wife and
|
|
existence had been lost completely. But he hadn't been able to hide
|
|
completely from himself what he had once been - and what he could have
|
|
been.
|
|
|
|
|
|
As the night wore on, and Jeremy took more of the heroin, he
|
|
remembered his brother - and vaguely remembered a court hearing at
|
|
which Jeremy had been declared incompetent. His brother had gotten
|
|
control of the money - and promised to send him some every month.
|
|
Jeremy hadn't cared. He collapsed into the bed, and cried with
|
|
frustration, loss, and rage.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Two hours later, hunger woke him up. He arose to put a frozen dinner
|
|
in the microwave, but discovered that, when he put weight on his feet,
|
|
they both hurt. When he sat back down on the bed, and reached down to
|
|
take off his shoes, he noticed the blood on both sides of his hands,
|
|
with some surprise. He discovered that he seemed to have circular
|
|
wounds on both sides of his hands, and the same marks on his feet,
|
|
once he took his shoes and blood-stained socks off. Cursing the pain,
|
|
Jeremy got up to make some food. While he was setting out a pizza, he
|
|
noticed the heroin still sitting on the counter. Remembering its
|
|
properties as a local anesthetic, he rubbed some on both hands and
|
|
feet.
|
|
|
|
|
|
For a while he was numbed, physically, and doped up enough to be
|
|
numbed mentally. In fact, he almost reached his original child- like
|
|
level; 5:00 am found him seated, Indian style, on his bed, passing a
|
|
piece of string through the holes in his feet, and giggling insanely.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Every jag has a crash, and Jeremy's came that morning. He didn't wake
|
|
up for twelve hours, and, by then, it was too late. Heroin and blood
|
|
loss had done their jobs, and he laid in bed, unable to move.
|
|
|
|
Now that he was drug-free and clear, again, Jeremy realized - to a
|
|
certain extent - what had happened. One of the dubious benefits of a
|
|
Catholic school education was knowledge of some spiritual events -
|
|
such as the stigmata, the reproduction of the wounds of Christ on the
|
|
human body. Somewhere in the back of his mind, Jeremy knew that the
|
|
wounds were inaccurate - that the Romans and probably not nailed
|
|
Christ up literally - and that, even if they had, the nails had been
|
|
in the wrists and not in the palms.
|
|
|
|
Jeremy felt his rage building, again. First God had taken his life,
|
|
his love, and, most outrageously, his mind. Now, He saw fit to give
|
|
them back, but only at the expense of Jeremy's body. And only for a
|
|
little while, at that.
|
|
|
|
If he'd had a phone, he might have called for help. If he'd had some
|
|
friends, someone might have dropped in. If - well, if the universe
|
|
were a loving place, perhaps none of it would have happened in the
|
|
first place.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Officer Robin LaRouche was the first into the smelly apartment. Death
|
|
was the most evident smell, followed closely by urine. He wrinkled his
|
|
nose, and looked at his partner, coming in through the broken door.
|
|
"Why can't these guys clean up before they die, Dave?"
|
|
|
|
His partner shook his head.
|
|
|
|
Robin picked his way over to the bed. An emaciated figure was
|
|
stretched out on the blood-stained sheets, rigid in death. "Why do
|
|
these people do this?" he demanded, rhetorically.
|
|
|
|
Dave looked at the dead junkie, arms outstretched, legs together.
|
|
"What's that, man, get killed?"
|
|
|
|
Robin shook his head. "Naw, this idiot's a suicide." He pointed with
|
|
disgust at Jeremy's wounds. "Wounds of Christ. Damned religious
|
|
fanatic."
|
|
|
|
|
|
Loretta peeked nervously in from the hall, and saw the two policemen
|
|
standing over the bed. If she had been Catholic, she would have
|
|
crossed herself. As it was, she merely bowed her head briefly.
|
|
|
|
"But for the grace of God," she murmured softly, "There go I."
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"He's Returned" by Cyntha Anne Foster
|
|
|
|
|
|
He's returned...
|
|
But without the rhymes.
|
|
Only lilacs and reasons
|
|
For the endless succession of time
|
|
And the oncoming of seasons.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"Sestina" by Susan Tefft Fitzgerald
|
|
|
|
|
|
I'm in a dream. We are transported to a beach.
|
|
Crystal blue water rolls on soft white sand. The ocean breeze
|
|
Reggaes with gauzy curtains. Drinks with striped umbrellas
|
|
In hand, we lean against poufy pillows talking
|
|
About our future, laughing about our past, smooth brown skin
|
|
Against smooth brown skin. What a cliche, this dream.
|
|
|
|
I roll over, punch the pillow, relax into another dream.
|
|
We are on the wharf now, not far from the beach,
|
|
Walking hand in hand, side by side. My skin
|
|
Tingles from the sharp sea spray surfing on the breeze.
|
|
Different people, strange shops, good food keep us talking.
|
|
But, wait, now I see umbrellas.
|
|
|
|
Rows upon rows of pink frilly umbrellas
|
|
Tap dancing around me with a crescendo. Is this a dream?
|
|
I am the star of a MGM musical! Gene Kelly and I are talking
|
|
Through song. No, wait, I am dancing on the beach.
|
|
It's "South Pacific"! I'm kissing a gorgeous plantation owner
|
|
and the island breezes
|
|
Call to me and brush my skin.
|
|
|
|
Actually, artic winds chill my skin.
|
|
You commandeered the blanket. I snuggle under the umbrella
|
|
Of warmth and ride the breeze
|
|
Back to the island. No luck. What else can I dream
|
|
About? Let's go back to the beach!
|
|
Yes! No, wait, the trees are talking.
|
|
|
|
No, actually, you are talking.
|
|
"It's six o'clock" and you rub your scruffy chin against my skin.
|
|
I roll over and swim back to the beach.
|
|
I spy bronze men in speedos from underneath the umbrella.
|
|
Yes, this is reality. That other place is the dream.
|
|
You calmly rip away the blanket. I'm naked in the breeze.
|
|
|
|
That damn, cold six o'clock in the morning breeze.
|
|
"What the hell..?" I yelp and jump. "Stop talking."
|
|
You mumble. "You have the starring role in this wonderful dream."
|
|
Dream does become reality. Scruffy skin
|
|
Against chilled skin as you umbrella
|
|
The blanket over us and we settle on the beach.
|
|
|
|
A gentle breeze waltzes over my skin.
|
|
"No talking allowed." you whisper under the umbrella.
|
|
Dreams are wonderful. Life's a bitch.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"Elinor Rigby" by Karen Alkalay-Gut
|
|
|
|
|
|
It was while she was sorting the laundry on Sunday morning
|
|
that she noted that all of her panties were gone.
|
|
There was nothing frilly about them, no sexy codes
|
|
they adhered to - simple black cotton bikinis. No reason
|
|
for anyone to want to add them to some amazing collection.
|
|
Still they were not there. Not a pair remained. And where
|
|
could they have vanished. The man who came to dinner last night
|
|
left early, clicking his heels at the door.
|
|
Had he visited the bathroom, rummaged through
|
|
the hamper, stuffed his pockets with underwear?
|
|
This is what we have come to, she said to the first drawer
|
|
of her cupboard - propriety at dinner/
|
|
true passion alone in our beds - both for me
|
|
and my guest.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"Twilight Dancers" by William C. Burns, Jr.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The soothing quiet descends
|
|
with the twilight
|
|
|
|
Hope rushes within the music
|
|
I invite you to dance
|
|
|
|
Gentle waves rise within tenderness
|
|
painting the shore in shades of deeper hue
|
|
|
|
Exquisite we dance
|
|
descending into the dawn
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"What Gets Me" by Benjamin Parzybok
|
|
|
|
|
|
The bungi parade
|
|
slathers the sky
|
|
with lavering trites.
|
|
And creeps of luck
|
|
philibuster floozies
|
|
who bow and pay homage
|
|
to polite punctuation
|
|
adorned with beer speckles.
|
|
|
|
I've got Ukulele poisoning
|
|
and a Token Ocean--
|
|
and I prance through the town square
|
|
in my shark fin underwear
|
|
selling history
|
|
for five bucks an era
|
|
while a teaspoon of Barking pus
|
|
follows at my heels.
|
|
It's the par cool.
|
|
It's the new wave.
|
|
Don't be a fool--stay hip,
|
|
park your soda and unzip.
|
|
|
|
What gets me is--
|
|
Barking pure blue and
|
|
billowing lines to the sky.
|
|
Singing bow ties,
|
|
dancing green eyes and
|
|
law firms in bondage
|
|
force fed french fries.
|
|
Cucumbers that calculate
|
|
the angles of innocence
|
|
and Broccoli that sells
|
|
the past for clever lies.
|
|
|
|
But See, it's none of the above.
|
|
It's the self-strangled love.
|
|
Or the regret
|
|
of a midnight egret
|
|
circled in yellow yarn
|
|
and not a sock to darn.
|
|
What gets me is the soft cry
|
|
that awakens demon hunger
|
|
and the obscure moan
|
|
that drives meaning asunder.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"Wednesday Afternoon" by Lori Kline
|
|
|
|
|
|
I give you a silent proposition.
|
|
If I taste your
|
|
sweetness, your thighs
|
|
scented in dark fertile earth
|
|
brushed with loam,
|
|
your balls (which contain a sliding world)
|
|
your cockwarm brightness,
|
|
Will you taste my
|
|
lips?
|
|
|
|
You. Are utterly oblivious.
|
|
Sliding pawns across smooth board.
|
|
The dark points of lash &
|
|
blue-jean colored eyes
|
|
I would like to kiss,
|
|
when you are contemplating casually,
|
|
a rook's suicide,
|
|
my body swells and leans
|
|
to you.
|
|
True
|
|
somehow, my nipples have deviously devised
|
|
a path...
|
|
can nipples think? WE ARE AWARE!
|
|
announcing themselves oh
|
|
so
|
|
stiff
|
|
ly
|
|
Chiefly because your nipples taste
|
|
of ripe peaches between my teeth.
|
|
Surprise me.
|
|
Touch gleaming gold in my core.
|
|
Sheen of silver against your
|
|
tongue.
|
|
Checkmate.
|
|
Easily, eagerly
|
|
now,
|
|
give me the contemplation of your eyes-
|
|
I am willing to be caught in your game.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"monet's old studio is a gift shop" by John Adam Kaune
|
|
|
|
|
|
I received the dream of the six gardens:
|
|
wandering the peculiarities of light -
|
|
painting again the damp stacks of hay
|
|
by the edge of the Seine, eating lunch.
|
|
the old man's celebration
|
|
of a simple pond of lilies -
|
|
the reflection of long-armed willows
|
|
hanging limp in remembrance
|
|
of modernity. please, can i return
|
|
to the studio now, so i can buy
|
|
that small reproduction? thank you.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"The Judge" by Doctress Neutopia
|
|
|
|
|
|
_Open Letter_
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
_Dear Geertjan,_
|
|
|
|
It is strange how some people I correspond with begin to mean
|
|
something to me in my everyday thoughts. Our correspondence has done
|
|
something like that to me. I guess it is a result of the things we
|
|
talk about: the revolution, the lovolutionary character, the human
|
|
bond. As of this moment, I must conclude that our bond is that of two
|
|
like-minded individuals who are seeking truth and justice in a world
|
|
founded on injustice and lies. You said that bonding doesn't
|
|
necessarily have to be about love, but need. Now, the question is how
|
|
do _we_ need each other? You are thousands of miles away in South
|
|
Africa. I have never seen you or heard your voice; you are years
|
|
younger than me. How could we possibly need each other?
|
|
|
|
Obviously we don't need each other for our basic daily needs. So then,
|
|
could it be that we need the psychological emotions and information
|
|
that we receive through our letter exchange? Maybe I need your advice
|
|
and your criticism helping me to focus on the positive energy and not
|
|
succumb to cynicism and despair. Maybe I need to know that there are
|
|
other people in the globe who feel as alienated from Western Culture
|
|
as I do. Maybe that is all we can give each other since we live on
|
|
different continents. Maybe all we can do is to exchange letters to
|
|
help each other cope with living in a society which we know is slowing
|
|
killing us.
|
|
|
|
I have been thinking about your idea that the best thing for me to do
|
|
with my life now would be to join a liberal cause, play their game of
|
|
social reform and charity, and wait until the system falls apart to
|
|
then be ready to take over a position to provide us with an
|
|
alternative vision.
