2178 lines
103 KiB
Plaintext
2178 lines
103 KiB
Plaintext
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+======== March 1995 =========================== Volume 3, Number 3 ========+
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| [ A JOURNAL OF THE POETIC ARTS ] |
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| Editor: Klaus J. Gerken |
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| Production Editor: Igal Koshevoy |
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| Associate Editors: Paul Lauda |
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| : Pedro Sena |
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| : Gay Bost |
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| European Editor: Milan Georges Djordjevitch |
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| Contributing Editor: Martin Zurla |
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+===========================================================================+
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[ TABLE OF CONTENTS ]
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INTRODUCTION..............................Klaus J. Gerken
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World without End.........................Kathleen J. Kramer
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A Rose is Forever.........................Bill Shultz
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Upon the wishing well.....................Pedro Sena
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SHERWOOD CONCRETE FLATS...................Igal Koshevoy
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Transfer..................................Martin Zurla
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The Afflicted.............................Klaus J. Gerken
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POST SCRIPTUM
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Five Haiku Poems......................Lawrence Thurlow
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[ INTRODUCTION ]
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**************************************************************************
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When the visions flicker like shadows on the walls pulsating in the
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vampire nights, illumined by the kindled firewood of allusive
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augmentations, when the windows argue with the chilling splintered
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diamond wind; when the sceptre of the ghost of history refuses to
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decompose; and when the mountain refuses (as it should) to come to any
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prophet, and the rain accentuates the wisdom of the (still, and ever
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unknown) universe, it does not argue: argument is vain. The wind drives
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nails of hail into a lost horizon. Yet a found horizon offers less or
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more solution. The guru who professes to know, never has a clue, and the
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cat with phosphorescent eyes abounding with the visionary's mystery only
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heightens latent tensions where always have been arguments: between the
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entities surrounding you, or you surrounding all these entities, which
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happen to be real, or unreal as the truth of relevance supports within
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the parameters of its reclusive ramblings. Each supposition is our
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marker; each supposition is the grave-stone we envisage. Once we come
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full circle, it is hardly worth remembering. Such is the life of any
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human; any stone. Stone upon a stone. A life that is for us static and
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inviolable; but for a stone, we just don't exist. Just think of how the
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elements emerge and dis-emerge. How they compliment each other. They are
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lovers on a plain we cannot even hope to envisage. They are shadows of
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the gods we have delineated to a footnote. We think there's nothing left.
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We think that *they* cannot harm us anymore. But they are still very much
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alive. The cult of Christian suffering hasn't killed them all. Just
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obscured a few of them - merged with some convenient others - and given
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us a very convoluted and constricted view of the nature of life's
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spiritual requirements.
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I cannot disengage poetry from the all encompassing, the greater
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spiritual: the poetry of words is the 'word' of the gods - the lesser
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ones, the greater ones; the gods of ancient Sumaria, Egypt, the Greeks or
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the Romans, the Hindu Gods and the Buddhist ultimate path to
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enlightenment; even the Judeo-Moslem-Christian gods - and each word is as
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an atom in the breath of the ever evolving entity of what we perceive as
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'our' universe. Sometimes I even have the feeling that this 'word' takes
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us beyond even that limitation. Poetry, whether through the gods, or
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through limited human sympathy, speaks directly to us. Soul to soul,
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feeling to feeling, entity to entity, understanding to understanding.
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Poetry is our participation with the greater. And not only poetry, but
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the whole mind of the poet/writer/artist: all different modes within the
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same perception of the seer, the shaman, the mystic. The poet does not as
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much explain things - that is for science - as emote the unfelt thoughts
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and feelings of the great beyond, which becomes a vital extension of the
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process of the evolution of our thoughts and feeling, and therefore our
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societies, not only of individuals, but of communities of individuals,
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and therefore a society, forever dancing in the infinite, the radiant,
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brightly shining universe of hope.
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This edition also welcomes Martin Zurla as Contributing Editor.
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Martin is based in the L.A. region and is the 'Founder and former
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Director of the Raft Theatre (Theatre Row, NYC). His stage play, OLD
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FRIENDS, won the Forest A. Roberts Playwrights Award; his play, FEBRUARY,
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THE PRESENT, won the Stanley Drama Award. Mr. Zurla's plays won the
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Colorado University Playwrights Competition for two consecutive years
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(1985 and 1986). Plus numerous other theatrical awards, Mr. Zurla was
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twice awarded the prestigious Theatre of Renewal Awards for his;
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"Resplendent contribution to the development of American Theatre." Mr.
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Zurla recently had a series of one act plays published by Open Passages
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of NYC, AFTERMATH: THE VIETNAM EXPERIENCE.' Martin will be bringing his
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extensive experience and wisdom to Ygdrasil, including many new
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contributions from established dramatists, poets and short story writers.
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Glad to have you on board.
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-- KJ Gerken
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URGENT NOTICE TO CENTIPEDE BOARDS: Paul Lauda's Revisions Systems had a
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tragic disk crash and may take a while to become operational again. Tom
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Almy's Bitter Butter Better BBS has been officially announced as the
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temporary hub of operations. To continue your Centipede service, please
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send netmail to Tom Almy at 1:105/290 or dial up BITTER BUTTER BBS at
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1-503-692-5841 and leave a message.
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============================================================================
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World Without End
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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I.
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1945: the bomb had been dropped
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from discussion. Uncle Sam stepped
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out of the posters and appeared
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at county fairs wearing stilts
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so high he couldn't hear a thing.
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Citizen surveillance was inevitable.
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There were rumors of miracle
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machines, mighty in their minute sizes.
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Robots would replace men.
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Appliances would replace women.
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Deserts would bloom,
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we'd put a man on the moon,
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there'd be no more disease,
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all our time free to spend
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with our families.
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Television was inevitable.
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Sex could be trusted
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to pick up
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where the war left off.
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The girls were back in the kitchen
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wearing aprons pressed with sizzling
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irons of immaculate boredom.
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The boys took their victories back
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to factories the girls had run.
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Increased productivity was inevitable.
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Thanks to modern anesthetics and twilight labor
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girls became Mommies as painlessly
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as boys had always become Daddies.
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Daddy had his Cuban cigars and cocky
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smile until he came home from work
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and had to feed baby his bottle
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while Mommy talked on the phone.
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Corner bars were inevitable.
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II.
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Daddy started making home
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movies ~ like someday
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he'd need proof, evidence,
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of what, he'd never know.
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The bar of hot lights needed
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to film Junior's first Christmas
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made baby cry and Mommy yelled.
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Daddy was always too close,
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out of focus, never
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in any of the movies.
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He operated the projector,
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but when everyone was sleeping
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he played the movies backwards
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*suddenly he's wearing a smoking jacket,
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holding a brandy snifter. He's blowing smoke
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rings into the polluted Pittsburgh night,
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waiting for some broad*
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reminder of the president
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he was supposed to be.
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He gave at the office, leaving
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little time for home movies,
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but he bought a new Super-8 camera.
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The film moved so fast, he could shoot
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with only the light of birthday candles,
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five of them, at a party for their youngest
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about to start kindergarten. Mommy cried
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because she wanted another baby
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something to hold and Daddy saw it all
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through one zooming eye.
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By the time the kids
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are teen-agers, movies will talk.
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He'll have had enough.
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-- Kathleen J. Kramer
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============================================================================
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A ROSE IS FOREVER
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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As a writer, I always enjoyed a certain degree of solitude.
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That's why, several years earlier, my wife, Jasmine, and I had purchased
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a couple hundred acres in a remote area of the Colorado Rockies and
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built a log cabin right in it s center. We had no neighbors to contend
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with and the nearest town was a 30 minute drive away. Thus we were able
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to step out the front or back door of our home and enjoy the beauty of
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an almost untarnished nature as far as the eye could see.
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We settled into a peaceful existence. I did the writing while
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Jasmine, determined to give me creative freedom, handled the business
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end of the writing along with our personal finances. This did give me
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the freedom from worry or stress that I needed to allow my creative
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juices to flow.
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Jasmine and I shared a love so strong it was like what one
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usually reads about in a good novel. We were best friends, loving
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companions and wild lovers. A simple walk in the woods, even in the
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winter, often turned into a very private erotic love making adventure.
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It was now about six months since tragedy had struck. While
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driving back alone from a business trip to Denver, Jasmine was killed by
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a drunk driver. To say this left my life empty and without purpose
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would be a gross understatement. Since the day I had placed her in her
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final resting place on a little hill overlooking our cabin, I had
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ventured out only when necessary for supplies. I preferred spending my
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time at her grave side, talking to her as though she were still with me.
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I had no desire to meet socially or in any other way with anyone
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else, preferring instead to live in solitude with my memories of
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Jasmine.
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My anguish made it impossible to write. I had not even
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attempted to put two words together since the day of her accident. In my
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study lay the last manuscript I had written. It was finished, packaged
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by Jasmine, ready to mail. It sat there and gathered dust. Having
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tired of phone calls from my publisher asking where it was and trying to
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motivate me to get back to work plus listening to the sincere words of
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well wishers, I had ripped the phone cord from the wall weeks earlier.
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Perhaps the manuscript would never be mailed. Jasmine had usually taken
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care of such things and in my current state of mind, I felt that if I
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mailed it I would somehow be trying to take her place. It was
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impossible for me to do anything that would change any part of the life
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we had shared together.
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Although it was January and a fresh blanket of snow covered the
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earth, I didn't take the time to venture outside to enjoy it s beauty.
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The only thing the beauty of my surrounding brought me were memories of
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how we had enjoyed frolicking in the snow together. Now I was alone,
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that pleasure gone forever.