|
|
|
|
The problem I have with that is that I have to play their reformist
|
|
game for God knows how long. This means that I would not be taking the
|
|
initiative and creating my own organization (religion) which I think
|
|
could give us an alternative solution to the problem. The point is
|
|
that I have tried to work with liberal groups in the past for one
|
|
cause or another like the anti-apartheid group or the anti-nuclear
|
|
group or the group for sustainable economics, but their visions are so
|
|
specialized and focused that they are not able to see the depth of the
|
|
social problems. They don't want to go to the root causes and then to
|
|
fix them with radical solutions. Racism, classism, sexism, and ageism
|
|
are spiritual diseases and they will only be solved by spiritual means
|
|
which is why I have focused so much of my studies on the matter of the
|
|
heart and soul.
|
|
|
|
In _Power and Innocence_ Rollo May writes, "The breakdown of
|
|
communication is a spiritual one." He says that words get their
|
|
communicative power for the fact that they participate in symbols.
|
|
This creates a Gestalt, a symbol gets a numinous quality which carries
|
|
across to one some meaning from the emotions of another (75). Nelson
|
|
Mandela became a powerful speaker who people listened to because he
|
|
was a symbol of the liberation movement. Through the power of the
|
|
symbol, Mandela was able to change the way people thought and to make
|
|
them conscious of the injustice of apartheid.
|
|
|
|
Let me say a few more words about following the liberal agenda. This
|
|
summer I had a man (the Sheik) interested in forming a personal
|
|
relationship with me. As a liberal working on an advanced degree in
|
|
accounting, he could see the vast inequality with the world's wealth
|
|
and understood that what was happening in the United States was that
|
|
there was becoming two classes of people, the very rich who rule the
|
|
networks of the global corporation, and the poor. The Sheik gave his
|
|
money to liberal organizations. He wanted to make enough money in his
|
|
life to be able to have time to be able to enjoy life: support a
|
|
family, sail, take trips. He would listen to my ideas and seemed to
|
|
appreciate what I had to say.
|
|
|
|
I realized that we were not compatible because of our different
|
|
perspectives on life when we took a walk through a grave yard one
|
|
afternoon. We rested on a tree stump and before us was a large grave
|
|
stone which read _JUDGE_ on it. There was a small American flag beside
|
|
it as so many of the other stones had beside them to mark that they
|
|
had been US war veterans. I playfully took the flag from the holder
|
|
and dramatically ripped the flag from the stick and began using it as
|
|
a primitive drawing tool. I began to sketch out something that looked
|
|
like an Outerspace Creature from a UFO.
|
|
|
|
The Sheik got very upset with me and demanded that I put the flag back
|
|
in its proper place beside the grave. With a stern and, I must say,
|
|
inhuman expression, he said that I was violating the rules by
|
|
destroying the flag. I said that it was the wish of the dead that war,
|
|
nationalism, and the plutocracy be stopped. To this end we should tear
|
|
down all flags and bury them in the middle of the grave yard. The
|
|
Sheik said that I would be breaking the law and that for him that was
|
|
unacceptable behavior. He thought the laws of the United States were
|
|
just and that it was the people's fault that they were not working. I
|
|
said that I believed that the laws of the land were not fair since the
|
|
only way to have freedom in America was if you had money to pay for
|
|
it. The law protected the rich property owners and the United States
|
|
did not stand for human rights. Through boycotting and civil
|
|
disobedience to the laws were some of the ways I thought that we could
|
|
work to change the injustice.
|
|
|
|
But the Sheik thought it was always wrong to break the law and if the
|
|
law was unjust the people must work through the system in order to
|
|
change it. For him, working through the system was the only way to
|
|
effect change. He thought any other way would lead to social anarchy.
|
|
"What about the tactics of Martin Luther King or Mahatma Gandhi?" I
|
|
asked. "They broke the law in order to follow the Cosmic Law of human
|
|
justice." The Sheik thought that was the same thing that the right
|
|
wing had done in the Iran-Contra deals when Oliver North broke the
|
|
laws because he thought he must support the war in Central America in
|
|
order to protect American interests.
|
|
|
|
I tried to explain to him that what the left-wing was doing was _not_
|
|
the same thing as that of the right-wing since they were struggling
|
|
for completely different worldviews which were in opposition to one
|
|
other. The right-wing were into greed, nuclear family values, and
|
|
supported Corporate America. The left-wing was into (whether they know
|
|
it or not) creating a new world based on universal health care,
|
|
Neutopian actucation (the enactment of education), and rebuilding the
|
|
cities into arcologies.
|
|
|
|
The Sheik became very militaristic in his demands that I put the flag
|
|
back. Even after I told him that I needed the stick in order to draw
|
|
out a blueprint for Neutopia, he said he would not walk back to the
|
|
house with me if I didn't follow his orders. So right there at the
|
|
Judge's grave, I had to make up my mind as to whether or not to go on
|
|
with his wish; after all, he as going to be an accountant and he _did_
|
|
find me, a poor artist, attractive; and we had "grinded pelvis"
|
|
together. So I told him that I would follow his orders if he would
|
|
listen to my speech about why I had this burning desire to burn every
|
|
nation-state flag that I saw. There wasn't much lively energy from him
|
|
at the time, so my speech basically consisted of me throwing the flag
|
|
over my head. He then retrieved it and put it back on the stick and
|
|
stuck it into the ground beside the _JUDGE_.
|
|
|
|
We walked back to his apartment as he talked about world politics and
|
|
the poverty stricken nations. We smoked some pot together (really, I
|
|
am trying to quit) and then kissed and hugged each other. But the
|
|
passion did not last long. I knew in my soul I was not a liberal---I
|
|
didn't believe in the United States government or global capitalism. I
|
|
kicked myself for again getting into bed with a man who I could not
|
|
love because he would not join me in my lovolutionary crusade of
|
|
building Neutopia.
|
|
|
|
The next day we went to see Dr. Helen Caldicott speak at Smith College
|
|
on nuclear waste dumps. Her vision of the future was a very grave one
|
|
of families having to support children with severe genetic mutations
|
|
(like no arms and legs) and a world where clean water, air, and soil
|
|
were hard to find. She informed us that the food in Europe is
|
|
contaminated with the poisons which resulted from the Chernobyl
|
|
nuclear power accident. Oh no, I thought to myself. I bet I had eaten
|
|
contaminated food when I was in the Soviet Union in 1989 when I took a
|
|
trip there with my parents! Those poor Europeans! What are we to do?
|
|
|
|
Helen asked the audience what we could do to change the situation. She
|
|
believed we needed another American Revolution. She asked us how many
|
|
of us were dedicated to ending nuclear power this year. Out of a
|
|
couple of hundred people only about ten hands went up. My hand was one
|
|
of those hands while the Sheik's had remain low. He had his excuse for
|
|
not wanting to work to stop nuclear power. After all, he was a
|
|
graduate student in accounting with much school work to do. He didn't
|
|
have time to work on an anti-nuclear campaign while trying to finish
|
|
up his degree. Without that degree, he thought he would not be able to
|
|
buy the American standard of living, which Oliver North was fighting
|
|
to protect.
|
|
|
|
The last time I talked with the Sheik was over the telephone. He
|
|
called me to invite me over to spend some time with him. He said that
|
|
there was going to be a championship hockey game on TV that night and
|
|
he wanted me to watch the game with him. He said that we could talk
|
|
about ideas during the commercials. So I told him that I wasn't
|
|
interested in hockey games and that my time was too valuable to spend
|
|
in that way. After all, I had pledged to stop nuclear power and there
|
|
was no time to waste.
|
|
|
|
Geertjan, I hope that you can see what _kind_ of man I need. He is not
|
|
a liberal, but a rebel. Rollo May writes, "For the rebel function is
|
|
necessary as the life-blood of culture, as the very roots of
|
|
civilization" (220). May makes a distinction between the rebel and the
|
|
revolutionary which I feel is somewhat unnecessary. He says that the
|
|
chief goal of the rebel is not to overthrow the government which, of
|
|
course, she or he could also support, but what is more important is
|
|
her or his commitment to the vision. He writes,
|
|
|
|
We also note the startling regularity through history with which
|
|
society martyrs the rebel in one generation and worships him [sic]
|
|
in the next. Socrates, Jesus, William Blake, Buddha, Krisha--the
|
|
list is endless as it is rich. If we look more closely at the first
|
|
two, we shall see how the rebel typically challenges the citizenry
|
|
with his [sic] vision" (224).
|
|
|
|
The vision brings us out of the vicious circle of bloody revolutionary
|
|
after bloody revolution. May continues,
|
|
|
|
The slave who kills his master is an example of the revolutionary.
|
|
He can then only take his master's place and be killed in turn by
|
|
later revolutionaries. But the rebel is the one who realizes that
|
|
the master is as much imprisoned, if not as painfully, as he is by
|
|
the institution of slavery; he rebels against the system which
|
|
permits slaves and masters. His rebellion, if successful, saves the
|
|
master also from the indignity of owning slaves" (222).
|
|
|
|
In today's world, the slave owners are the owners of Corporate
|
|
America. Everyone who works for them are their slaves. In the recent
|
|
issue of _Newsweek_ (July 11, 1994) Bill Gates, who they call the
|
|
"Tech King" is described as a competitive, controlling, money-hungry
|
|
plutocrat who wants to rule the world through his computer empire and
|
|
his Microserfs. His vision is to "lure millions of people into
|
|
Microsoft's lane of the coming Information Highway: home banking, home
|
|
shopping, entertainment and electronic mail." Michael Meyer for
|
|
_Newsweek_ writes, "The future, increasingly, is Hollywood:
|
|
"edutainment," home videos, home everything." "Edutainment," a word
|
|
they coined combining the words education and entertainment, all
|
|
geared to brainwashing the minds of the youth with the principles of
|
|
the Tech King: competition, materialism, and monotheism. The
|
|
plutocratic vision is to make the Internet, not into an world
|
|
community of love and knowledge, but to use it to sell Microserf
|
|
products and to seduce us with their "edutainment."
|
|
|
|
Now, do you think Bill Gates and his cult is concerned with the
|
|
billion or so people throughout the world who don't have any homes? Do
|
|
you think in his "master plan" he is planning out a way to create a
|
|
world without poverty, a world based on compassionate justice? I don't
|
|
think so.
|
|
|
|
While I was visiting my parents in North Carolina last week there was
|
|
a front page article printed in the _Greensboro News and Record_ (June
|
|
30, 1994) about the Grandover Resort, being developed by the Koury
|
|
Corporation, which they describe as the "nation's first fully
|
|
computer-integrated and automated community." Grandover will be
|
|
composed of "two championship golf courses, 14 championship tennis
|
|
courts, golf and tennis clubs, a health club, a 900-room conference
|
|
center and hotel, retail villages and restaurants." There will also be
|
|
2,000 single-family homes-- generally selling for $300,000 and up.
|
|
Easy to use touch screens will allow residents to access "a variety of
|
|
entertainment, communications and building automations." It sounds
|
|
like paradise for the rich, right? To keep out all those poor, begging
|
|
intruders, the computer will control sophisticated security systems
|
|
(programmed to kill any foreign intruders). So the feudal kings are
|
|
beginning to rebuild their castle fortresses while half the world is
|
|
starving to death. Bill Gates and his Microserfs do not have the
|
|
saving vision. The saving vision must be a plan to save everyone.
|
|
|
|
I see a different kind of global culture, Neutopia, being built from
|
|
the fruits of advanced technology and the wisdom of ecology. Through
|
|
virtual reality, a new kind of community is evolving. New kinds of
|
|
human relationships are coming together as people begin to bond to
|
|
common interests, through email, listserves, Usenet newsgroups, etc.
|
|
As you have said in a previous letter, I am not a prototype for
|
|
feeling alienation from Western civilization. There are people all
|
|
over the world who feel the same alienation, isolation, and loneliness
|
|
as I do. Those of us who are online now have a way to reach each
|
|
other. We now can band together in virtual space. But is this the
|
|
community that we need?
|
|
|
|
Can we live happy lives in a virtual world where we don't need to
|
|
physically touch the people who we love? When we, peace comrades, are
|
|
so spread out all over the capitalist world, is virtual space the only
|
|
thing that we can hope for? All I can say to this is that it is
|
|
difficult to live strictly in one's dream world and imagination. It is
|
|
difficult to have virtual lovers in only the mind and not in the
|
|
flesh.
|
|
|
|
Geertjan, I don't really know what the answer is. I don't feel like a
|
|
free person, but a slave, powerless to change my polluted environment,
|
|
powerless to move beyond the single-family house, powerless to follow
|
|
my dreams and make them real. I have no desire to follow the liberal
|
|
cause, but to start an organization of Neutopian thinkers who can also
|
|
see their unique way to the Solar Jerusalem. I don't have all the
|
|
pieces to the puzzle of life. How to start a mass movement so that we
|
|
will have the energy and enthusiasm to build arcologies is still a
|
|
mystery to me. This is the saving vision I see for the world, but how
|
|
to get there? Without true love in my life, I feel that I am blind.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"Disclaimer" by Michael A. Simanoff
|
|
|
|
|
|
Warning:
|
|
This story has no moral.
|
|
|
|
It has very little literary value.
|
|
It tells a strand of a story,
|
|
barely,
|
|
and if you tug very hard you might find a point.
|
|
You will not find this story in a textbook one day.
|
|
Nor will it ever be the subject of scholarly debate.
|
|
|
|
This story has no context.
|
|
The background is a piece of paper-
|
|
maybe even a computer screen.
|
|
The only literary devices used are language and form,
|
|
but you are advised not to ask how.
|
|
|
|
In fact, you ought not to read this.
|
|
Just lean back and look at the pretty letters.
|
|
Maybe even have a drink.
|
|
Turn on the TV.
|
|
|
|
Expect very little
|
|
and you won't be disappointed.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"You can meditate in this mess?" by Michael Stutz
|
|
|
|
|
|
I asked me
|
|
going into my dirty
|
|
room all clothes every-
|
|
where and boxes --
|
|
So I sat down and
|
|
got in the
|
|
lotus position.
|
|
Yeah, I said, watching
|
|
me sit down and
|
|
I did.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"Room" by Karen Alkalay-Gut
|
|
|
|
|
|
I would like to be photographed
|
|
naked in this room
|
|
parts of my body
|
|
shading parts of these stones
|
|
a foot on concrete
|
|
arm along the arch
|
|
breast pressed to the wallstones
|
|
In the depths of this darkness
|
|
the spears of sharp, real light,
|
|
I would like my naked body
|
|
documented.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"What lengths must my children go to rebel when I'm 50" by Dave Zappala
|
|
|
|
|
|
I can see it now
|
|
I'll be a successful door-to-door existentialist
|
|
and at one point my children would have refered to me as 'dada'
|
|
and I would have sterilized their wounds with a painful,
|
|
burning solution, so they could feel it working
|
|
and I'll vote religiously
|
|
and my wife will be president
|
|
and our first cat would be able to defy gravity
|
|
hovering around the living room like that
|
|
I'll be crazed and happy, riding my bicycle around town
|
|
collecting treasures and offering bites off my sandwiches
|
|
Harvey, of course, will be gluing cherrystone clams together
|
|
in a big ball and dropping it off the roof every March 9th.
|
|
Ahh Bliss. One great orgasmic sneeze.
|
|
So what could my sweaty teenagers do
|
|
to undermine my society?
|
|
get boring, get serious, get symbolic
|
|
get,get,get, get,get, get
|
|
Fah! I used to run around spinning a peach basket over my head
|
|
because everything looked like an old movie
|
|
and I used to come home and my mother wouldn't believe my story
|
|
of how I got splinters in my shoulders.
|
|
Nothing mattered much then when DuPont kept exploding like that
|
|
rattling and breaking dishes, a crack down every ceiling in town
|
|
people died then and the rest died a year after they retired
|
|
my older brother thought there was a war with DuPont
|
|
and I fell onto a floor scattered with Leggos
|
|
however I have no Leggo scars to show
|
|
I'll be prepared on all sides for their adolescent angst
|
|
>From that damned music and their drop-out friends
|
|
except for one thing...
|
|
That damned food in their hair
|
|
Kidney beans, sauces, and other condiments just rotting
|
|
and dried into their stiff locks
|
|
No, they just get into the car
|
|
spend more money to symbolize the waste of our system
|
|
Maybe I should've slapped 'em around
|
|
They were always strange
|
|
They had to be the kid who would eat anything for a nickel
|
|
when they could've at least got a dime.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"Between the Hiatus" by Maree Anne Jaeger
|
|
|
|
|
|
You would bang at
|
|
the closed blue lids of my silence
|
|
|
|
While, in this makeshift womb
|
|
Dionysus, Orpheus and others were
|
|
trying to ripen.
|
|
|
|
Between the hiatus;
|
|
gossamer lines stretched
|
|
around houses
|
|
over oceans
|
|
somehow still joined
|
|
like stars strung out
|
|
thinly
|
|
on my night sky.
|
|
|
|
Between the hiatus;
|
|
I would look at you
|
|
and separate
|
|
|
|
your yolk
|
|
|
|
from my white.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"speaking of the secret" by Karen Alkalay-Gut
|
|
|
|
|
|
(with thanks to T'ai Dang)
|
|
|
|
I
|
|
|
|
Karen
|
|
of the book
|
|
manufactured
|
|
by an increasingly
|
|
sophisticated story teller
|
|
who believes
|
|
each legend
|
|
and builds
|
|
sequels
|
|
sometimes changing
|
|
even the creation myth
|
|
- and beginning again
|
|
|
|
II
|
|
|
|
The switched valise
|
|
in Victoria Station
|
|
a romance manuscript
|
|
in place of the child
|
|
-- text
|
|
growing
|
|
organically
|
|
|
|
III
|
|
|
|
Who are you?
|
|
Tell me your
|
|
story
|
|
No. Smile
|
|
and be silent.
|
|
I'll make it up
|
|
myself
|
|
|
|
IV
|
|
|
|
My man
|
|
never gives me such stark
|
|
facts, threads
|
|
his tongue in my mouth.
|
|
|
|
V
|
|
|
|
I want to tell you the truth
|
|
I want to look good.
|
|
The two
|
|
are incompatible.
|
|
|
|
VI
|
|
|
|
I see you dancing
|
|
a tiny man naked
|
|
in white light
|
|
everything about you
|
|
is ink
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"Custer is not here" by John Adam Kaune
|
|
|
|
|
|
I stand in a crowd - listening
|
|
to interpreters tell us of the loss -
|
|
all around us is Lament.
|
|
|
|
old men circle the guide
|
|
telling him of their great-
|
|
great-grandfather's
|
|
uncle twice removed.
|
|
|
|
Custer is not here.
|
|
he's laying low at West Point.
|
|
the irony escapes them -
|
|
WWII & Vietnam vets
|
|
can claim a part of this sacred soil -
|
|
to tell the passing public
|
|
of their want for proximity to the mass grave
|
|
once removed. Atop the hill
|
|
|
|
where the ants scurry to and fro
|
|
with Panasonic camcorders.
|
|
"take a still picture," I think, "for this
|
|
in no time will move." your memory of it
|
|
hangs dry in your mind. I myself,
|
|
I'm just a wandering Canadian
|
|
who happens to study the history
|
|
of this anomaly known as America.
|
|
so they tell me "they worship him
|
|
'cause he lost big time." led his men
|
|
to death. screwed up. don't know why.
|
|
|
|
that hangs heavy in my ears
|
|
as I pass through two-dimensional towns
|
|
of the Cheyenne reserve lands
|
|
to the forest named after this in/famous man.
|
|
It has long since burnt, as did the fields
|
|
of Little Bighorn - to show the remains.
|
|
To show the remains.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"Pool Night" by Leland Ray
|
|
|
|
|
|
It's late afternoon, I'm waiting for the girl to arrive, and the cat
|
|
is helping me make up the bed. The bed is too close to the wall and to
|
|
the dresser at the foot, so when I need to go around it to stretch the
|
|
fitted sheet up to the head I have to bend over the bed with my back
|
|
to the dresser to avoid the windowsill next to the dresser. The cat
|
|
watches until I'm balanced in this somewhat uncomfortable position,
|
|
not quite leaning over enough to fall forward onto the bed, and then
|
|
she jumps onto the bed near the foot, dead center, holding the sheet
|
|
down to the mattress.
|
|
|
|
When I pull on the corner of the sheet she tries to catch the wrinkles
|
|
as they float away from her like waves. This action of hers, this
|
|
lying on the bed, will leave a wrinkled place on the sheet which will
|
|
stay where she is now; I want the sheet to be completely, perfectly
|
|
straight, flat, the Navaho pattern laid out as precisely as if it were
|
|
a sand painting. I worry about the wrinkled spot even though another
|
|
sheet and a comforter will go over the sheet.
|
|
|
|
I say "Shoo" to the cat, whose name is Murphy, and she looks up at me
|
|
and meows. She's smiling, I think. I say it louder and make a shooing
|
|
motion with the backs of my hands toward her, and she explodes off the
|
|
bed and out of the room; I decide I was foolish to arrange the
|
|
furniture like this, and of the two bedrooms this is the smaller, and
|
|
why didn't I go ahead and set up the larger as a bedroom instead of as
|
|
a combination library and office?
|
|
|
|
She doesn't bother me again, and I hear her in the hallway playing
|
|
with her gray catnip mouse; the bell on its tail tinkles, and when the
|
|
doorbell rings I stand there by the bed and wonder how she got the
|
|
little round bell to sound so loudly and rapidly. The confusion
|
|
passes, and I go to the door of the house which I rented when my wife
|
|
and I divorced. As I walk to the door I imagine the house as it must
|
|
look from an airplane: the small house with a pool in the back taking
|
|
up the entire backyard and the tall wooden privacy fence around the
|
|
pool; the front yard stretching out to the blacktop road in front; the
|
|
driveway leading down to the road and the two large mimosa trees in
|
|
the yard, one on either side of a cast-iron loveseat painted red.
|
|
|
|
At the door is my daughter Mandy. The afternoon sun frames her in the
|
|
doorway, and when I stand back from the door to let her in I can see
|
|
the outline of her body through the light cotton dress she wears. "Hi,
|
|
Daddy," she says, and I stand for a second looking at her before
|
|
answering.
|
|
|
|
"Hey, baby," I say, and she lets me hug her and kiss her on the crown
|
|
of her head; her hair is long enough to reach her slender hips. "I
|
|
didn't expect to see you today." When I say this she looks confused
|
|
until I add, "But it's always good to have you visit," and then she
|
|
smiles and goes over to the sofa to sit down. Her shoulders are tanned
|
|
and lightly freckled. I worry about her, that she is too beautiful,
|
|
that some man will hurt her, that she is sexually active already.
|
|
Mandy is seventeen, almost eighteen, a young woman just graduated from
|
|
high school and taking the summer off before college in the fall.
|
|
|
|
"Are you okay, Daddy? You look like you've got something on your
|
|
mind."
|
|
|
|
"I was fixing up the house a little. I have company coming tonight." I
|
|
sit down in the comfortable armchair which sits at an angle to the
|
|
sofa.
|
|
|
|
She leans forward with her hands on her knees and the neckline of her
|
|
dress falls open a bit, and I can see the upper swell of her breasts.
|
|
"Hot date, huh?" she says, and I wonder if it's appropriate for me as
|
|
her father to mention to her that I think she should be wearing a bra
|
|
under such a sheer dress. Her mother takes care of her, I think, and
|
|
then I feel better. No less protective, just less worried.
|
|
|
|
"Yes. A date," I say. "She'll be here in a little while."
|
|
|
|
"Good for you. I'm glad you're trying to have a social life." She
|
|
looks at me and smiles. "Mom and I were afraid you'd lock yourself up
|
|
out here and never do anything."
|
|
|
|
When she says this I think how much I love her and her mother and wish
|
|
we could have stayed together. "What brings you all the way out here?"
|
|
I ask. "Just want to see your dad?"
|
|
|
|
"Yeah, mostly. And to give you a message from Mom. She says you still
|
|
need to sign those papers for me to get into school."
|
|
|
|
I am a history professor at a small university. It is an exclusive
|
|
place, very expensive. They allow the children of tenured faculty to
|
|
attend school for half tuition, and I have to sign a paper which
|
|
states, among other things, that this is my daughter, and yes, that I
|
|
love her, that I claim her as my own. "I haven't signed them, but I
|
|
will, and you can take them with you," I say. I have forgotten about
|
|
the papers, as if signing them is an avowal that I have wondered about
|
|
the heritage of this beautiful young woman or ever doubted my love for
|
|
her. "I'll get them for you," I say.