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It was a dark, cold night. A blanket of clouds covered this
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part of the world bringing with them the promise of even more new snow.
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I sat before a cold fireplace, lost in my memories, dreading the
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future and, as usual, feeling extremely sorry for myself. Suddenly,
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from seemingly out of nowhere, I felt a chill enter the room. Actually
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it was more like a blast of cold air which struck me in the back,
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travelled up my spine to my neck and stood the hair at it s base on end.
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Getting up, I walked to the back of the house to see if the oil
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furnace was working correctly and all seemed to be in order. Although I
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hadn't heard anything, I thought perhaps a window had blown open. I
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began to walk around the house, looking for the source of cold air.
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Every window was tightly closed and all the doors were closed and double
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locked, yet the chill continued. I even went so far as to check and see
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if the air conditioning system had somehow come on but, it too was off.
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On the way back to my chair I grabbed a sweater from the closet
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and slipped it on as I walked. How strange it was. The sweater had no
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effect on the cold. I felt the chill spreading throughout my body and I
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began to shiver. Glancing at the old grandfather clock in the corner, I
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noted that it was only a few minutes before midnight. As my discomfort
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grew, I decided to go climb between the sheets and under the heavy
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comforter of the bed and try to get warm.
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I took one more look around the house, again finding everything
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closed as it should be. Again I shuddered from the cold and turned to
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go to my bedroom in the loft above. As I neared the foot of the rough
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hewn stairs leading to the loft, I glanced up. For a second, in the dim
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light which leaked into the loft from the hallway below, I was sure I
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detected movement.
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I flipped on the stairway light and looked again. There was
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nothing to see. The top of the stairs were vacant. Turning off the
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downstairs light, I proceeded up to my bedroom. As I turned to the left
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at the head of the stairs, I again detected the hint of movement through
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the partially opened bedroom door. I shuddered again, this time more
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from the unknown than from the cold.
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Slowly, I walked to the door and placed my palm flat against
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it s surface. Exerting a slight pressure, I eased the door open and
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looked into the dark room, my eyes straining to penetrate the gloom.
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I saw nothing. I reached around the door jam to the wall and
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flipped on the lights. They flickered for a second and then flashed
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out. Oh Great , I mumbled to myself. A perfect time for the bulb to
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burn out.
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Carefully I felt my way to the bedside table and fumbled around
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for the lamp. When I pulled the chain switch, it came on immediately.
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The glow from the weak bulb attempted in vain to penetrate the
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darkness, instead casting a dim glow at the head the bed. I surveyed
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the room as best I could in the dim light and could find nothing out of
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order. Something else was different. I stood there looking around when
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I noticed what it was. I detected the fait aroma of roses in the air.
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Jasmine s favorite perfume smelled very much like the hint of roses.
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This was getting stranger and stranger.
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Convinced now that my imagination was getting the better of me,
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I said the hell with it and stripped off my clothing. Naked, I crawled
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between the sheets, laying on my side and burying myself deeply under
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the heavy bed clothes. Reaching out, I switched off the lamp and closed
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my eyes, waiting anxiously for escape sleep brings to overtake me.
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I don't know how long I lay there when suddenly, I felt the bed
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move. It was as though someone else were climbing in. I knew I was
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alone in bed. I must have dozed off and started dreaming. I didn't
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even bother to turn over and check. I knew the feeling of movement
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wasn't real.
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As I felt my eyes finally begin to relax with the coming of
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sleep, I was startled to full wakefulness as I felt a hand softly caress
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my shoulder. I turned quickly but the hand did not move away. Who are
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you? I asked, as panic began to overtake me. How did you get here?
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What are you doing in my bed?
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Shhhh, came a soft feminine voice. Just relax. You know who
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I am and you know exactly what I'm doing here.
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Jasmine? I inquired. Jasmine, how can this be? You're dead.
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You were killed in an auto accident months ago. It can't be you.
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Will, my darling. Yes, it is me. My life was taken from me
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so quickly that I never had a chance to come back and say good-bye.
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I've been on the other side. I've been watching you, could see your
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pain. Will, you have to get hold of yourself and stop all this moping
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around. You still have a life to live and you're young enough to get
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some enjoyment out of what you have left. I had to come back one more
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time to kick your butt if necessary and help you snap out of it. We'll
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be together again someday but, until that time comes, you can't just
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quit. But to say that's the only reason I came back would be a lie. I
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also wanted to say good-bye. Don't turn on the light darling. I want
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you to hold me, to make love to me like you always did. Have no fear my
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love. Everything will be okay.
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With that, I felt her hands begin to explore my body in ways
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that only Jasmine knew how to do. In spite of the strangeness of the
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situation, I felt the heat of passion growing within me. I took her in
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my arms. As I held her, I felt her soft warm thigh against my hip as
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she hooked her leg over my body. I felt her dampness as she arched her
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back into me, rubbing her body against mine.
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To hell with common sense, I had to have her. I knew what was
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happening wasn't possible, that it must be a dream. But if it was a
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dream, I never wanted to wake up.
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My lips began to explore her. I nibbled on her neck and felt
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her body tremble with pleasure. Slowly my mouth drifted down to her
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firm pert breasts. I massaged one with my hand while I took the nipple
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on the other between my lips, sucking on it, nibbling it, teasing it
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with my tongue. I heard her sigh with pleasure.
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Jasmine and I never had any inhibitions between us when it came
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to making love. We enjoyed letting our passion rule our love making
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with a wild abandon. We continued to make love, over and over,
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sometimes slowly, sometimes in a frenzy of activity, until the sky began
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to glow with the faint light of the coming morning.
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Finally exhausted, we fell to the bed together. I slid from on
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top of her as she turned with her back to me. Feeling fully satisfied,
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I pulled her to me and wrapped my arms around her, feeling her firm body
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press against mine. Like the traditional spoons, we slept.
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The blinding rays of the morning sun glaring through the window
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pane woke me from a deep sleep. I was instantly aware of what happened
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the night before and turned quickly, looking for Jasmine. She was no
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longer in bed. I quickly climbed from bed, calling her name as I did.
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There was no reply.
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Slipping on my robe, I looked first in the bathroom and, finding
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it empty, went quickly down the stairs, calling her name all the while.
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She was not in the house. I looked out the front and the back door
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but, she was no place to be found.
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Sitting for a while in the kitchen as I sipped at a hot cup of
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coffee, I wondered. Could anything so realistic have been nothing more
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than a dream? It must have been. After all, the only woman I had ever
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loved, Jasmine, had died. She couldn't have been here last night. Yes,
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it must have been only a dream. Yet, it had been so powerful that when
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I licked my lips, I could imagine the taste of her muskiness still upon
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them.
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I returned to my upstairs bedroom. When I walked in I looked at
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the bed, still rumpled from the night before, and noticed something
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partly hidden by the blanket. Going over and picking it up I discovered
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one red rose. It really had been Jasmine. She had come back to say
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good-bye. There would never be another woman for me. I placed the rose
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in a vase and set it on the nightstand.
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Later that morning, on my way out the door to drive into town, I
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grabbed the finished manuscript to take to the post office. I may never
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understand what happened last night but, one thing for sure. I was
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determined to get on with my life.
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That was three short years ago, and you know what? That rose
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still stands there, as fresh as ever with it's scent still lingering in
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the room, as a reminder of that night and a testament to a love Jasmine
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and I would share throughout eternity..........
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-- Bill Shultz
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============================================================================
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Upon the Wishing Well...
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Upon the wishing well once I stood
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and prayed, cried, and even hoped
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for new feelings, hopefully good
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until I fell dreamt away....
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Vast ocean
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Thoughts
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Delirium
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I once loved
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I now hate
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Who, What, Why?
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to this day I dare not even look
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cause I found, wasn't what I wanted
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until I talked, read, some new book
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and then fell into it...
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Vast past
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Thoughts
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I wish
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I once loved
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Then I hated
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I know why.
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The years come and go, by seconds
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life is hard, candid, but also true
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and I stirred,
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some measure of freedom
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a cry from afar,
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oh my gosh, forgot, the child calls
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And I know I will make it
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somehow,
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someway,
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...
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surely I will.
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( A Happy New Year poem for the elusive Diana )
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-- Pedro Sena
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============================================================================
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SHERWOOD CONCRETE FLATS
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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grey. grey and cold cement all around.
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sharp edges and gritty grey,
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under my feet, around my sides, and soon over my head.
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the brown earth sheathed for our protection, with a grey scab.
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slow footsteps on the concrete, echo off along concrete walls of grey.
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metal tombs pass by, just tombs on wheels ... driving by.
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inside each car, sits a person - a being.
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every one of them is something. they bring bread to some,
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pain to others, gifts, presents, threats, love, or simply emptyness.
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each individual a collection of years of molding, of parents' yelling,
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of teachers' scolding, of the lessons of their peers, of the sorrows
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that they went through. millions of tiny lessons, and years of them,
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to make a product that will never be completed, nor complete.
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inside each car, another sits and waits for something. some wait to
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return home, others running from it, some trying to get away from work,
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others trying to find love - searching, searching - in their
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never-ending search.
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there, each occupant breaths their own air (their own fumes), listens to
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themselves talking, shrouds themselves from the rest, because they are
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afraid.
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and they drive, drive by in the night. quietly, methodically,
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going their own ways. going to their homes, apartments, mansions,
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or just finding a good place to park there car. waiting to wrap
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themselves in a blanket in the backseat. dilating, diaspora.
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walking alone on a road never meant for the human foot, i pace.