|
|
|
|
I go back to the larger of the two bedrooms and rummage through the
|
|
student papers on the desk; the forms I must sign are under an essay
|
|
by Monica Dodd, a sophomore in one of my just completed spring
|
|
classes. I look at the paper, which is about George Washington's
|
|
expense accounts. I sign the form which claims, certifies, declares,
|
|
states that I love my daughter. I sign in triplicate for the academic
|
|
advisement office, the business office, the dean's office, then fold
|
|
the papers lengthwise and walk back to my daughter in the living room.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The cat is sitting in Mandy's lap when I return, and Mandy is
|
|
scratching the cat's ears. "Nice kitty," Mandy says, though I am not
|
|
sure whether she is addressing me or the cat. "How long have you had
|
|
her?"
|
|
|
|
"A couple of weeks," I say. "She was an orphan, I think. I got her at
|
|
the animal shelter." They have many cats there of all kinds, I want to
|
|
tell my daughter, and she can have one if she wants. I will take her
|
|
there to pick out a cat.
|
|
|
|
"She's sweet," Mandy says. The cat looks up at her and smiles. "What's
|
|
her name?"
|
|
|
|
"Name? I haven't given her a name yet," I say. "What do you think?"
|
|
|
|
"Scarlett. Like Scarlett O'Hara." She rubs the cat's head and makes
|
|
kissing noises. "How do you like that for a name, Scarlett-kitty?"
|
|
|
|
The cat doesn't seem to care one way or another, so I say, "That's a
|
|
good name. It fits her personality to a t. Yes, to a t." I hope the
|
|
cat hasn't gotten used to Murphy yet, but it is my daughter's wish
|
|
that the cat be called Scarlett.
|
|
|
|
I have the papers still; Mandy reaches over and takes them. "I've got
|
|
to go, Daddy. Kevin's taking me to a movie tonight and I have to get
|
|
ready." She stands up and the cat jumps down. Mandy brushes black cat
|
|
hair off her white cotton dress. "I'll see you in a few days. Maybe at
|
|
school, huh?"
|
|
|
|
"It's too late to start the summer session," I say. I want her to stay
|
|
and talk to me, my only child who is growing up too fast for me to
|
|
bear.
|
|
|
|
"I was going to be over there for the Earlybird orientation next week.
|
|
And besides, I can drop in and see you at the office, can't I? Just
|
|
because I want to?"
|
|
|
|
I hadn't thought of this, how she could just want to see me, and I am
|
|
glad. "Sure," I say. She reaches out to give me a hug, then kisses me
|
|
on the cheek. I ask, "Do you need any money? For clothes or anything?"
|
|
It seems a silly gesture, superficial somehow, but it is all I can
|
|
offer her except my love, and she has that.
|
|
|
|
"No, but thanks anyhow. Mom and I went out three times in the last
|
|
couple of weeks and bought clothes. All I'm going to need is books,
|
|
and Mom says I could ask you about those."
|
|
|
|
"Certainly," I say. Books. I want to be a daily part of her life
|
|
again, but all I can do is buy books. "Well," I say.
|
|
|
|
"Well," she says, and then she is gone. The cat tries to follow her
|
|
out, but I stop her by putting my foot out, and she shies away from
|
|
the foot and goes back to her food dish in the kitchen. I hear the
|
|
crunching of the hard dry food. She is a good cat; I should be better
|
|
to her.
|
|
|
|
Just as I'm hearing the crunching from the kitchen and the whine of
|
|
Mandy's car leaving, the little foreign sports car I bought for her
|
|
last year, there is a knock at the door, and I am standing right
|
|
there, so I open the door and there is Monica Dodd, sophomore. "Hello,
|
|
Dr. Lear," she says. "I hope I'm not too early, but you said
|
|
seven-ish."
|
|
|
|
She is a pretty girl, and while I am not in the habit of inviting
|
|
students, especially pretty female students, into my home, I did
|
|
invite her here for dinner. She did well in my class, except for
|
|
missing classes on Fridays when the sun was bright and the weather
|
|
warm. Younger students will go out and socialize on Fridays, beginning
|
|
the weekend early. This was Monica's problem, her only one,
|
|
scholastically speaking. I hold the door for her. "I'm glad you could
|
|
make it," I say. "Did you have any trouble finding the house?"
|
|
|
|
"You gave good directions. No problem at all." She is wearing tight,
|
|
very short cutoff blue jeans and a peasant-style cotton top much like
|
|
the top of the dress which my daughter was wearing. "I met your
|
|
daughter on my way in," Monica says. "Does she go to college?"
|
|
|
|
"Would you like something to drink?" I ask. "She's starting in the
|
|
fall," I say.
|
|
|
|
"Do you have some white wine? I love white wine."
|
|
|
|
I go into the kitchen and open the refrigerator and push aside
|
|
mayonnaise and the pot of soup I cooked a few days ago. Lying on its
|
|
side against the back wall on the top shelf is part of a bottle of
|
|
Zinfandel, which I remove and open. I take two glasses and return to
|
|
the living room. Monica has found a piece of string and is trying to
|
|
get the cat's attention. When I walk in Monica looks up at me and the
|
|
cat strikes with a forepaw. Scarlett the cat catches the string and
|
|
runs away to hide behind the couch. "Ouch," Monica says. A bright drop
|
|
of blood grows on her forefinger. "She got me," Monica says and puts
|
|
the finger in her mouth and sucks hard on it.
|
|
|
|
The girl is not seriously hurt, but while I search the bathroom for
|
|
disinfectant and bandages I wonder whether the cut can get infected
|
|
and worry about my homeowner's liability coverage. In the living room
|
|
again with Band-Aids and peroxide and a tube of something which is
|
|
advertised to speed healing of small wounds, I attempt to administer
|
|
first aid, but do a poor job it; I ruin one bandage when the tape
|
|
falls across the gauze pad and cannot be removed. "Let me do this,"
|
|
Monica says, "and you can get me a glass of wine." I pour the wine
|
|
into glasses. "It'll kill the pain," she says, and smiles.
|
|
|
|
I give her a glass. Her finger shows a neat pink band of sterilized
|
|
plastic. "I'm sorry about the cat. She hasn't gotten used to people
|
|
yet." Monica sips her wine, the bandaged finger sticking out like a
|
|
rebuke.
|
|
|
|
"Don't worry. We have six cats at home, and sometimes they do these
|
|
things." She shifts the glass to her uninjured hand and holds the
|
|
finger up to look at it. "They usually don't mean anything by it."
|
|
|
|
"Okay. If you're not worried, that is." I, of course, am worried. I
|
|
worry about her getting an infection, about a lawsuit over the
|
|
infection, about the regents discovering that a forty year-old
|
|
professor has invited a nineteen-year-old female student to his home
|
|
for dinner and wine. I worry about my daughter, who is just two years
|
|
younger. Soon she will be living away from home, and the world is full
|
|
of dangers which I can warn her about.
|
|
|
|
"So do I get a guided tour of the house?" Monica asks. She stands up
|
|
and holds the wineglass close against her chest and begins to look
|
|
around the room.
|
|
|
|
"There's not much to see. It's a small house." The house is a
|
|
long-term lease from a friend in the English Department who has moved
|
|
to Africa, where he is teaching Kenyan students about James Joyce and
|
|
William Faulkner. He still makes payments on the house, and I
|
|
reimburse him each month. People have asked why I do not go ahead and
|
|
buy the house, but I cannot tell them the answer. Perhaps I am looking
|
|
for something else, perhaps not. I do not know, but my problem may be
|
|
that buying a house would be an admission of failure in my marriage. I
|
|
do not know. "I thought we could barbecue some steaks for dinner," I
|
|
say.
|
|
|
|
"Neat. Lead on."
|
|
|
|
We go out into the backyard, where I have already prepared the gas
|
|
grill and have the steaks in an ice chest next to the grill. The
|
|
steaks are marinating in teriyaki sauce and a little garlic. "I didn't
|
|
tell you about the pool, did I?" I ask.
|
|
|
|
She seems impressed by the pool. She goes to a lounge chair and sits
|
|
on the edge sipping her wine. "No, you didn't. If I'd known I could
|
|
have brought a suit." She is pretty, with long red hair tied at the
|
|
back in a loose ponytail, and her eyes are green, much like the cat's.
|
|
|
|
|
|
"I thought my daughter could have friends over," I say. I turn away
|
|
from her and open the grill. "How do you like your steak?"
|
|
|
|
"Medium-well, I guess. I'm not much into meat."
|
|
|
|
I turn back to her. "We could go out, if you like. Or there's salad.
|
|
Lots of salad. A big bowl."
|
|
|
|
She laughs and shakes her head. "I live in the dorm, and the meat
|
|
there is soybean. It's really gross. I love steak." She stands up.
|
|
"Mind if I get another glass of wine?" She holds the glass out; it's
|
|
nearly empty.
|
|
|
|
"Sure, it's in the refrigerator."
|
|
|
|
She starts toward the sliding door, then stops and turns. "Would you
|
|
like something?" Her cutoffs are short, and in the late-afternoon
|
|
light I can see very fine reddish-blond hairs on her thighs glowing
|
|
like tiny fires.
|
|
|
|
"No." I hold up my glass, which I've barely touched. "There's a bottle
|
|
of something in the cabinet under the sink." She stands there looking
|
|
at me. "I think the corkscrew is in the silverware drawer," I say.
|
|
|
|
"Okay," she says, and leaves into the house.
|
|
|
|
The grill is easy to use. Turn on the gas and get the heavy cast-iron
|
|
grill part hot, then put on the steaks. But for some reason tonight it
|
|
won't start. I use up half a box of matches before I realize the gas
|
|
is barely on, so I reach down and open the valve on the tank a little
|
|
further. This cures the problem, and when Monica gets back the fire is
|
|
started and I'm getting the steaks out of the plastic container in the
|
|
ice chest. Below the ice are twelve cans of beer which I bought
|
|
earlier in the day.
|
|
|
|
"Why don't I put this on ice and then we won't have to go inside until
|
|
it's time to eat," she says. She's got a bottle of Burgundy and the
|
|
corkscrew.
|
|
|
|
"Burgundy doesn't need to be too cool," I say. "But it's so warm
|
|
outside it wouldn't hurt to put it on top of the ice."
|
|
|
|
"You've got beer, too," she says when she kneels down to put the wine
|
|
away. Her legs are strong and well-shaped. She's a beautiful girl.
|
|
|
|
"Yeah. The beer. I didn't know what you'd like, and then I forgot it
|
|
was here until I got the steaks out."
|
|
|
|
She stands up and looks at me. "You're not going to try getting me
|
|
drunk, are you, David?" She must understand from my return look that
|
|
this is not the case, because then she winks and says, "I was just
|
|
kidding. You wouldn't do something like that, would you?"
|
|
|
|
"No," I say, but if the regents found out about Monica's visit, this
|
|
would be the first thing on their minds. "I just figured you're used
|
|
to beer at parties and things," I tell her. The steaks are beginning
|
|
to sizzle, and this gives me the opportunity to check them with the
|
|
long-tined fork.
|
|
|
|
"Yeah, beer's okay, but wine's sort of . . . more sophisticated,
|
|
somehow."
|
|
|
|
"I like wine, but I don't drink much of it. It's for company." The two
|
|
bottles have been here for over two months; I opened the Zinfandel two
|
|
weeks ago and drank it with a microwave dinner. "The white's been
|
|
opened for a while," I say. "How is it?"
|
|
|
|
She sits on the lounge chair again. "I wouldn't know if it's good or
|
|
not, really. I don't drink it too often."
|
|
|
|
"The steaks will be ready in a little bit," I say. "If you'll watch
|
|
them for just a minute I'll go get the salad. Unless you'd like to eat
|
|
inside, that is."
|
|
|
|
"It's nice out here. Let's stay."
|
|
|
|
Inside I get the salad bowl and set it on the kitchen counter. The cat
|
|
jumps up and puts her nose to the plastic wrap covering the top, and I
|
|
say "No, kitty. No, Scarlett," and the cat looks at me and meows. I
|
|
get her some dry food from the cabinet above the sink and pour some
|
|
into her bowl. She jumps down and sniffs at the food, then looks up at
|
|
me and opens her mouth as if she's going to say something, but she
|
|
doesn't. The phone rings, and it startles me. I get the wall phone and
|
|
answer, "Lear residence."
|
|
|
|
"Daddy? I just wanted to call and ask if everything was okay."
|
|
|
|
"Sure, baby. Things are fine. Why should you worry?" I feel good to
|
|
think she's concerned about me, but her tone makes me feel like a
|
|
child.
|
|
|
|
"I was just wondering," she says. There's another voice on her end, in
|
|
the background, and she says something soft which I don't catch. "I
|
|
met your friend when I was there a little while ago. She's kind of
|
|
young, isn't she?"
|
|
|
|
"She's not a student, if that's what you're thinking," I say. I am not
|
|
lying to her. Monica is an ex-student now. "We're just about to have
|
|
dinner, in fact." I realize I'm not making much sense, but I don't
|
|
want my daughter talking to me right now. "I thought you and Kevin had
|
|
a date tonight. What happened?" I ask.
|
|
|
|
"We're here at the house. Mother offered to cook dinner, and then
|
|
we're going to play Monopoly or something."
|
|
|
|
"That's good. In fact, if I don't get outside and check the steaks
|
|
we'll have to go out to eat, so I'd better let you get back to what
|
|
you were doing." The cat has wandered off somewhere, and I want to go
|
|
ahead and get the salad outside.
|
|
|
|
"Be careful, Daddy."
|
|
|
|
"I will, baby. Tell your mother hello for me."
|
|
|
|
"She knows I called you. She doesn't hate you, you know?" There's a
|
|
plaintive quality to her voice when she says this, and I am sorry all
|
|
over for not being with them. I want to apologize somehow, but I do
|
|
not know how. For the last two years of my marriage I had trouble
|
|
communicating with my wife, and Mandy was trapped in the position of
|
|
mediator and messenger, always having to translate for us.
|
|
|
|
"I'm glad you told her. I don't want you to have to feel guilty about
|
|
being in touch with me." I think she's crying, but maybe it's just
|
|
something in the line. "And if you want to come out here with your
|
|
friends or anything," I say, "you can use the pool for a party or
|
|
something."
|
|
|
|
"I'd like that, Daddy. Take care, huh? Please?"
|
|
|
|
"I will." I make a kissing noise into the receiver, only it comes out
|
|
like a slurp. "Bye, honey," I say, and the line goes dead. I hang up
|
|
before the dial tone starts and stack paper plates and salad dressing
|
|
on a tray with the bowl of salad.
|
|
|
|
When I get outside, Monica is sitting on the edge of the pool dangling
|
|
her legs in the water. She looks up and says, "The steaks smell good.
|
|
I'm starved." She stands, and I see that water runs down in droplets
|
|
off her calves, to her ankles, to the tops of her feet. She sees me
|
|
looking. "It was so warm, and the water felt so good. You don't mind,
|
|
do you?"
|
|
|
|
She is truly a beautiful girl. In class she was always quiet, but when
|
|
I asked questions she was quick with answers. "Not a bit. I mean, not
|
|
at all. That's why the pool is here."
|
|
|
|
"Let's eat," she says.
|
|
|
|
There is a small picnic table under the awning by the back door, and
|
|
we sit there to eat. I turn on the bug zapper and it glows blue,
|
|
begins almost immediately to snap and pop with the tiny gnats and
|
|
mites which fly into its grill. As we eat our salads I have a
|
|
momentary fantasy about being a bug drawn into the machine, and I
|
|
wonder whether they feel pain. While I think this I look up at Monica
|
|
sitting there across from me, her jaws working gently on lettuce and
|
|
tomato and radishes. "I'll get the steaks," I say.
|
|
|
|
The grill has been off during salad, but the meat is still hot, and I
|
|
serve the small t-bones on paper plates. Monica cuts off a small piece
|
|
and holds it on the fork in front of her lips, purses them, and blows
|
|
on the meat, as if blowing a kiss, then puts the piece in her mouth
|
|
and chews with her eyes closed. "It's perfect," she says. The
|
|
expression on her face says this is so. She cuts more and eats, and we
|
|
don't talk, we just eat and sip wine and look up at each other
|
|
occasionally.
|
|
|
|
I finish my steak first. "Would you like something else? I could run
|
|
down to the store and get some pie or ice cream." She is just
|
|
finishing, dabbing at her lips with a paper napkin. "I'm not prepared
|
|
so well. I'm not used to company."
|
|
|
|
She stands and begins stacking up the paper plates. "Why don't you
|
|
make yourself comfortable," she says. "I'll go do the dishes." She
|
|
giggles. "Pour us a glass of wine. Sit down and relax. I'm not running
|
|
off."
|
|
|
|
I start to protest, but she touches my shoulder and nudges me in the
|
|
direction of the lounge chairs. When she's gone I pour wine and leave
|
|
her glass on the table. I sit down and watch the water. The outdoor
|
|
lights have come on, and they glow softly. Insects flit in and out of
|
|
the light like tracer bullets in a war movie. The lights are small,
|
|
more for atmosphere than illumination, I suppose. They highlight the
|
|
pebbles imbedded in the concrete around the pool, but then the lights
|
|
go off, leaving only the glow of the pool's underwater lights. I start
|
|
to rise, but Monica comes out and gets the glass of wine from the
|
|
table. She sits in the lounge next to me. She tilts her glass back and
|
|
takes a long sip. "I found the light switch," she says. "I always
|
|
liked the way a pool shines at night."
|
|
|
|
"I sit out here sometimes and watch the water. It's very peaceful," I
|
|
say. There are a few small, white clouds moving in from the east, and
|
|
I wonder if it's going to rain. "I hoped my daughter Mandy and her
|
|
friends would come out and use the pool."
|
|
|
|
"I know," she says. I look at her. "You mentioned that before, David."
|
|
|
|
|
|
"Yes." As I answer I have a momentary thought of Mandy and her friends
|
|
from the high school splashing in the water of the pool, while her
|
|
mother and I sit back and watch them, then we get up to serve sodas
|
|
and sandwiches. "I'm not thinking too well lately," I say. "Or maybe
|
|
it's just the wine."
|
|
|
|
She stretches, her arms extended fully like a cat's legs when it's
|
|
getting up from a nap, and the cotton blouse rides back up over her
|
|
shoulders, then goes back into position when her arms are down. "I
|
|
feel . . . delicious," she says. "The water felt really good earlier.
|
|
I'd love a swim."
|
|
|
|
I look at the water. The surface is calm, broken only by the slight
|
|
breeze blowing over the wooden privacy fence. "It's too bad you don't
|
|
have a suit," I say. "And besides, you should never swim on a full
|
|
stomach."
|
|
|
|
"I wouldn't worry, David. You're here."
|
|
|
|
Before I can answer, she's standing up, and she walks to the edge of
|
|
the pool. "You keep the pool really clean," she says. "It's a lot of
|
|
work, isn't it?"
|
|
|
|
"I suppose," I say. "I keep it clean in case my daughter wants to come
|
|
by and swim."
|
|
|
|
Her shoes, white docksiders, are already off and lying by her chair;
|
|
she dips one foot into the water, swishing it back and forth, and hugs
|
|
herself, as if she's cold. She looks back toward me. "It feels
|
|
wonderful," she says. She turns around again and stands for a moment
|
|
moving her foot back and forth in the water.
|
|
|
|
"You could come here and use the pool this summer," I say.
|
|
|
|
"Maybe I'll do that," she says. "If you think it's okay, that is." She
|
|
at me again and smiles, then she reaches down and unbuttons her
|
|
cutoffs and pushes them down and steps out of them. She throws them
|
|
toward me, and they land on the far side of the chair she's been
|
|
using. I sit and watch, unable to say anything as she pulls the blouse
|
|
over her head and throws it at me. She sits on the edge of the pool
|
|
with her legs in the water and pulls off her blue panties, then she
|
|
slides off into the water. It's the shallow end, and the water comes
|
|
up to just above her navel. Her breasts are small, and her nipples are
|
|
erect. "Put these with my things, please?" she says, and throws the
|
|
panties. They land halfway between the pool and my chair. I go and
|
|
pick them up and hold them, stand there watching her as she sinks into
|
|
the water. Her hair trails off behind in a fluid mass, like a
|
|
Portuguese man-o'-war. She reaches back and does something to it, and
|
|
then her ponytail is gone and the hair spreads out across the water as
|
|
she sinks deeper, until the water is at her lower lip. "I'm going to
|
|
do some laps," she says. "Wait for me, huh?"
|
|
|
|
I sit down again and pick up my glass. It's empty, and I look into it
|
|
for a moment, contemplating whether I want more. Monica's body cuts
|
|
the water in smooth strokes, her hair flying straight out behind her.
|
|
She makes three laps, then reaches the opposite end and stops, resting
|
|
her arms on the edge. "Would you like for me to stay here tonight?"
|
|
she says to the wooden fence in front of her. Her voice seems larger
|
|
in the enclosed yard, as if it were a small room.
|
|
|
|
"That wouldn't be a very good idea," I say, and I wonder whether she
|
|
can hear me. My voice sounds small and tense.
|
|
|
|
"I like you, David. I wanted you to ask me out months ago."
|
|
|
|
"And I like you, too, Monica. But it wouldn't be right, you see. I'm a
|
|
professor. You might take another of my classes sometime."
|
|
|
|
She turns and swims back, then hoists herself up to the edge. She sits
|
|
and draws her legs up and puts her arms around them. "I won't. I don't
|
|
need any more history." She begins to wring out her wet hair. "Could
|
|
you bring me a towel? I'm getting cold."
|
|
|
|
I get a large bath towel from the bathroom cabinet and go back. She's
|
|
lying back in the lounge chair, watching the cat as she stands poised
|
|
at the edge of the pool, looking into the water. The cat dips a paw
|
|
into the water, then takes it out and shakes the water off. She begins
|
|
to lick at the paw and bathe her face. Monica is rubbing the rim of
|
|
her wineglass with a finger, and the glass gives off a high-pitched
|
|
sound. She dampens the finger and tries again, but nothing happens. I
|
|
hand her the towel, and she turns, putting her legs over the side of
|
|
the chair. She sits up and starts drying her hair, flattening the hair
|
|
between layers of the towel and pulling it down to the end. "Sit down,
|
|
David," she says. "I'll be dry in a minute. Then we can go inside."
|
|
|
|
I sit and watch her; the cat comes over and starts rubbing on my leg.
|
|
I reach down to pet her, and she rubs her head against my hand. She's
|
|
purring. She enjoys what I'm doing, but then she seems to get bored
|
|
and goes off into the house. "This isn't a good idea at all, Monica,"
|
|
I say.
|
|
|
|
She stops drying her hair and holds the towel up by a corner in front
|
|
of her. "Come dry my back, David?"
|
|
|
|
I begin to stand, but hesitate. In the light from the pool her skin is
|
|
darker, and its dampness shines like polished marble. "I haven't been
|
|
near a woman in months, Monica. I think I'm afraid of you."
|
|
|
|
"Are you worried that someone will accuse you of sleeping with a
|
|
student to change a grade, David? Do you think this is about a silly
|
|
grade?"
|
|
|
|
I don't want to admit my thoughts; Monica should have been an "A"
|
|
student, but her attendance was spotty during the last two months of
|
|
the semester. "No, of course not," I say. "I'm just nervous is all.
|
|
You're a lot younger than I am." She holds the towel against her
|
|
chest, patting herself dry, but the warm air has nearly done the job
|
|
for her. "I'm just confused, is all," I say.
|
|
|
|
She stands and holds out her hand. "Don't be. Let's go inside." She
|
|
leads me into the house, and inside the door I stop long enough to
|
|
turn off the pool lights.
|
|
|
|
I'm nervous when we get to the bedroom; Monica turns off the lights
|
|
and turns down the sheets I placed so carefully on the bed, and then I
|
|
lie down while she undresses me. When she guides me into her I seem
|
|
inept, like a frightened teenager, but Monica knows what to do.
|
|
Afterwards, when Monica is asleep, I lie awake listening to her, and
|
|
to the cat playing with the catnip mouse I bought after I got her from
|
|
the shelter. Monica stirs, and I feel her looking at me in the
|
|
darkness. "That wasn't so bad, was it?"
|
|
|
|
I kiss her forehead in much the same way I would kiss my daughter. "It
|
|
was nice," I say.
|
|
|
|
She puts her arms around me and draws me close. "You're a nice person,
|
|
David. I like you a lot." She burrows her head into my chest and
|
|
scratches my back lightly with her nails. I try to remember if they
|
|
are polished or plain. "And don't worry about my grade in your class,"
|
|
she says. "If you want to change it that's okay."