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carefully i look inside each contraption of steel, aluminum, plastic
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and glass - trying to find the person inside. some sit, worn out and
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tired from a hard day's work, others happily chatting away on the
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phone trying to kill the loneliness, others listen deafly to the
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chattering radio trying to convince them that something that costs
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$19.95 can alter reality.
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as i walk, i know, i got my reality - stapled and nailed down shut.
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i know the way, but i don't know my way.
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whoosh, whoosh, whoosh. they drive by. empty, empty cars, filled with
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empty, empty people, going to their empty, empty houses filled with
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emptyness or just more empty, empty people.
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through each now-vacant head passed an ocean's flood. billions of ideas,
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maybe even more than that. inventions that could bring us to salvation
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or to doom, that will never be made. books that never will be written.
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shots that will never be fired. words that will never be spoken. hope
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that was so desperately needed, but will never arrive. kisses that
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will never reach the cheek they were meant for. people that never
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got home. trains that never got to their destination, now just
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rusting away in the station. waiting forever for their chance
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that will never arrive. rusting slowly away, silently -
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as the world spins round ... and rusts.
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empty highways, empty streets. empty cars with empty people. empty homes
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and empty men. and empty trains dissolving away. and concrete, grey and
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grim, crumbling apart as the rains wash it away. the rains trying
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mindlessly to wash the slate clean. and they pour and the rust bleeds
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from the rivets, from the empty souls that dot the streets. and the
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rains washed it away, down into the gutters, down into the bowels
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of the earth. trying to clean the creation that will never be
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clean.
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. . .
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if i stand here long enough, staring at the sky; looking at the
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shattered moon, looking up at the rains that fall; maybe i'll drown in
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the tears. i can't tell if they are mine - or just that of the heavens
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crying softly as they sing another lullaby.
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i look at you all, see ourselves slowly bleedin'...
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while our flames burn aaaawwwwwwwwwwwaaaaaaaaaaaaaaayyyyyyyyyyyyyy....
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. . .
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(and the rains fell)
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(and the people dragged on)
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(and the earth kept spinning round and round and round)
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(and the tears from the heavens)
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(and the tears from my eyes)
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(and the rains)
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(fell)
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-- Igal Koshevoy; March 15, 1993
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TIN FOIL GHOST 10:2
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============================================================================
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TRANSFER
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~~~~~~~~
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The bus pulled up to the stop and he got on.
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He asked the driver for a transfer. The sad-faced driver
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looked up at him with this kind of odd expression. He couldn't
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read what it was in the driver's dull eyes, what it was that sent
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a quick shock wave of fear through his body.
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As he made his way toward the back of the bus the odd
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assortment of passengers looked up at him with the same blank
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expression the driver tossed up at him.
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When he sat down with his eyes glancing out the window and not
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focusing on anything in particular, it started. That song. It
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was a song he remember from his childhood, an Italian song, "Non
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Si Vive Cosi." He didn't know Italian, hadn't heard the language
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since he was a child. Why would he be thinking of this song now?
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All he could remember about the song was it's title in English
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and he wasn't too sure about that either. Odd, was all he could
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come up with.
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He wanted a scotch. No, he needed a scotch; hadn't had one
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all day and it was beginning to catch up with him - the lack of
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it floating through his system, mixing with his blood. He wanted
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one now and wondered why he didn't get one before he stepped on
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the bus. But he hadn't been thinking straight for the last
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couple of weeks. Something was definitely happening to him
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of late and it wasn't just because he was getting older and was
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out of a job. No, it was something quite different. He was going
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through a change, or so he now thought softly to himself.
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The bus pulled into a stop and one or two people got
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off while none got on. He noticed how odd it seemed, how
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strange the passengers looked. There was something quite unusual
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about them, the way they got off the bus. It wasn't the act of
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moving in or out of the door, it was about their blurred faces:
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all of the faces were blank. People don't normally look like
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that, he thought to himself. As he looked around at the he
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noticed that everyone, right down to that little kid across from
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him, were wearing blank expressions.
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And he noticed something else, no one said a word to anyone
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else. Not one sound. He almost wanted to speak to someone just
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to see if they would respond. He kept to himself. As was quite
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usual with him.
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He couldn't shake that song rummaging through his head. It
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pulsated between his ears as if it were travelling through two
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loudspeakers that were attached to the inside of his skull. He
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never remembered a song so clearly, so exactly. It was if he had
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memorized it, but he knew that he hadn't. Why would he have
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memorized this song, any song for that matter? Yet it was
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playing in his mind as if he were listening to a stereo system.
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The bus pulled into a stop. No one moved. No one left nor
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got on. It pulled away from the curb and continued up-town.
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He moved ever-so slightly in his seat. So he thought.
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"Should have brought that damn book," he thought to himself
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"Should have bought a newspaper, Shit!"
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So, with nothing to occupy his brain he turned to look out
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the window. There was no traffic. None. No one was walking in
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the streets. Nothing. He turned back to look at the other
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passengers. They were all looking directly at him. A strange
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tingling sensation crawled slowly up the nape of his neck. He
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turned his gaze toward a woman that was sitting opposite him.
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She was looking right into his eyes.
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"Yet," he thought, "she's not really looking at me, not
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really. Should I say something to her; ask what the fuck she
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thinks she's glaring at? Better not say anything."
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Then another odd realization struck him. The woman who was
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staring at him hadn't blinked once.
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"She's just not blinking."
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He turned to an old man who was sitting two places beyond
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the woman. The old man was also staring at him, looking into his
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eyes but not blinking.
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"What the fuck is this?" he wondered almost out loud.
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"And this lousy song playing in my head too."
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The bus rolled into another stop. No one moved. The front
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door opened and closed without making a sound. No one got on.
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It slowly pushed away from the curb and moved into the center
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lane of Broadway. He realized that the bus hadn't stopped at any
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red lights. None. He turned again and looked out the window.
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He saw nothing. No one was there; not a truck, not a car, not a
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single person walking the streets. All the lights started to
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develop a weird cast, an off-white that seemed to glow, to bend
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with the movement of the bus. It must be the tinted windows, he
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thought.
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For one split second he wanted desperately to stand, to bolt
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out the door and run and run, to go as fast as he could back down
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town. He froze. He felt a strange buckling jolt in his stomach
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and wanted to double over from the force of the impact, but he
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didn't budge, not a flicker of movement.
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"Good Christ, I want a lousy scotch."
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He stayed put in his seat.
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The song ended and started all over again. There it was:
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the music, the foreign lyric, the slow rhythm mingling in his
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head. His mind began to hurt and the pain in the gut increased.
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He didn't move a muscle.
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And he didn't even know Italian, had no idea what the song
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meant; the words, nothing. But he thought that he had known what
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it meant, had known its meaning years ago, yet he couldn't
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recall, not exactly.
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He sneezed. But his body never moved. He tried to sneeze
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again.
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He did. The body just wouldn't move an inch. "Give me a
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break," he thought. Only this time he thought the idea out loud.
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Nothing came from his lips, not a sound.
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"Hey, lady, what the hell are you looking at?" he heard his
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mind ask, felt the lips move but the words never left his mouth.
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"I'm not looking at anything," said the lady.
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"She said that to me."
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He saw her lips move yet the sound never came out. Nothing.
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Yet he heard every word, every syllable. It was as if he were
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listening to a radio, a stereo that had the song on one track and
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her voice on the other.
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The bus pulled into another stop. He wanted to stand and
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get off; wanted to open the back door and walk off and start to
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run. He'd run to Central Park, maybe to the Empire State
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Building and climb to the top and jump off.
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"That's a dumb idea," he thought to himself.
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He didn't move.
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He lifted his right leg to cross it over his left. There
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was the feeling of the leg coming up and moving across the other
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and resting. Yet, as he looked down, he saw that both feet were
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still on the floor. But they felt crossed. He knew they were
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crossed. He pinched his right knee and felt the pinch. And yet
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he didn't see his hand move toward the knee.
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The song stopped.
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"That happens sometimes," a voice said to his mind.
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"Did I just think that? No, I couldn't have".
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"No," another voice responded.
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There was no song. He smiled to himself. Than another song
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started the same way. It was Billy Joel singing "Allen Town".
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"What the hell is that?" he wondered.
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He became very frightened.
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"I'm getting the fuck off this bus!"
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He didn't move.
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"I want outa here!" as he sat there trying to calm his
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soul.
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Another stop. The door opened. The door closed and on uptown
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it continued. No red lights, not one. No traffic and it's
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starting to snow.
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He wondered what time it was. He couldn't remember what
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time it had been when he got on the bus. And why were the
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streets so deserted, almost desolate. It can't be that
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late.
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"I'm getting off at the nearest bar."
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He uncrossed his legs. Nothing moved.
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"God, I'm not even drunk."
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"Only had one beer at lunch. Lunch?" as he couldn't recall
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his lunch.
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"What did I have for lunch?"
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He simply couldn't think that far back.
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"Must have had something."
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Nothing came to him as Billy Joel song played out and
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started up again.
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"Maybe I'll ride further up-town and look up Doug. We could
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both go for a drink. Doug liked a cocktail in the afternoon.
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Afternoon?
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"Anyway, be nice to see him again, it's been a while."
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He passed for a second, then whispered, "Doug who?"
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He touched his face and his hand never left his side.
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"I don't know any Doug."
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But he must have known someone named Doug. Or why would he
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want to stop off and have a cocktail with him? Why would he want
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to get off this warm bus, ring the doorbell, say hello to this
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Doug, maybe get invited in, take off his overcoat and watch this
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stranger pour a cocktail for the two of them and then be handed
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one and they'd probably sit and chat about this and that, maybe
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about work, maybe about what Doug was doing these days?
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"What kind of work was Doug doing anyhow?"