|
|
|
|
We lie there until she goes to sleep, and in the early morning I get
|
|
up and take the cordless phone out to the pool and sit there watching
|
|
the rectangular blackness of it. I feel the cat rubbing against my
|
|
leg, and then she's gone, and I hear a soft splash and then the
|
|
rhythmic churning of her feet as she swims. When it's light enough to
|
|
see the buttons on the phone I dial Mandy's number at her mother's
|
|
house, the house the three of us shared until a few months ago. When
|
|
she comes on the line I say her name over and over, perhaps a dozen
|
|
times until she's awake, and I say, "Mandy, thanks for being concerned
|
|
about me. I'll be all right. Everything will be all right." She says
|
|
something in return, and her voice sounds worried, though I can't make
|
|
out the words exactly. I want to understand what it is she's saying,
|
|
as if knowing this is the most important thing in my life, and I
|
|
listen, trying to comprehend what is wrong with me.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
"The Strawberry Blond" by Edward J. Austin
|
|
|
|
|
|
She moved into the pagoda bus-shelter where I had stood alone. She
|
|
moved slowly, casually, as if she'd just returned from a summer stroll
|
|
down a shady country lane. She wore a bright yellow dress and held her
|
|
belongings--a purse, two magazines, and a small, cordovan
|
|
portfolio--as a school-girl might, with both arms and against the
|
|
cushion of her abdomen. But she was no teenager. Rather, she had that
|
|
young office-girl look about her: too much make-up beneath the
|
|
cheekbones; long, slender nails, darkly painted to hide the plastic;
|
|
and strawberry blond hair that had been whipped and sprayed into
|
|
broad, staunch curls.
|
|
|
|
The nails got to me, though. More than the dress that held her closely
|
|
and reached to mid-calf. More than the mature hips and abundant bosom.
|
|
Even more than the pleasant, but mildly vacant expression of her face.
|
|
To me, to a thirty-two year-old Indian with a freshly recreated life,
|
|
the nails shrieked accusations of affectation and superficiality. They
|
|
overwhelmed my thoughts, as well as my libido.
|
|
|
|
I leaned against a large, brass banister that surrounded the three
|
|
glass walls of the structure, and I held a grocery sack containing
|
|
canned soup and Wheat Thins, herbal teas and toilet bowl cleaner. The
|
|
sweat from my four-mile hike after work--first to the hair-cutter's,
|
|
then to Bag-N-Save, then to the bus stop downtown--had soaked my
|
|
shirt, except for the tops of my shoulders. And the residue from the
|
|
haircut, the sharp-edged clip- pings, dug into my neck where the
|
|
collar rubbed my skin.
|
|
|
|
I felt conspicuous and uncomfortable. Then, I thought about the
|
|
strawberry blond and her airs. She looked cool. But I knew that
|
|
farther down, beneath the burden of her costume and mask, she was
|
|
languid from the heat. I thought about her nails once more, then,
|
|
about her hairdo, which hadn't budged under the humid breeze. I
|
|
thought about the make-up, and her panty-hose--intended to add color
|
|
where there was none.
|
|
|
|
A put-up job, I told myself.
|
|
|
|
Quickly, irrefutably, I judged her scope and dimension. I scanned and
|
|
reviewed her future and past. She became a character in one of my
|
|
stories:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Pretty, but slightly overdone, I thought. Probably aged
|
|
twenty-nine to thirty-two--although her face looked five years
|
|
younger. Most likely spends her day on the telephone, or
|
|
directing company visitors. Does minimal typing and has
|
|
moderate difficulty with the office software. Enjoys flirting
|
|
with the unattached men of the department, but has a
|
|
semi-employed boyfriend named Bruno--or perhaps ZACH--
|
|
whose principal pastimes are flexing his muscles in the mirror
|
|
and adjusting the carburetor of his pick-up. (Which he
|
|
can't seem to get quite right.) She wishes that life
|
|
was easier for her eight year-old son and herself, but
|
|
is determined to hang-on until Mr. Right comes along to
|
|
fix it all--to make it wonderful.
|
|
|
|
|
|
She'd sat down on the wooden bench that was behind and to my right.
|
|
The bench, in its shallow glass alcove, was a favorite spot of Omaha's
|
|
drunks and transients--especially during the chilly months, since its
|
|
doorway faced the south and the shelter was partially warmed by a
|
|
quartz heater. She sat very properly, with her head held high and her
|
|
spine perfectly aligned. She sat near the edge of the bench, and I
|
|
assumed that it was to limit the area of contamination.
|
|
|
|
I turned my head, and crouched behind a wall of phony indifference. I
|
|
stared in the opposite direction and pretended to be deep in thought,
|
|
pretended to be hard-hearted and streetwise, pretended that my shell
|
|
was impervious to the effects of light, sound, and time. But I
|
|
listened.
|
|
|
|
I heard her sigh and place her things on the bench, then, she crossed
|
|
her nyloned legs and smoothed the fabric of her dress. I heard the
|
|
clasp of her handbag open, then, the rustle of paper money being
|
|
removed and folded into her lap. I heard her sniffle, and afterward,
|
|
the sound of cosmetic containers jostling as she dug for a tissue.
|
|
|
|
A bus roared away from the corner preceding ours, and I was forced to
|
|
turn toward her as I checked its number. She sat primly, with her pale
|
|
hands clasped atop her knees. Her smile was pleasant and seemingly
|
|
carefree--the pretty little smile of one whose people have seized
|
|
Canaan--but I deliberately avoided eye-contact. Still, I felt the heat
|
|
of her attention on the left side of my face. And as I sought the
|
|
number of the approaching bus, I imagined the sound of her snippy
|
|
voice as it sighed, then, wondered aloud why she had to be stuck in
|
|
the same enclosure with a sweaty Indian.
|
|
|
|
I gave her a stern glance, then shifted the weight of the sack from
|
|
one thigh to the other. At least I'm not drunk and hustling you for
|
|
change, I thought. Like that other life, I recalled, when I was so
|
|
desperate for sweet oblivion that I might have considered the odds of
|
|
a successful downtown purse-snatch. Then, I wondered whether she had
|
|
ever felt hopeless, lost, and alone. Not because Bruno--or _ZACH_--had
|
|
laughed at the outcome of a box-perm, but because of something real.
|
|
|
|
The bus slowed to a crawl as it neared our corner, and when neither of
|
|
us stepped out to the curb, the driver mashed down on the throttle.
|
|
The diesel's belts shrieked and the eruption of exhaust blew a fierce
|
|
cloud of grit from the gutter.
|
|
|
|
"Oh darn!" she cried.
|
|
|
|
Her volume was feeble compared to that of the bus. And as the engine
|
|
rattled windows in the next block, I turned and flashed her my
|
|
favorite maintenance-man expression: one containing exasperation and
|
|
incredulity. The same one that I sometimes give to barefoot co-workers
|
|
who've locked their shoes in their filing cabinets, or to obese
|
|
dietitians who've lost their money in the candy machines.
|
|
|
|
She leaned forward and watched the bus halt at the next corner, then,
|
|
made two tiny fists and brought them down meekly against her knees.
|
|
"Oh darn!"
|
|
|
|
I could just imagine my Dad's reaction: (Doubled over and laughing.)
|
|
"Did you see that silly bitch? She sat on her dead-ass while the bus
|
|
went by! Then, when it's a mile down the street, she looks up and says
|
|
(imitating a squeaky white woman), 'oh darn'. Lord A' Mighty! That
|
|
bitch is crazy!"
|
|
|
|
"Was that a fifteen?" she asked me.
|
|
|
|
A charming voice, I thought, and imploring eyes. The air of glib
|
|
self-confidence that she'd arrived with suddenly evaporated. She
|
|
became girlish and helpless. "No," I told her, wearily.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, good," she said, smiling once more.
|
|
|
|
Well, that was simple, I thought. The Earth had been righted; bliss
|
|
restored. I wondered what her response might have been had I said,
|
|
"Oh? You wanted that one? You just sat there like a lump." But, I
|
|
guessed that it would have ruined her evening. I imagined her telling
|
|
Bruno as they lay in bed: "I had a wonderful day, but a sweaty Indian
|
|
ruined it all by being mean to me."
|
|
|
|
I placed my sack on the ground and folded my arms across my stomach. I
|
|
felt the roll of flab that had never gone away, despite gross
|
|
malnutrition and radical loss of muscle-mass. Then, the back of my
|
|
neck began to itch and I couldn't scratch it. Self-consciousness and
|
|
the dread of hearing another disparaging comment in my mind kept me
|
|
frozen. Quickly, I wondered if the white chickens were ever curious
|
|
about the effects of the barnyard on the black ones--or the red ones.
|
|
|
|
On the bench, the woman uncrossed her legs, releasing a distinctly
|
|
feminine scent. Then, she turned sideways and began tapping her
|
|
finger-tips on the glass of the alcove.
|
|
|
|
Outside, stood a pair of very fat, very black, women; each wore
|
|
outrageously printed shorts, sleeve-less tops, and tired canvas
|
|
slip-ons. They spoke with grand emphasis, often standing with hands on
|
|
broad hips, seeming to swell even greater as they struggled to make a
|
|
particular point, or rhythmically swaying in soulful agreement, as
|
|
they matched one another's body language. And near the knee of one,
|
|
stood a beautiful, honey-brown baby girl that looked to be only a
|
|
couple of years old. The baby smiled, extravagantly, at the strawberry
|
|
blond, then giggled and hugged her mother's knee.
|
|
|
|
I watched the blond lean farther, nearer to the glass and the child,
|
|
seemingly indifferent to any loss of dignity. She tapped the glass and
|
|
waved playfully, then made smooching sounds. And the baby moved
|
|
closer, as well, smiling joyously, displaying a pair of bright, white
|
|
teeth in front. She released her mother's leg and rapped against the
|
|
glass with a chubby fist, giggling, trembling, and rolling her head in
|
|
wild circles. And the blond leaned even closer, laying down on her
|
|
left elbow.
|
|
|
|
Unexpectedly, the baby kissed the glass, then burst into laughter.
|
|
|
|
Still on her side, the woman looked over her shoulder and smiled at
|
|
me. I couldn't help but smile back. I was swept-up by their emotion.
|
|
So enamored were the pair, that they made me forget myself and own
|
|
mask. I forgot the silliness of my face and my body, my fear of
|
|
rejection, and even my initial lust.
|
|
|
|
The baby moved to within inches of the glass wall and placed her
|
|
flattened palms against the surface, then, she grew quiet as the blond
|
|
met the hands with her own. The gesture reminded me of the end of
|
|
visiting-hour up at the old county jail. Prisoners and their
|
|
girlfriends would end the session with their palms pressed against the
|
|
Plexiglas window, as if the intensity of their emotion might somehow
|
|
alter the physical reality. And I would stand there--sitting wasn't
|
|
allowed during visiting hour-- in my concrete cubicle, groping at
|
|
conversation with my Aunt Bernice or a buddy that I'd talked into
|
|
coming for a visit.
|
|
|
|
Both looked up at the mother and smiled, who continued an animated
|
|
conversation with her friend. The baby slapped at the back of her
|
|
mother's knee, demanding attention, and the woman reached down and
|
|
fanned at the area with her fingers, as if shooing mosquitoes. Then I
|
|
watched as the blond sat-up and began searching the bottom of her
|
|
purse. Part-way, she looked over at me--evidently aware of my
|
|
attention--and said, "This purse is a junkyard. I find everything but
|
|
what I'm looking for."
|
|
|
|
I nodded my acknowledgment, then, began to wonder how much farther
|
|
from the truth my assessment would find itself.
|
|
|
|
She produced a black felt-tip pen and began sketching a face on her
|
|
left fist. She stopped between work on the eyes and nose and lips to
|
|
show the baby, who now divided her interest between the
|
|
puppet-in-progress and frustration at her mother's apparent lack of
|
|
interest. When it was finished, the blond worked her thumb as the
|
|
puppet's mouth and tried to entertain the child. But the baby just
|
|
frowned and turned away. She threw her arms around her mother's legs
|
|
and rubbed her cheek against the outside of her mother's thigh.
|
|
|
|
The blond returned the pen to her purse and didn't try to regain the
|
|
child's attention. She just smiled, wistfully, and said, "My two
|
|
year-old is the same way. It doesn't take much to distract her. One
|
|
minute she's interested, and the next, she isn't."
|
|
|
|
I nodded in agreement. Although I didn't know much about two
|
|
year-olds, I recognized a profound statement when I heard one. Then, I
|
|
chuckled to myself as I repeated it inwardly: One minute she's
|
|
interested, and the next, she isn't.
|
|
|
|
"You only have the one?" I asked her.
|
|
|
|
"No," she said, exhaling simultaneously. Then, added proudly: "I have
|
|
five."
|
|
|
|
"Wow!" I said, astonished. And at the same time, I heard my Dad's
|
|
comment: "Oh, Lord! That bitch stays pregnant. 'Better have three
|
|
jobs."
|
|
|
|
"They must enjoy the hell out of having you for a mother," I told her.