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"I don't know anybody called Doug so why would I ring his
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doorbell, sit calmly in his large living room, share a cocktail
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and then get up unexpectedly and leave because I'd realize that I
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was in the wrong apartment. I can't do that, it isn't nice, not
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polite at all."
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And he always thought of himself as being quite polite,
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quite proper. Everyone had said so. Even Doug had said so one
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day when they were both in college. Even that day Doug
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introduced him to his wife.
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"My wife, not Doug's wife," he said to his inner brain.
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Both his wife and Doug had been friends back then. And they
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both, Doug and his wife, had said how polite he was, how
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considerate, what a terrific guy he was and how kind he could be
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to people, even total strangers, especially animals. That's one
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comment he never quite understood, he had always hated animals,
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always.
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Allen Town played on and on in his head. Of all places,
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and he knew that he would never go back to Allen Town, P.A.;
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never go there. Much too depressing with all those steel mills,
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or were they coal mines? He couldn't remember. He hadn't been
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there since he was a child, and he sure as hell wasn't going back
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now. At least not today.
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He couldn't even remember who Doug was, not even what Doug
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was doing for a living, to make ends meet or, for that matter,
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where Doug lived. He couldn't remember if there were stairs to
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climb to get to Doug's apartment, or whether there was an
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elevator with a short black elevator operator with a Spanish
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doorman, or was he an Italian? Was the place painted? Oranges.
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It was painted in a thousand shades of orange, all different
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shades of orange.
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"That Doug was a weird dude, what with painting such a nice,
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such an expensive apartment a thousand shades of orange. Maybe
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another color would have been more appropriate, more
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satisfactory; especially in the den, a room that should always
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reflect a certain sensibility, should have a fireplace and a big
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ugly dog with slippers after dinner and a smoking jacket for
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wearing on Sunday mornings while reading the Arts and Leisure
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section from the New York Times.
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He could never understand why his wife said he liked
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animals, especially when she knew the opposite, knew all along
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that he didn't like them, didn't care for them even after he did
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have a cat once when he was a small child, but it drowned one day
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when he wasn't looking and from that moment on he had promised
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himself, took an oath while holding the dead animal in his
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soaking hands, that he would never have another animal again, one
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that could get itself dead and cause all kinds of hurt inside
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because they wouldn't be there any longer to pet and to play with
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especially around Christmas time when having a real live animal
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was fun as you watched it play with all the wrapping then get
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sick and throw-up all over mother's favorite Afghan that she made
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last year so that all her shitty friends could tell her just how
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talented she was and still being able to raise a family all by
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herself when times were tough enough, especially when your
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husband was a bum who left you at the wrong time and times were
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bad enough without having to take care of five kids who never
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listened and were constantly eating her out of house and home but
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would hopefully one day get a job and send money to help keep the
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old homestead afloat during these hard times.
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The bus pulled into another stop. The rear door opened and
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the lady opposite stood up, turned and left. The only passengers
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left on the bus were the old man and himself. The door closed
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and the bus pulled off.
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No red lights.
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His head hurt and he couldn't get the thought, no, the
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question of who Doug was settled in his brain.
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"Who in God's name is Doug? And why would he paint his
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apartment so many shades of one color. Orange. Especially in
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the den of all places. The bathroom, okay, but not cover over
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the oak panelling and the big fireplace and gold and green lamp
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shades."
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Now that he thought about it, it wasn't orange, it was more
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like shades of red. "Yeah, maybe red."
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His stomach pain was worsening. He wanted to urinate. He
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wanted to urinate right here sitting in this bus. He wanted to
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urinate right down his pants leg.
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So He did. He sat there and urinated all over himself.
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Everything was getting soaked; the seat, his pants, even the
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shoes were filled with his urine. He urinated for a full at
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least a full minute. It was the longest he had ever urinated.
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The old man was still looking at him and never blinked and eye.
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Nothing moved except the bus and the urine running down his leg
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like a river flowing down a mountainside, flowing to the ocean,
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filling the Great Lakes, drowning little kids who play too long
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and hard and get tired when they swim out too far, drowning
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little cats, especially when they're put in old, musty potato
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sacks that are thrown from a very high place - like off a bridge
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near Allen Town, P.A. But who likes cats anyway, his mother
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always said. She had said that we couldn't afford to keep any
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animals, they were dirty besides, and it didn't matter what your
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father had to say about anything only that if he did that it
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would only be the straw that broke the camel's back, the final
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irony from his self-centered point of view, which, she had said
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on many occasions, was the god damnest truth besides.
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"I don't know any Doug or Douglas, no Douggie nor Dugan, not
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a Dan, not even a Daniel or a Dudley, so who the hell is this
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upper-middle class slob called Doug that lives up-town in an
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expensive apartment that's been recently painted a thousand
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shades of red? I, for one, certainly don't. And this bus hasn't
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stopped in a long while."
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He wished the old man would stop looking at him. Maybe he
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should get up and move to the front of the bus. He stayed put.
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The song played on and on in his head, a head that was aching
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even more with each city block they passed; his head and
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that sharp pain in the gut.
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He put his right hand on his stomach and pressed down. Maybe
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that would ease the biting, the constantness of the pain.
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"Shit," he thought, "I didn't think I pissed that far up."
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His right hand was soaking wet. He looked down and didn't see a
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thing, didn't see his hand on his stomach, didn't see any
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wetness. He just saw his body sitting straight in the seat.
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But he was so absolutely sure, so positive that his right hand
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was resting on his stomach. He pushed at his hand. He tried to
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push the pain back inside. He felt that pressure but saw no
|
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movement. But he knew it, felt it, felt it just as he felt he was
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sitting in this bus moving up-town heading towards Doug's house
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for that cocktail.
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He closed his eyes. His mind just didn't want to work any
|
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more. He was tired tonight. Tonight?
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"Why am I sitting on this bus," he wondered to himself. No
|
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response, just Billy Joel rocking on and on.
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He slowly moved his right hand toward his abdomen. Something
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is there and it didn't feel like it should be. It wasn't part of
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his clothing. It was flesh of some sort. And he felt like he was
|
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holding something, something quite odd. Something heavy. He
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dreaded opening his eyes to see what it was. That was the last
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thing he wanted to do at this very moment.
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Something forced him to open his eyes. His eyelids hurt. The
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old man was still looking at him.
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Maybe Doug's home now, he wondered. But he's always home
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lately. He thought, "Hell, with it, I'll get off and go see my
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buddy, Doug. Doug was always good with things, figuring things
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out, coming to solutions and conclusions about many things, all
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sorts of things, making logical and reasonable assessments on any
|
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subject, no matter how alien it might be to his nature. Doug had
|
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always been a big help in such things, in anything. Maybe he
|
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could explain why his stomach hurt so much."
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"But why paint an apartment all those shades of red?"
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Even his own wife commented on Doug's use of color. It was
|
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this morning that she had mentioned it, wasn't it? Or was it
|
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something else she had commented on? Was it some other subject
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they had talked so earnestly about? Yes, it was something else
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they had discussed in the early morning hours.
|
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"Christ, it was very early when we had that talk," he
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thought.
|
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But what about? About the den, he wondered? They were in the
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den. He was sitting in his favorite leather chair and she was
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sitting opposite him on the sofa.
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The bus continued up-town.
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"What did she want to tell me. She wanted me to give her
|
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something, something that I had been holding in my lap. But what
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was I holding so tightly," he asked himself and the old man.
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The old man just stared at him without batting an eye.
|
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He hadn't been holding a book, not even his usual morning
|
|
coffee. He remembered that it was too early for coffee.
|
|
"What would Doug say about all this?"
|
|
She had sat there looking nervous, which is something she
|
|
never usually was. She was very calm individual.
|
|
"Just like Doug's wife."
|
|
As a matter of fact, he recalled that they - his wife and
|
|
Doug's wife - were, in many respects, very similar. Like
|
|
twins.
|
|
"But when did Doug get married? Jesus, I even forget what
|
|
his wife looks like."
|
|
He turned his head toward the window. The song stopped and
|
|
started again.
|
|
"No one in the streets today. Must be a holiday."
|
|
He was getting tired; hadn't felt this tired in months.
|
|
He thought to himself that everything was going to work out.
|
|
They'd be able to keep the apartment, he'd find another job and
|
|
they wouldn't have to take the kids out of school.
|
|
He was beginning to enjoy the music that pushed through his
|
|
brain. It was the sharp pain in his gut that bothered him. His
|
|
eyes closed again.
|
|
"What did she want from me?" I didn't have anything in my
|
|
hands that she needed so badly."
|
|
He remembered that she was crying. And his wife very rarely
|
|
cried, never showed much deep emotion. She got that from her
|
|
mother, the stiff-upper-lip-type, that elegant lady.
|
|
"No, I won't give it up," he had said to her in the early
|
|
morning hours.
|
|
His head pounded.
|
|
"Christ, do I want a lousy scotch!"
|
|
Anything to ease the new constant pain.
|
|
"When the hell am I gonna reach that stop?"
|
|
He didn't move and couldn't remember what stop he wanted. It
|
|
was someplace up-town. He knew that. He knew it was near Doug's
|
|
place, the place with all those red stains streaking those deep
|
|
oak walls. He had to get off near Doug's, Doug's place that
|
|
looked very much like his own, a den with a fireplace, a wife and
|
|
a dog.
|
|
But he had never really liked Doug very much. Could never
|
|
really understand why they knew each other. He always had to
|
|
compete with Doug, and that was one thing he had always hated: to
|
|
compete with anything or anyone. He was tired of competing,
|
|
especially with a person that was suppose to be a friend, a
|
|
friend that had a wife and den just like his own, had a wife that
|
|
was looking straight into his eyes this morning, looking from his
|
|
eyes to his lap and back again, her eyes constantly moving back
|
|
and forth and crying all the while.