|
|
"Do you do this puppet-face thing for them?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes," she admitted, guardedly. "But not too often. They live with
|
|
their father."
|
|
|
|
"Oh," I said.
|
|
|
|
"But I see them pretty often," she added. "Just not as often as I'd
|
|
like to."
|
|
|
|
I could tell that she was trying to put a brave face on what must have
|
|
been flashing memories of a bad situation. I thought that she must be
|
|
re-living those scenes, even as she spoke. I knew that the sights and
|
|
smells and sounds must have strained at her emotional flood-gates.
|
|
|
|
I looked at her and simply said what I thought and felt, in spite of
|
|
the scant body of evidence. "That's real unfortunate. I think they're
|
|
missing out on one hell of a mother."
|
|
|
|
She sat up very straight, then softened her posture. Her eyes thanked
|
|
me--even before the words escaped her lips. Then, she told me that it
|
|
was the greatest compliment that she'd ever been paid.
|
|
|
|
I considered telling her of my foolish assessment, but knew that it
|
|
would only be a demeaning distraction. She sat for a moment, staring
|
|
at her hands, and I looked at them, too. Suddenly, they seemed unlike
|
|
those of the mannequin that I'd presumed them to be. I now saw the
|
|
bone and veins and tiny pale hairs. I saw freckles and delicate folds
|
|
of skin around her joints.
|
|
|
|
Then, feeling more at ease, I said, "So...uh...did they pop out two or
|
|
three at a time? Because you really don't look old enough to have five
|
|
kids."
|
|
|
|
"Thank you," she said, demurely. "My oldest will be sixteen in
|
|
November. And my baby is almost twenty-seven months. It seems like all
|
|
that I've ever done is raise kids. But now...."
|
|
|
|
"I'm sorry," I said. "I didn't mean to make--"
|
|
|
|
"--That's okay," she interrupted. "I was just thinking of how strange
|
|
it all feels. One day I'm a mother with five kids, and the next...."
|
|
She paused and carefully smoothed her dress, then, turned toward me
|
|
with an incredulous expression. "It feels the same way every morning,
|
|
now. Like it all might have been a dream, a beautiful one. Or that all
|
|
this," she said, gesturing at the world, "might be just a dream. A
|
|
nightmare."
|
|
|
|
I nodded in agreement. But I might have just as easily said, "Yeah, I
|
|
understand, I've been there." I wanted to hold her and tell her that
|
|
it would all get better, but I didn't know that it would. I only knew
|
|
that it could.
|
|
|
|
"I have this problem with depression." She said it stiffly, and I knew
|
|
that it must a part of her therapy. "It ruined my life--at least, the
|
|
parts that I loved the most. It turned everything sideways. It got so
|
|
that I couldn't even get out of bed. There was just no reason. Then, I
|
|
went to the hospital, and when I was finally getting better--really
|
|
better--my ex-husband just said, 'You have to move out'. And that was
|
|
it."
|
|
|
|
She sat quietly, but I knew that she was grappling with anger. Anger
|
|
at her body-chemistry, her ex-husband, the way that words can't be
|
|
taken back. But mostly, anger at the anger.
|
|
|
|
She sighed, as if to say, Oh, well, then continued. "Now I've got an
|
|
apartment, a roommate, and a job at an art-supply store. But it all
|
|
seems so unreal."
|
|
|
|
"I know," I said. Then, I told her a little bit about my own
|
|
experiences with hopelessness. I told her about the chemicals, the
|
|
immorality, and the danger. I told her that I'd lived that way for
|
|
twelve years, that I'd pissed away everything that most people hold
|
|
dear. And then, I told her about the specter that had come for my
|
|
mind--and how my brain became the only thing that I'd ever wanted to
|
|
save.
|
|
|
|
She listened, quietly, then smiled. The connection was intangible, but
|
|
there, none the less.
|
|
|
|
"Um," she began, "I'm sort of an artist. Would you like to look at a
|
|
few sketches? I've always toyed with the idea of becoming a commercial
|
|
artist, and then my sketches became a part of my therapy. Now I'm a
|
|
little more serious. And I just like to get other people's opinions.
|
|
These are me, kind of naked expression."
|
|
|
|
And I said, bawdily, "Naked, you say?" "Oh, quit," she said.
|
|
|
|
She opened the portfolio and produced a thick pad of pencil drawings,
|
|
and I liked them. To me, they were beautiful, and I told her so. Then,
|
|
I added that art was all magic to me, that I didn't know good
|
|
technique from bad, and that earning money with art was a hard hustle.
|
|
I wanted to tell her that the world was full of talented people, and
|
|
that the difference lay in dedication and work-habits. But it would
|
|
have been too much, too soon.
|
|
|
|
"What do you do?" she asked.
|
|
|
|
"I'm a maintenance man."
|
|
|
|
"You mean, like with mops?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, sometimes," I said, smiling. "Actually, I spend most of my time
|
|
working on lights, paint, and plumbing. But, I work in a nursing home,
|
|
and mops are a part of it, too."
|
|
|
|
She touched her forehead, then said, "Boy, I don't think that I could
|
|
work there."
|
|
|
|
"Maybe not right now," I told her, "but when you're better, it might
|
|
be a good thing. Helping people who desperately need it, does wonders
|
|
for the soul--and mind. It helps diminish self-centeredness, if you
|
|
let it. But more than anything, it helps me put my problems in a
|
|
Lifetime perspective."
|
|
|
|
She began to tell me about her grandmother, who'd gone to a nursing
|
|
home, but I'd turned toward the No. 15 as it lumbered up the hill,
|
|
raising a cloud of dust. She looked, then stood and said, "That's
|
|
mine."
|
|
|
|
She grabbed her belongings and began to move past me, but at the
|
|
doorway, she stopped. "Thanks for talking to me," she said. "I don't
|
|
know why I told you that."
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|
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|
Ordinarily, my response would have been a glib one. I might have
|
|
referred to my 'honest face' or 'my powers of seduction'. But I didn't
|
|
want to demean the depth of our connection. "Keep doing it," I told
|
|
her. "It's good for you."
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|
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|
She smiled and moved to the open doorway of the bus, then she turned
|
|
and waved before disappearing inside.
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|
|
|
After she'd left, I got to thinking about a conversation that I'd had
|
|
with my boss, Bill--who also happens to be an important Teacher of
|
|
mine. I'd told him of some minor repair that I'd made to a resident's
|
|
wheelchair, and then of the lady's effusive thanks. I'd told him that
|
|
there must be a million little things that people do for others that
|
|
they're unaware of, yet, they may have one hell of an impact. And he
|
|
agreed. Then, he told me that it really doesn't take much effort.
|
|
|
|
Little things. Like saying that we like one another when we do, or
|
|
seizing the opportunity to find out.
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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ABOUT THE AUTHORS, VOLUME 1 ISSUE 4, TMR
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o Karen Alkalay-Gut (gut22@ccsg.tau.ac.il) teaches Victorian and
|
|
Modern poetry at Tel Aviv University. Her latest books are _Ignorant
|
|
Armies_ (N.Y.: Cross-Cultural Communications, 1994) and _Recipes_ (Tel
|
|
Aviv: Golan, 1994). She also appeared in Volume 1, Issue 1 of _The
|
|
Morpo Review_ with three poems: _The Frog Prince_, _Tangents_ and
|
|
_Interview_.
|
|
|
|
o Edward J. Austin (74067.3040@compuserve.com) is Native American and
|
|
thirty-five, living with his best friend Alaina, and soon to be
|
|
entering his sixth year of sobriety. He is employed by Beverly
|
|
Enterprises, the nation's largest owner/operator of nursing care
|
|
facilities, where he serves as an environmental services manager.
|
|
|
|
o Blackbird (blackbird@aztech.com) is a writer whose works have
|
|
appeared in (among other places) _SailNSteam_, _Persona_ and various
|
|
anthologies. He lives and writes in Tucson, AZ.
|
|
|
|
o William C. Burns, Jr. (burnswcb@kodiak.gvltec.edu) is a nationally
|
|
published author of poetry, engineering texts and science fiction
|
|
short stories. He is an artist as well. Many of his murals and
|
|
sculptures are on permanent display at various colleges as well as
|
|
numerous, privately held works. He is indigenous to the eastern part
|
|
of the planet and sustains his family teaching electrical engineering
|
|
courses. Other occupations have included pumping diesel, mining coal,
|
|
peddling heavy equipment and fixing traffic lights.
|
|
|
|
o Susan Tefft Fitzgerald (sfitzger@s-cwis.unomaha.edu) writes poetry
|
|
and short stories. She is a senior at the University of Nebraska at
|
|
Omaha majoring in English and Journalism. This is her first published
|
|
work.
|
|
|
|
o Cynthia Anne Foster's (tudorose@aol.com) works have appeared in _The
|
|
American Poetry Annual 1991_, _Awakenings_, and the Oakland Community
|
|
College literary magazine _Speakeasy_, which she also helped to edit.
|
|
She has scripted for theater and television and is currently working
|
|
on her first book. Cynthia has studied in England, France, the
|
|
Netherlands, Switzerland and Italy. Her favorite authors are E. M.
|
|
Forster, George Meredith, Emily Dickinson and Robert Frost. She was
|
|
born in 1955 and lives in Michigan with her four rescued pets. She
|
|
enjoys reading, sculpting, watercolours, genealogy, travel, the
|
|
theater and history. "Mortui vivos docent. Carpe diem".
|
|
|
|
o Robert A. Fulkerson (rfulk@creighton.edu), Editor, is currently
|
|
working on his Master's Degree in Computer Science at Creighton
|
|
University in Omaha, Nebraska. He will soon be published in a book of
|
|
poetry and art entitled _Voices of the Grieving Heart_, edited by Mike
|
|
Bernhardt.
|
|
|
|
o Mike Gates (tsmwg@acad1.alaska.edu), ReadRoom Layout Designer, is a
|
|
cyberholic who runs a small BBS in Ketchikan, Alaska. Mike is a closet
|
|
writer who sells explosives for a living (really!) and has a humming
|
|
room full of computers in a house he shares with his wife and two
|
|
infant daughters.
|
|
|
|
o Maree Anne Jaeger (maree@tasman.cc.utas.edu.au) has had poetry
|
|
published in magazines, books and anthologies in Australia and
|
|
overseas. She has also performed her poetry in public. She likes
|
|
acting, writing, reading, the ocean, the moon and swiss chocolate.
|
|
|
|
o Kris M. Kalil Fulkerson (kkalil@creighton.edu), Proofreader, is
|
|
happily married to _TMR_'s esteemed editor and also happens to be a
|
|
graduate student at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.
|
|
|
|
o John Adam Kaune (jkaune@trentu.ca) is a part-time poet-wanderer from
|
|
Peterborough, Ontario. He is one of the three editors of the _Sand
|
|
River Journal_, a collection of the best poetry from rec.arts.poems
|
|
(available at the etext archives at the University of Michigan). His
|
|
next project is setting up a World Wide Web site for _SRJ_.
|
|
|
|
o Lori Kline (libelce1@unix.satcom.net, Attn: Lori Kline) is a poet
|
|
living in Southern California. She is currently working on a book of
|
|
poetry. She hopes to obtain her degree in creative writing and
|
|
medieval studies. She is married and has a son, Alexander.
|
|
|
|
o Matthew Mason (mtmason@morpo.creighton.edu), Editor -- published poet,
|
|
world traveller, butthead (and proud)--recently received his Master's
|
|
degree in Creative Writing from UC Davis. Now he wanders in search of
|
|
adventure and health insurance.
|
|
|
|
o Doctress Neutopia (neutopia@educ.umass.edu) received a doctorate in
|
|
Future Studies in February 1994. Her calling is to help save the human
|
|
species. "In the United States, this is a vocation which society does
|
|
not want to pay anyone to do, so I remain an unpaid worker for the
|
|
survival of the human race." _The Judge_ has appeared in various
|
|
places throughout the Internet, and a collection of Doctress
|
|
Neutopia's writings can be found at http://iglou.com/xville/ on the
|
|
World Wide Web.
|
|
|
|
o Benjamin Parzybok (parzybok@elwha.evergreen.edu) could not be
|
|
reached for a biography by press time.
|
|
|
|
o Leland Ray (lray@whale.st.usm.edu) is a thirty-nine-ish Ph.D.
|
|
dropout who's currently employed as an adjunct English instructor at
|
|
the University of Southern Mississippi, where he once studied at the
|
|
Center for Writers. He has published poetry, fiction, and non-fiction
|
|
in "little" academic journals.