|
|
But what was in his lap?
|
|
He realized that he was sitting in a very large puddle. The
|
|
feeling was like he would have when he was a small child back in
|
|
Pennsylvania. That's when he would happily plop into a puddle of
|
|
water after a summer rain storm. How happy was happy then? But,
|
|
he thought, that was then, now is now.
|
|
It was just last week when he realized that he was no longer
|
|
a child, realized that he was an adult with big responsibilities:
|
|
an expensive home, a beautiful and loving wife, two kids, a den
|
|
and a big ugly dog that he loved. And he wasn't suppose to like
|
|
animals, animals that could die and leave him alone like when he
|
|
was a small child when his mother would constantly yell and
|
|
scream at him and his brothers and sisters, especially his father
|
|
when he was around, when she'd yell because they would eat two
|
|
meals instead of just one, yelled because she hated animals,
|
|
especially little gray cats with funny spots, yelled because
|
|
there was no husband to yell at. And here was his own wife this
|
|
very morning yelling and screaming at him. She was screeching so
|
|
loud that the dog went to hide under the big chair in the living
|
|
room.
|
|
What was she shouting for? He had no idea.
|
|
Why was she talking so loud when he could hear every word
|
|
she said? He wasn't deaf. She had never screamed like that
|
|
before, never in all the years they had been married, not even
|
|
when the kids lived at home and they'd get on her nerves. Never.
|
|
What he would never understand was her yelling over some
|
|
stupid song that he was singing. It was, after all, only a song,
|
|
one that he remembered from when he was a child, a little Italian
|
|
song his father would sing to him right as he was about to fall
|
|
asleep in the warmth of the evening's light and thunder. It was
|
|
the song his Dad would sing every night, every night before his
|
|
father finally couldn't take the screaming, the bills, the
|
|
responsibility of life, the heaviness of his existence.
|
|
Oh, how his father would sing and sing in that deep voice, a
|
|
voice that would sail across the mountains, would flow over the
|
|
hills and valleys, through the mines and deserted streets, a
|
|
voice that would calm the very beast in his heart; his heart that
|
|
would finally burst from the pain, from his loneliness, from the
|
|
empty pay envelope, from the empty icebox, a voice that would
|
|
spread out before the world as he would stand in the front yard
|
|
and sing those sad Italian songs of things lost, of times in the
|
|
past, songs of kings and queens that loved deeper than all other
|
|
loves, a voice that would touch the ground and bounce up to the
|
|
heavens as he cried in his songs, as he raged at the sky, his
|
|
life that would be no more, raged at the stars that would blink
|
|
and blink, that were so far out of his reach. His father that
|
|
would calm his young soul in the dark, touch his small face and
|
|
smile into his child-like heart, a heart that was bursting
|
|
because of the love he had felt for that father who was now so
|
|
far, so very far away, far away in that mystery world of old
|
|
Italian songs and dreams, a father who couldn't speak the
|
|
language, couldn't count over ten, a father that had given this
|
|
small boy so much, so much to fill an aching heart, an aching
|
|
memory.
|
|
And his wife was screaming this morning like his mother,
|
|
screaming because he was sitting straight up in his bed singing
|
|
the song his father had sung, singing at the top of his resonating
|
|
lungs. He hadn't been dreaming. No, he was sitting up singing
|
|
like a bird, like an eagle, like a volcano, singing early this
|
|
morning as the dawn was breaking.
|
|
His head hurt.
|
|
He had asked his wife to stop the screaming, told her that
|
|
he didn't know why she was carrying on this way. So he just
|
|
couldn't stay in the bedroom any longer, the yelling was burning
|
|
into him. And what had he been talking to her about right before
|
|
he left the room?
|
|
"Was I shouting something too? Yeah, maybe I was."
|
|
He hated yelling, any kind of yelling, yelling for any
|
|
reason. He would never yell, never.
|
|
The strangest sensation began to envelope him now on this
|
|
up-town bus. It was as if he had no legs. He quickly looked down.
|
|
They were still there. But they seemed all wet, not a feeling,
|
|
just the sight of a large puddle under his feet.
|
|
The bus passed another stop. At least, that's what he
|
|
thought. Billy Joel played on and on.
|
|
And he never thought of hitting his wife. That was something
|
|
so removed from his character, his middle-class personality. But
|
|
what else could he do when she lunged at him like that. They had
|
|
just been sitting there; him in his favorite chair, her on the
|
|
leather sofa. She just jumped at him.
|
|
"She must have really wanted that thing," he thought. I had
|
|
to push her away, didn't I?"
|
|
"What the hell are you jumping at!" he had screamed at her.
|
|
"Doug's wife would never do that!"
|
|
He began to feel badly about striking his wife, hitting her
|
|
in the face like that.
|
|
She just stayed on the floor crying and pleading with him,
|
|
praying for him to give the thing to her, let her take it away
|
|
and put it back where it belonged.
|
|
"Why the hell does she want this?" he thought. "She had
|
|
never wanted it before, had hated the very sight of it from the
|
|
day I brought it home."
|
|
She had never understood why he had wanted something like
|
|
this, something that big.
|
|
He placed his head back and let it rest on the chilly
|
|
window. He looked up at the ceiling and spoke out loud; "Why
|
|
wouldn't she just let me hold it? I wasn't hurting anybody just
|
|
holding on to it."
|
|
All he wanted to do was dream, day dream a bit. He couldn't.
|
|
But without a job, a job that he had worked at for the past
|
|
twenty years, nothing could be done, nothing. He hadn't believed
|
|
her when she told him that everything would work out, that there
|
|
was a market out there for guys like him, people with his sort of
|
|
talent and experience. Little did she know that that was a pipe
|
|
dream, a fairytale. There were no jobs for him. He had no
|
|
training and now he was over the hill in his profession. He was
|
|
top-dollar now. Who would pay top-dollar when they could get a
|
|
kid and teach the kid, at half the cost? Who? Nobody, that's who.
|
|
Oh, he had made phone calls. They all led nowhere. All he would
|
|
get was, gee I'm sorry but there's nothing now, maybe next month,
|
|
next year, we'll keep you on file, send a resume. And even the
|
|
friends that he called had nothing, felt embarrassed for him, or
|
|
themselves. He had even tried to cash in on some favors that were
|
|
due - he hated that - and all he got was, "Some friend you are.
|
|
That's shit, Doug, trying to pressure me that way. What kind of
|
|
friend are ya suppose ta be, Doug. You're an asshole! And yes,
|
|
there are NO openings, buddy," as the other end of the phone line
|
|
went dead, very dead.
|
|
So he knew what had to be done. Simple. Life would no longer
|
|
be complicated, no longer contrived and false. Too many years of
|
|
that. And where had it gotten him? He had thought about this for
|
|
weeks, the weeks he spent reading the "Want Ads", walking from
|
|
one large skyscraper to another, from one receptionist to
|
|
another, from one "No, he's not in now," to another. What had it
|
|
all been for in the first fucking place.
|
|
"So I drank a little bit these past two years. So what.
|
|
Shit, everybody else did. I wasn't the only joker at the cocktail
|
|
parties packin' it away. There were hundreds of other guys
|
|
pushin' the sauce down their fat guts. I wasn't alone. And I'd
|
|
look like a damn jerk if I took a Tab or a Coke. Shit, the whole
|
|
place woulda laughed me outa the room."
|
|
The bus churned on.
|
|
"I mean, hell, so what was a drink at lunch? Big stinkin'
|
|
deal. The bar was full a guys like me puttin' down a cocktail or
|
|
two. They all had jobs, dealt with goin' back to work after
|
|
lunch. They made it, were able to hack it."
|
|
His head felt like it was about to explode.
|
|
"So I missed a day or two. Big deal. I had vacation time
|
|
comin'. And that fuckin' V.P. from accounting, man, he had
|
|
no right to say those things to me. I did the work, got the paper
|
|
out. So I was late a day or two on finishing. Big fucking deal,
|
|
man."
|
|
His stomach was coming apart. He felt it fall to the floor.
|
|
"And my whore of a mother had no right to yell at Dad. So he
|
|
couldn't speak English all that well. I mean, so what. She had no
|
|
right, at least not in front of us. No way, no how. And who the
|
|
hell was she ta talk? A jerk was what she was. He sang, so what.
|
|
He'd find another job soon enough. And boy, could he sing, sing
|
|
like it was the end of the friggin' world, sing like there was no
|
|
tomorrow."
|
|
He knew that all his father wanted was to be left alone to
|
|
sing, to sing his gentle ballads, his opera that he had loved
|
|
since he was a child in Italy. That's all.
|
|
"Was it askin' all that much? Was it askin' too much to give
|
|
'em those moments on the front lawn, those times when he could
|
|
talk to his God in his own way? Was that too much?"
|
|
"I'm forty-five fuckin' years old. Where do I go from here?
|
|
I go nowhere is where I go. Who needs the lousy humiliation? Not
|
|
yours truly. Enough's enough."
|
|
He closed his eyes and saw his wife; saw her face, her soft
|
|
blue eyes looking at him. He opened his eyes to erase the image.
|
|
Her face was still in front of him. It was as if he had not quite
|
|
opened his eyes.
|
|
He closed them again. Her face there.
|
|
Opened, still there.
|
|
Closed and she cried into his face. She just put her head
|
|
quietly in her hands and sobbed.
|
|
How pretty she had always been, he thought. He knew that she
|
|
was the kindest person he had ever met, the most giving and
|
|
gracious lady he had ever known. That's why he had come to
|
|
realize that it had to be this way.
|
|
He no longer wanted a drink. He didn't care if he had one or
|
|
ten. He had no thirst for a drink. And his stomach was rolling
|
|
across the floor of the bus.
|
|
He wanted to ask the old man across from him to hand him his
|
|
stomach, but he didn't say anything.
|
|
"Maybe the bus driver'll help me out, hand it to me. Nah,
|
|
better let him just keep driving up-town."
|
|
His head hurt.
|
|
He had asked his wife to stop the screaming, told her that
|
|
he didn't know why she was carrying on this way. So he just
|
|
couldn't stay in the bedroom any longer, the yelling was burning
|
|
into him. And what had he been talking to her about right before
|
|
he left the room?
|
|
"Was I shouting something too? Yeah, maybe I was."
|
|
He hated yelling, any kind of yelling, yelling for any
|
|
reason. He would never yell, never.
|
|
The strangest sensation began to envelope him now on this
|
|
up-town bus. It was as if he had no legs. He quickly looked down.
|
|
They were still there. But they seemed all wet, not a feeling,
|
|
just the sight of a large puddle under his feet.
|
|
The bus passed another stop. At least, that's what he
|
|
thought. Billy Joel played on and on.
|
|
And he never thought of hitting his wife. That was something
|
|
so removed from his character, his middle-class personality. But
|
|
what else could he do when she lunged at him like that. They had
|
|
just been sitting there; him in his favorite chair, her on the
|
|
leather sofa. She just jumped at him.
|
|
"She must have really wanted that thing," he thought. I had
|
|
to push her away, didn't I?"
|
|
"What the hell are you jumping at!" he had screamed at her.
|
|
"Doug's wife would never do that!"
|
|
He began to feel badly about striking his wife, hitting her
|
|
in the face like that.
|
|
She just stayed on the floor crying and pleading with him,
|
|
praying for him to give the thing to her, let her take it away
|
|
and put it back where it belonged.
|
|
"Why the hell does she want this?" he thought. "She had
|
|
never wanted it before, had hated the very sight of it from the
|
|
day I brought it home."
|
|
She had never understood why he had wanted something like
|
|
this, something that big.
|
|
He placed his head back and let it rest on the chilly
|
|
window. He looked up at the ceiling and spoke out loud; "Why
|
|
wouldn't she just let me hold it? I wasn't hurting anybody just
|
|
holding on to it."
|
|
All he wanted to do was dream, day dream a bit. He couldn't.
|
|
But without a job, a job that he had worked at for the past
|
|
twenty years, nothing could be done, nothing. He hadn't believed
|
|
her when she told him that everything would work out, that there
|
|
was a market out there for guys like him, people with his sort of
|
|
talent and experience. Little did she know that that was a pipe
|
|
dream, a fairytale. There were no jobs for him. He had no
|
|
training and now he was over the hill in his profession. He was
|
|
top-dollar now. Who would pay top-dollar when they could get a
|
|
kid and teach the kid, at half the cost? Who? Nobody, that's who.
|
|
Oh, he had made phone calls. They all led nowhere. All he would
|
|
get was, gee I'm sorry but there's nothing now, maybe next month,
|
|
next year, we'll keep you on file, send a resume. And even the
|
|
friends that he called had nothing, felt embarrassed for him, or
|
|
themselves. He had even tried to cash in on some favors that were
|
|
due - he hated that - and all he got was, "Some friend you are.
|
|
That's shit, Doug, trying to pressure me that way. What kind of
|
|
friend are ya suppose ta be, Doug. You're an asshole! And yes,
|
|
there are NO openings, buddy," as the other end of the phone line
|
|
went dead, very dead.
|
|
So he knew what had to be done. Simple. Life would no longer
|
|
be complicated, no longer contrived and false. Too many years of
|
|
that. And where had it gotten him? He had thought about this for
|
|
weeks, the weeks he spent reading the "Want Ads", walking from
|
|
one large skyscraper to another, from one receptionist to
|
|
another, from one "No, he's not in now," to another. What had it
|
|
all been for in the first fucking place.
|
|
"So I drank a little bit these past two years. So what.
|
|
Shit, everybody else did. I wasn't the only joker at the cocktail
|
|
parties packin' it away. There were hundreds of other guys
|
|
pushin' the sauce down their fat guts. I wasn't alone. And I'd
|
|
look like a damn jerk if I took a Tab or a Coke. Shit, the whole
|
|
place woulda laughed me outa the room."
|
|
The bus churned on.
|
|
"I mean, hell, so what was a drink at lunch? Big stinkin'
|
|
deal. The bar was full a guys like me puttin' down a cocktail or
|
|
two. They all had jobs, dealt with goin' back to work after
|
|
lunch. They made it, were able to hack it."
|
|
His head felt like it was about to explode.
|
|
"So I missed a day or two. Big deal. I had vacation time
|
|
comin'. And that fuckin' V.P. from accounting, man, he had
|
|
no right to say those things to me. I did the work, got the paper
|
|
out. So I was late a day or two on finishing. Big fucking deal,
|
|
man."
|
|
His stomach was coming apart. He felt it fall to the floor.
|
|
"And my whore of a mother had no right to yell at Dad. So he
|
|
couldn't speak English all that well. I mean, so what. She had no
|
|
right, at least not in front of us. No way, no how. And who the
|
|
hell was she ta talk? A jerk was what she was. He sang, so what.
|
|
He'd find another job soon enough. And boy, could he sing, sing
|
|
like it was the end of the friggin' world, sing like there was no
|
|
tomorrow."
|
|
He knew that all his father wanted was to be left alone to
|
|
sing, to sing his gentle ballads, his opera that he had loved
|
|
since he was a child in Italy. That's all.
|
|
"Was it askin' all that much? Was it askin' too much to give
|
|
'em those moments on the front lawn, those times when he could
|
|
talk to his God in his own way? Was that too much?"
|
|
"I'm forty-five fuckin' years old. Where do I go from here?
|
|
I go nowhere is where I go. Who needs the lousy humiliation? Not
|
|
yours truly. Enough's enough."
|
|
He closed his eyes and saw his wife; saw her face, her soft
|
|
blue eyes looking at him. He opened his eyes to erase the image.
|
|
Her face was still in front of him. It was as if he had not quite
|
|
opened his eyes.
|
|
He closed them again. Her face there.
|
|
Opened, still there.
|
|
Closed and she cried into his face. She just put her head
|
|
quietly in her hands and sobbed.
|
|
How pretty she had always been, he thought. He knew that she
|
|
was the kindest person he had ever met, the most giving and
|
|
gracious lady he had ever known. That's why he had come to
|
|
realize that it had to be this way.
|
|
He no longer wanted a drink. He didn't care if he had one or
|
|
ten. He had no thirst for a drink. And his stomach was rolling
|
|
across the floor of the bus.
|
|
He wanted to ask the old man across from him to hand him his
|
|
stomach, but he didn't say anything.
|
|
"Maybe the bus driver'll help me out, hand it to me. Nah,
|
|
better let him just keep driving up-town."
|
|
So it had to be this way. She was too kind, too good to him
|
|
for the past nineteen years, too damn good. There were no
|
|
alternatives. Poor Doug had tried, in vain, to come up with at
|
|
least one solution. Nothing. The whole situation had passed over
|
|
into another plane, someplace that was alien, so far away from
|
|
his life and times.
|
|
He had lost control of the situation, his time and place in
|
|
the universe. That simple. And that knowledge was building in him
|
|
day after day, drink after drink, hangover after hangover. It had
|
|
just become too humiliating, too foreign to his nature, his
|
|
personality.
|
|
There are limits, he would hear himself say each day as he
|
|
sat having his third scotch.
|
|
"Ya just can't hold on ta certain things," is what he would
|
|
say to himself as he looked into the men's room mirror. "Gotta
|
|
let it go," he realized as he began to talk himself into a
|
|
certain vision, a particular image, an image quite his own.
|
|
He knew that's how his father would have thought.
|
|
His father was a man who had always put things in a certain
|
|
way, looked at life in a particular way, his own fashion, you
|
|
might say. His Dad was like that, a man unto himself, a sparrow,
|
|
a swan, a swimmer - hard and fast - a no-win situation-type guy,
|
|
a hero, a ballet, a Christmas pie, a gauntlet, a galaxy, a worm,
|
|
a mouse, a monster, a tough son-of-a-bitch; a warm, delicate hand
|
|
holding his on rainy days and sunny days, a hand that would lift
|
|
his small body to the sky and back; a giant, a mystery, a whore,
|
|
a thief, a prince, a pawn, a palace, just a man, that's all.
|
|
He tried to recall what his father looked like and couldn't.
|
|
And right now, at this very instant, he wanted that more than
|
|
anything else in the universe, just to remember what his Dad
|
|
looked like.
|
|
"We never painted our den red. Not all those shades of red
|
|
and orange. Did we?'
|
|
He simply couldn't remember.
|
|
He started to softly cry as he sat in the bus, the bus
|
|
heading up-town to see Doug, his tears falling smoothly, gently
|
|
down his aged face. He could taste the salt striking his lip,
|
|
touch his tongue. He cried and cried.
|
|
All of a sudden he had this tremendous urge to hug his two
|
|
kids, to take them and hold them so close that they would push
|
|
themselves into his very body, his very soul, to take them up and
|
|
kiss them, to swallow them whole, to put them inside his body. He
|
|
wanted that more than even seeing his father's cracking face. He
|
|
would, yes, he would take them around the world, put them on his
|
|
shoulders and carry them to India, China, to the moon. Yes, he
|
|
would put them in his back pocket and carry them to work so
|
|
they'd never be out of his sight. He wanted to take them and put
|
|
them in his mouth so that he could forever taste them, taste
|
|
their life, their future, their very smell and texture. He wanted
|
|
that now but now he was on a bus riding up-town. They weren't
|
|
here with him, not now, not on this bus.