|
|
|
|
o Michael A. Simanoff (simanoff@acc.fau.edu) is taking a short break
|
|
from his studies at a rather prestigious, elitist, anonymous
|
|
University to write, paint, and develop his musical skills. He was
|
|
born in New York and raised in London, Madrid, San Fransisco, Fort
|
|
Lauderdale, and is now the self-proclaimed 'Hermit of Boca Raton'. He
|
|
welcomes any correspondence.
|
|
|
|
o Michael Stutz (at118@po.cwru.edu) is a net.writer from Cleveland.
|
|
He's had a Vision of the inevitable creation of a dymaxion computer
|
|
whose geodesic structure would be the ultimate Literary Machine. He
|
|
loves Allen Ginsberg, but likes girls more. His story, _Favorite
|
|
Comics_, appeared in Volume 1, Issue 2 of _The Morpo Review_.
|
|
|
|
o Edgar Sommer (sommer@gmd.de) is continuously climbing the walls to
|
|
nodom. The colliding banter is making his eyes empty all the time. His
|
|
poem, _the past mostly_, appeared in Volume 1, Issue 1 of _TMR_.
|
|
|
|
o Brett A. Thomas (quark@rmii.com) is an OS/2 developer for MCI
|
|
by day (and often night). His hobbies include reading, spending almost
|
|
every waking moment online, running @bat.com, pontification, writing
|
|
and fencing. He welcomes any correspondance.
|
|
|
|
o Dave Zappala (zappala@elvis.rowan.edu) could not be reached for a
|
|
biography by press time.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
|
|
IN THEIR OWN WORDS
|
|
|
|
o _shard_ by John Adam Kaune
|
|
"[_Shard_ was] written while sitting in the Only Cafe,
|
|
Peterborough, 10-93."
|
|
|
|
o _Roman Ruin_ by Blackbird
|
|
"I wrote _Roman Ruin_ on the understanding that the other
|
|
person involved was being silent without apprehension. As it
|
|
turned out, I was wrong. It's a great example of how a poetic
|
|
insight can be completely wrong and beautiful at the same time.
|
|
Like most of my love verse, it's pretty much a portrait of a
|
|
disappointment."
|
|
|
|
o _words find_ by Edgar Sommer
|
|
"These pomes are pitchers in the mind for a brief moment as
|
|
they are written down. Pitchers contain at least as much aural
|
|
as visual Stuff, in the platonic sense (just kidding). I don't
|
|
know them before this happens, and don't understand them much
|
|
after. Author and reader are pretty much in the same situation.
|
|
Welcome to excrimentalism. Ola!"
|
|
|
|
o _But For the Grace of God_ by Brett A. Thomas
|
|
"_But for the Grace of God_ is probably a backlash against my
|
|
religious (and, more specifically, briefly Catholic)
|
|
upbringing. I wrote it several years ago, before full-time
|
|
computing robbed me of the time and energy to write. I
|
|
basically wrote the entire story in one evening, with the aid
|
|
of a six pack of Foster's."
|
|
|
|
o _Elinor Rigby_, _Room_ and _speaking of the secret_ by Karen
|
|
Alkalay-Gut
|
|
"All of these poems I think of as pleasantly perverted.
|
|
_Eleanor Rigby_, with its echoes of 'Oh, look at all those
|
|
lonely people' from the Beatles, is the key -- at least to the
|
|
_Rigby_ poem and _Room_. The latter, by the way, was inspired
|
|
by an actual room, in which every detail had a personality of
|
|
its own, and I found myself talking to the stones in the wall.
|
|
_speaking of the secret_ is about self-construction, and is
|
|
inspired by conversations with the dancer T'ai Dang and Oscar
|
|
Wilde's _The Importance of Being Earnest_."
|
|
|
|
o _Twilight Dancers_ by William C. Burns, Jr.
|
|
"This particular work is a love poem made up one cool October
|
|
nightfall, for my wife of seventeen years. It struck me, that
|
|
evening, how the sound of stillness descends on our house with
|
|
the coming of night. I'm an owl and she is a morning sparrow,
|
|
who often curls against my left side and drifts off shortly
|
|
after dark. I use this silent/warm time to re-collect the
|
|
fragments of my mind, and knit the sleeve of my soul. It also
|
|
hit me that this moment (twilight) is not the low point of the
|
|
day, for me, but the loftiest. Hence we descend into the dawn."
|
|
|
|
o _Wednesday Afternoon_ by Lori Kline
|
|
"As a poet, I'm interested in the presenting the concept of
|
|
ordinary life, everyday things, as being just as mystical,
|
|
dreamy and deserving of attention as say, Avalon or Atlantis.
|
|
The idea for _Wednesday Afternoon_ came about by watching my
|
|
husband's chess game, and evolved as an exercise of reality
|
|
blending with fantasy- his game and mine."
|
|
|
|
o _monet's old studio is a gift shop_ by John Adam Kaune
|
|
"Monet's old studio actually _is_ a gift shop nowadays. For
|
|
some reason, I found irony in this. 'modernity' is the key word
|
|
here."
|
|
|
|
o _The Judge_ by Doctress Neutopia
|
|
"Writing is a revolutionary activity to me. I write because
|
|
there is definitely a better, more free and just way for us to
|
|
live. As an artist, I feel that it is my duty to communicate
|
|
this message to the human race. There is an urgent need for us
|
|
to build a sustainable economy so that all people can become
|
|
self-actualizing. In order to do this we must communalize our
|
|
resources and let the artists live for free!"
|
|
|
|
o _Disclaimer_ by Micahel A. Simanoff
|
|
"The only disclaimer to _Disclaimer_ is that it is extremely
|
|
untypical of all my work, as I break away from my preferred act
|
|
of creation and exploration to comment on the sad state of what
|
|
I interpret as 'contemporary literature'. It is an entirely
|
|
sarcastic piece about the dulling of 'pop culture' upon the
|
|
intellect. But that's just my opinion."
|
|
|
|
o _You can meditate in this mess?_ by Micahel Stutz
|
|
"About six months old, it was a spontaneous (maybe slightly
|
|
self-conscious) mind breath done after the author's morning
|
|
meditation. Really, I caught myself 'talking to myself' and got
|
|
up to the keyboard to write it down."
|
|
|
|
o _Between the Hiatus_ by Maree Anne Jaeger
|
|
"[_Between the Hiatus_ was] written as a retrospective look
|
|
backwards (I'll leave the rest for you to work out). This poem
|
|
will be included in a book of my poetry to be called _Between
|
|
the Hiatus_, which is a collabaration of myself and an artist
|
|
(unsure of publication date as yet)."
|
|
|
|
o _Custer is not here_ by John Adam Kaune
|
|
[_Custer is not here_ was] written at Crow Agency, Montana,
|
|
7-94. Again, more irony: countless tourists stop by there, not
|
|
really knowing _why_. n.b. in the late 80s a brush fire helped
|
|
archaeologists to find more artifacts strewn about the site of
|
|
the battle."
|
|
|
|
o _Pool Night_ by Leland Ray
|
|
"I wrote this when I started dating the girl who became my
|
|
ex-wife; she gave me a cat on our first date, and the story
|
|
developed from there. The sixteen-year age difference between
|
|
my girlfriend and myself had something to do with the story as
|
|
well."
|
|
|
|
o _The Strawberry Blond_ by Ed. Austin
|
|
"_The Strawberry Blond_ was inspired by an incident that really
|
|
happened to me at a bus-stop on a hot afternoon. That day, I
|
|
was somehow blind-sided by cultural shame (a common malady
|
|
among minorities) and fear of rejection. I was miserable. That
|
|
is, until that nameless honey grabbed me by the shoulders and
|
|
shook the joy of life back into me. These days, I can't recall
|
|
the slightest detail about her voice, but I still remember the
|
|
appreciation in her eyes as we parted company. And I can't help
|
|
but think: Why are simple acts of humanity so rare that we have
|
|
to wonder where they've been all our lives?"
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
|
|
WHERE TO FIND _THE MORPO REVIEW_
|
|
|
|
Current and past issues of _TMR_ can be located and obtained via the
|
|
following means:
|
|
|
|
o Interactive Methods:
|
|
The following methods of accessing _TMR_ allow you to
|
|
interactively pick and choose what you want to read.
|
|
|
|
o Via the World Wide Web.
|
|
Read it on-line at http://morpo.creighton.edu/morpo/.
|
|
|
|
|
|
o Via the following Bulletin Board Systems:
|
|
The Outlands (Ketchikan, Alaska, USA)
|
|
+1 907-247-1219, +1 907-225-1219, +1 907-225-1220.
|
|
_The Outlands_ is the home BBS system for the
|
|
ReadRoom BBS Door format. You can download the
|
|
IBM-PC/DOS ReadRoom version here, as well as read
|
|
it interactively on-line via the ReadRoom door
|
|
installed on the system. There is a free 30-day
|
|
trial time for this system -- then subscriptions
|
|
start as low as $2.50 per month.
|
|
|
|
The Myths and Legends of Levania (Council Bluffs, Iowa, USA)
|
|
+1 712-325-8867. _The Myths and Legends of Levania_
|
|
is located in the heart of the original Morpo and,
|
|
in fact, is a direct descendant of the original
|
|
_The Land of Morpo_ Bulletin Board System. You can
|
|
download both the IBM-PC/DOS ReadRoom versions and
|
|
ASCII text versions of _TMR_ here.
|
|
|
|
o Semi-interactive methods:
|
|
o Via Anonymous FTP.
|
|
ftp://morpo.creighton.edu/pub/morpo
|
|
ftp://ftp.etext.org/pub/Zines/Morpo.Review
|
|
o Via Gopher.
|
|
gopher://morpo.creighton.edu/The.Morpo.Review
|
|
gopher://ftp.etext.org/Zines/Morpo.Review
|
|
|
|
o Via America Online.
|
|
Use Keyword _PDA_, then select "Palmtop Paperbacks", "EZine
|
|
Libraries", "Writing", "More Writing"
|
|
|
|
o Electronic Mail Subscriptions.
|
|
You can obtain an electronic mail subscription and have the
|
|
full ASCII version of _TMR_ arrive automatically in your e-mail
|
|
box when it is released to the public. Send Internet mail with
|
|
a subject of "Moo!" (or some variation thereof) to
|
|
_morpo-request@morpo.creighton.edu_ and you will be added to
|
|
the distribution list.
|
|
|
|
o Via Electronic Mail Server.
|
|
Send the message "get morpo morpo.index" to
|
|
lists@morpo.creighton.edu and you will receive instructions
|
|
on how to use our email archive server to retrieve ASCII
|
|
versions of _The Morpo Review_.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
|
|
Addresses for _The Morpo Review_
|
|
|
|
rfulk@creighton.edu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Robert Fulkerson, Editor
|
|
mtmason@morpo.creighton.edu . . . . . . . . . . . . Matthew Mason, Editor
|
|
|
|
kkalil@creighton.edu . . . . . . . . . Kris Kalil Fulkerson, Proofreader
|
|
tsmwg@acad1.alaska.edu . . . . . . . Mike Gates, ReadRoom Layout Designer
|
|
|
|
morpo-submissions@morpo.creighton.edu . Submissions to _The Morpo Review_
|
|
morpo-request@morpo.creighton.edu . . . Requests for E-Mail subscriptions
|
|
morpo-comments@morpo.creighton.edu . . . Comments about _The Morpo Review_
|
|
morpo-editors@morpo.creighton.edu . . . . . Reach all the editors at once
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
|
|
Submit to _The Morpo Review_
|
|
|
|
What kind of work do we want? How about Sonnets to Captain
|
|
Kangaroo, free-verse ruminations comparing plastic lawn ornaments to _Love
|
|
Boat_ or nearly anything with cows in it. No, not cute, Smurfy little "ha
|
|
ha" ditties--back reality into a corner and snarl! Some good examples are
|
|
"Oatmeal" by Galway Kinnell, "A Supermarket In California" by Allen
|
|
Ginsberg, or the 6th section of Wallace Stevens' "Six Significant
|
|
Landscapes."
|
|
|
|
But, hey, if this makes little or no sense, just send us good stuff;
|
|
if we like it, we'll print it, even if it's nothing close to the above
|
|
description of what we want (life's like that at times). Just send us
|
|
good stuff, get published, and impress your peers and neighbors.
|
|
|
|
So send us your unhinged poetry, prose and essay contemplations at
|
|
|
|
morpo-submissions@morpo.creighton.edu
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
|
|
|
Our next issue will be available around November 15, 1994.
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|
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