|
|
He tried to stop crying but couldn't. And yet, deep inside,
|
|
he didn't want to stop crying. When he cried he felt himself that
|
|
small child playing in the mud during a summer rain, felt the
|
|
mountains hold him, the hills caress his body and mind. But that
|
|
was when he was a boy, now he was a man.
|
|
And the tears started to fill his shoes.
|
|
Fuck it, he had thought at that one instant in time. Those
|
|
were his very words. Fuck it as the steel tube with the wide,
|
|
ever so big opening turned toward his stomach. He pressed the
|
|
opening against his belly as his wife screamed and lunged for him
|
|
again. But it no longer mattered, not for him.
|
|
She screamed and screamed into the blackness that was
|
|
beginning to surround him as his stomach came through his back
|
|
and splashed against the far wall; the wall with the fireplace.
|
|
She screamed and screamed at him, at his desperation, at his
|
|
conclusion, at his dreams, at his final thought of his father's
|
|
face pressed against smashing glass, at his father's face
|
|
crashing through thousands of tiny glass particles, at his
|
|
father's face as it shattered the glass of scotch that lay before
|
|
him on the kitchen table in November, at his father's face calm
|
|
and still falling off the chair and onto the linoleum floor,
|
|
screaming at his father's face gone white and red, all red from
|
|
the skull that was no more, the skull that had come apart from
|
|
the jaw, from the nose, screaming at his father going so far away
|
|
in November, yelling at his father to put down the gun, put it
|
|
down before you get hurt, at his father's smiling face as he took
|
|
that drink and the world came apart.
|
|
His wife had lurched as his upper body separated from his
|
|
lower body, as the chair started to move back pushing both of
|
|
them into space, into the gentle air.
|
|
And she screamed and screamed at him, had hated him in that
|
|
one moment, in that second when nothing could turn that instant
|
|
in time back, nothing could become something else, in that one
|
|
moment of time when what was was. Simple.
|
|
He could still see her face; a face filled with such pain.
|
|
He thought for a brief second, that he had never seen so much
|
|
pain in one face, never.
|
|
He also saw the walls of his den as he and his wife were
|
|
falling backwards. They had all turned red, red splashed all
|
|
over, covering everything. Thousands of shades of red mingled
|
|
with the oak walls and the off-white ceiling. He had never seen
|
|
so much red.
|
|
Her hands were grabbing for him, grasping for him. He saw
|
|
her face as they struck the floor, her on top of his upper body.
|
|
Her tears were meshing with the splashed blood that completely
|
|
covered her face.
|
|
She had tried to pull him up, to grab at him, to hold his
|
|
torso to her frail chest, to breathe life back into his shell,
|
|
into his now vacant head, his stale lungs.
|
|
She picked herself up and sat next to his hollow limbs and
|
|
lifted them up to her, held them to her, tried to force her life
|
|
into them, to give her energy, her life-force into his heavy
|
|
nothingness.
|
|
And there hadn't been any pain, not really, just a blankness
|
|
that said; "You're here."
|
|
"What?"
|
|
"It's your stop," said the old man.
|
|
"Oh," he answered. "Thanks."
|
|
The bus pulled into a stop. He stood up, went to the back
|
|
door. It opened by itself. He stepped from the bus and walked
|
|
right off the edge of the world.
|
|
|
|
|
|
-- Martin Zurla
|
|
|
|
============================================================================
|
|
|
|
THE AFFLICTED
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The candle flickers in a non-existent wind..
|
|
|
|
Not that anyone need notice;
|
|
Deliverance, as god would say,
|
|
is not a substitution: 't is death itself.
|
|
Death's sole positive and terse arrangement,
|
|
strange with life: a steaming nostril
|
|
bled with each evolving century of love.
|
|
|
|
The picture's not as I would have it
|
|
seen torn. Had I not been born...had I not been born!
|
|
Mere speculation...fate's a non sequitur, a non-selective
|
|
entity. And I have fled the angle of a birth unshorn...
|
|
and give or take an ear or two
|
|
have made the universal saviour
|
|
scorn...
|
|
|
|
I have been so many things, many personages;
|
|
many entities, all too many masks. Discussing...
|
|
after all, these pages damp with blood, carry a
|
|
reality...imaginary blood, none the less
|
|
more real than birth is to a child: Birth recalled:
|
|
...discussing, of all things, the price of clay...
|
|
|
|
And why the price of clay is nothing
|
|
amazes even sometimes god...
|
|
|
|
You are restless...wish to go...
|
|
My rambling has upset you...?
|
|
No. Then...Do not leave me...do not go...
|
|
Have I been in love?...you ask. The time is ripe
|
|
for oranges...pomegranates...and sand. Yes, sand.
|
|
A million million million stars
|
|
upon the netherworld of universes in between
|
|
this taught of you and your reality (vitality). I can't
|
|
remember when...is it charm or curse?
|
|
But what's it matter anyway
|
|
We sigh the clamour of our lives away. While fighting
|
|
fighting...the fighting clashes swords so far away.
|
|
Do you think that war will touch us now, in a century
|
|
of volatile ignition?
|
|
Admit it. You are frightened! Let me hold you.
|
|
Just a little while. Until the warm wind
|
|
blows the truth away...
|
|
|
|
No, I am not cradled in some mother's arms.
|
|
Am far from harm. No doctor clones the healing
|
|
of my charms. I drink dark wine; poison blood
|
|
from a chalice gods dare not approach. I drink
|
|
divine. Death. For death will save the universe.
|
|
Or death the universe will purge. Urge
|
|
a human entity towards intangibility.
|
|
I let myself go wrong. Did the wrong things
|
|
purposefully...felt the force of retribution
|
|
down at heel...from it. (False alarm?)
|
|
You say no...I, simple fool
|
|
do nothing.
|
|
|
|
I sat beneath an ellum tree...
|
|
|
|
I cut into an ancient oak
|
|
a scrap of poem that I wrote
|
|
went back there a year ago
|
|
to find it faded overgrown
|
|
with scales of life's vitality
|
|
and not the bleak delusion
|
|
of humanity...
|
|
|
|
I have become a hermit
|
|
A hermit not to poison you
|
|
with shadows of intransigence
|
|
but some to reach out more
|
|
by being what I was before
|
|
not half the man I am
|
|
nor was to be as each year passes
|
|
each year masses
|
|
death...
|
|
|
|
I am poisoned...let us make a deal.
|
|
Go down to the river near the sparkle of the waterfall
|
|
early in the morning when the soft birds sing
|
|
and rest upon the eves
|
|
of those deserted houses
|
|
haunted and so little known
|
|
to what is our ideal...
|
|
and throw a stone into the splash
|
|
of water...count the waves
|
|
upon the quantum waves...eternity
|
|
upon eternity
|
|
upon the unrelenting way to god.
|
|
|
|
I walked between St George's church and
|
|
gothic university. Spotted sea gulls
|
|
screamed a storm. Threw away
|
|
a piece of paper,
|
|
scrap of poem... scrap of food
|
|
for some poor fool, deluded as a poet
|
|
thinking he could write, in poverty,
|
|
a fable for the innocent, explaining (ultimately nothing)
|
|
life.
|
|
|
|
Go, idle fancy, prepare this rusted soul
|
|
to walk a disanthropic mile. The painted desert
|
|
is not, know it now and weep...the painted desert
|
|
is not loaded with the curse of copse. Instead
|
|
the haunted rattle and the scorpion
|
|
gloat on our defeat.
|
|
|
|
I see the mind, Teresias, knowing death
|
|
to be of death, spoke death's rattle.
|
|
|
|
Vast we are to fail, and fast we are to sacrifice
|
|
our voices. Knowing dying is not easy (or perhaps,
|
|
just knowing that it is) we chose to sacrifice ourselves
|
|
to other disparate activities. The hospital of life
|
|
is full and, overflowing, is not kind.
|
|
And given knowledge, we refuse in kind.
|
|
|
|
And the shadow of the bell tolls louder
|
|
than the bell itself. Which is not, if ever
|
|
thicker than the thickest skull.
|
|
|
|
Yorik begs to be the jester, once again,
|
|
he never was or thought so after all.
|
|
|
|
The dagger dangles. The snowflakes jangle. And
|
|
the jungle burns. I was privy to an understanding once
|
|
but forget it was an understanding, and
|
|
forget it was near anything conclusive...
|
|
|
|
I forget it was...a word or two...
|
|
a child so deeply troubled...doing
|
|
nothing wrong...wrecked with guilt...defenceless...
|
|
anger fear and shame. Was I ever free to be
|
|
alone again?...I was never young again...
|
|
I shut the poison out. Left alone
|
|
I wrote my songs. Alone. Lost to time
|
|
I wrote...Show me how to write...
|
|
remember...show me how to feel no pain. (Remember.)
|
|
I tried so hard...so hard the heart bled deeper
|
|
deeper deeper and I thought I felt no pain...
|
|
|
|
It was a lonely wanderer, who said, 'dead dry tubers
|
|
in a rotten land.' But knowing they who die alone
|
|
can never say they forced a helping hand.
|
|
Beauty is in words, but never words
|
|
as these, used in retribution, anger, fear...
|
|
resentment that will cry a child to sleep.
|
|
|
|
There is poison in these words. And there is poison
|
|
in a shadowed land. The window is a wall and
|
|
does not understand
|
|
the world. The curtain rises...is withdrawn... is just the mind
|
|
asleep.
|
|
And neither do I mourn the sun
|
|
in hand. The sun that rots good flesh and love
|
|
turned ugly, into hate and warms the lover's
|
|
ultimate refusal to believe. 'This
|
|
refuses what was once so warm. And now is overwarm...
|
|
and now, for god's sake! only harms...'
|
|
|
|
There is neither shadow, light nor substitute.
|
|
On my way to work, rested, hand against rough wall;
|
|
felt faint: with little sleep, and rested wearily
|
|
in dreams where strangers do not hesitate, and lovers argue,
|
|
still denying what was left.
|
|
|
|
Paint rots canvas
|
|
(this is what the poet said)
|
|
Eyes of blue
|
|
We gather you
|
|
(emotionally I think
|
|
but am not sure)
|
|
Distant
|
|
|
|
This oak is poison is
|
|
Tristram's glory
|
|
The mirror that reflects
|
|
No story
|
|
|
|
The killer minotaur
|
|
Created
|
|
Those who would
|
|
Deny him life
|
|
Lest we glance
|
|
a shadow of our death
|
|
|
|
This illusion
|
|
gathers slowly...
|
|
slowly gathers
|
|
once elusive
|
|
still elusive
|
|
truth...
|
|
|
|
(I won't debate
|
|
what is now aged
|
|
and still so fresh to
|
|
gentle youth
|
|
lost to innocence...lost truth...)
|
|
|
|
O these four rotten walls! These shards of evidence!
|
|
Torn sheets, splintered pain. So much like
|
|
the mind created it.
|
|
Rusty sailor and
|
|
white albatross.
|
|
After all was said and done:
|
|
the wedding guest
|
|
still
|
|
denies complicity.
|
|
|
|
It is a murderous wind
|
|
bodes ill tonight. I am alone, but do not venture forth...
|
|
speak to walls, Hamlet and Ophelia.
|
|
I speak to Oedipus, Lazarus, confused, confessed
|
|
and risen from the living hell to death.
|
|
I speak: to Yoric
|
|
living, not as god, but as a shrunken jester's head.
|
|
|
|
Know that once the world was clean. Now is shattered
|
|
with explosive heat. The id the psyche and the horoscope
|
|
premeditate defeat. And fear the ultimate solution is
|
|
a broken confused mind that heals too slowly, and the wound
|
|
is all that's left to heal the lie.
|
|
|
|
I do not suffer. Do not ever think I suffer. No.
|
|
The curtain stirs. The breezes tremble
|
|
autumn leaves murmur...trembling... children sleep
|
|
with heavy lids a-dream...
|
|
those who think
|
|
they run away from life, experience or pain,
|
|
run away from nothing. Run only from the childhood magic
|
|
and from poetry, towards a desperation
|
|
in the heart of darkness. Who is there? Do I hear...
|
|
I think there's someone at the door...but...well
|
|
the wind is always much too friendly here...
|
|
Speaking in soft whispers, as of death,
|
|
they feel themselves life's madness
|
|
life's desperation, love's dance,
|
|
death's death.
|
|
|
|
And witness this, a ridge of cirrus catches
|
|
just a ridge of sun. The evening places heavy stones
|
|
upon a heavy wind.
|
|
I should try to work some more.
|
|
Perhaps just go away. But
|
|
frightened I am here to stay. Beneath the blanket
|
|
in a cave, old, and yes... King Lear was brave.
|
|
The blind old bugger knew his place.
|
|
|
|
They said, 'he shouldn't be alone' and
|
|
'why does he not eat?'and yes I was alone, and yes
|
|
I didn't eat 'at table' with the others.
|
|
Like a monk I ate the fragments of a rich
|
|
debate...and cast off scraps of bone too bare to eat.
|
|
I have bad teeth.
|
|
Lasted years.
|
|
A prisoner, more myself than of the others.
|
|
They said, 'how strange his eyes! see how he looks
|
|
upon the world.' They would not walk with me.
|
|
Sent me home from school. 'He is not like the
|
|
others'. 'Muss balt zu erholung.' They tried hard
|
|
to take me, but I would not go. Frightened I just
|
|
stayed at home. Could not, did not want to
|
|
know (but knew eternity) the world.
|
|
The world of murderous activity.
|
|
|
|
The years rolled on, as years would go.
|
|
There were joys and heartaches and the pangs of love.
|
|
O once so young! behind the revelry
|
|
a caution hid. Smouldering beneath the surface
|
|
deseasing every atom (The breath of its decay!).
|
|
|
|
I studied this geometry, it said the world
|
|
composed a symmetry. A perfect structure mortals
|
|
could not emulate. It wasn't so at all.
|
|
I studied this cosmology, and saw the chaos
|
|
and the beauty and above it all
|
|
the loneliness we claim our own.
|
|
|
|
This thinking, I would query others, this and...
|
|
what is thought? what's it do?
|
|
how are we the cognisant? why should this sensation
|
|
be so real? Why should we be we? Why should they be
|
|
they. Why can't one be of a total? Among others?
|
|
Why are we alone?
|
|
|
|
Midnight. Cat screams. Dogs bark.
|
|
The circle is a coded hell. Seven ages dark.
|
|
And somewhere in the distance...in another land,
|
|
a monk agitates himself
|
|
to life.
|
|
|
|
'Living's such a duty thing,
|
|
without it...why the lie...?.'
|
|
|
|
I don't know what to say to those
|
|
who would not clutch the vine
|
|
and gather to the dregs.
|
|
After all, are not, how say?
|
|
'the living dead'.
|
|
|
|
'Living's such a duty thing...
|
|
a duty, duty...lie..' All a pack of lies!
|
|
|
|
Listen. Do you hear it? far beyond the wind,
|
|
the ocean and the shoal...far beyond the universe
|
|
no bells toll...
|
|
|
|
Listen...
|
|
|
|
'Living's such a duty thing...'
|
|
|
|
And Basho wrote this poem:
|
|
|
|
Leaves of autumn
|
|
silent...
|
|
scattered...
|
|
Splash
|
|
|
|
I remember sitting in a restaurant
|
|
alone one afternoon
|
|
winter snow on rotted boots too thick
|
|
hair down to my shoulders
|
|
Debbie (not a lover but) a friend
|
|
came by. Talked awhile, like any youthful
|
|
indiscretion talks. Had an 'empathy'
|
|
meaning 'we were young'...
|
|
anyway...she asked about this poetry
|
|
and how it 'conquered' life...
|
|
I said: it doesn't 'conquer life'
|
|
She frowned. She was pretty, but not beautiful
|
|
tried to be a friend. I just wanted solitude.
|
|
I guess, a fool alone...
|
|
She wished me well in my pursuit
|
|
kissed me on the mouth
|
|
and left to find another 'friend'.
|
|
Nothing
|
|
conquers life, I guess. The end...
|
|
|
|
I guess. Even these solutions are not real.
|
|
Offer only bandages too temporal...
|
|
|
|
'My love is fire, and the sun
|
|
shining bright and beautiful...
|
|
my love is dark and dangerous
|
|
no one wants to stay for long..."
|
|
|
|
Too late, I guess, too late...
|
|
grown tired of the old debate
|
|
Grown tired...
|
|
no solutions...I am just too old...
|
|
my mind too cold...
|
|
|
|
It's hot in here (Herod's cold redress?)
|
|
I leave the curtains drawn
|
|
windows closed (There has to be no death).
|
|
|
|
I no longer want
|
|
to view the world up close.
|
|
The fear is on me and I shiver at the sound
|
|
of others in the hall.
|
|
I burn a candle for the fall
|
|
of humankind,
|
|
and all...
|
|
|
|
alarmed I have not slammed this lead
|
|
upon the page for nothing. Have not
|
|
smashed these words, stinking in their
|
|
solitude, for nothing. Have not lost
|
|
an age to sleep for nothing. Have not scanned
|
|
the texts of age... and, nothing.
|
|
|
|
Of late have studied this cosmology
|
|
drawing circles and appending notes
|
|
to cast a doubt upon the sanctity
|
|
of all that went before ( and
|
|
all, of course, that will come after).
|
|
No doubt we can't know all: are much deluded...
|
|
think the end is near?
|
|
|
|
The end is no solution. The end is just a...shall
|
|
I say it? figment? The end, for god's sake, well
|
|
may well be just another tear!
|
|
|
|
How well we think we know it all! The bitterness
|
|
and the recall of the offence.
|
|
The needless killing of a future hope
|
|
or even just an idle dream!
|
|
Sometimes I just want to scream!
|
|
|
|
Tell me? Do we the "modern living",
|
|
not prepare for death? History confirms the lie.
|
|
We have hidden death away. A lie.
|
|
|
|
Tried to void the realm of life.
|
|
Dante knew it otherwise.
|
|
The modern church has much in common
|
|
with a modern lie, the broken temples; shards of empire,
|
|
they destroyed. Rome's a Modern Vatican. This modern
|
|
Vatican is Rome. All regains survival (as it's cause).
|
|
The splendour and the decadence.
|
|
Take the all in life, for life's not permanent,
|
|
eternity is for the soul, pleasure, body.
|
|
But eternity remains the body (supposition? soul?)
|
|
It is precisely part of that reality
|
|
the quantum set denies. The body is
|
|
reality, and does not yet conflict infinity.
|
|
Rather it's the mind that holds the shadow
|
|
by the ear. It's the mind we compromise.
|
|
The mind we so restrict to this conformity
|
|
humanity requires for subsistence.
|
|
The mind, not the body, requires the reality
|
|
of what is magically denied by those chose to flood
|
|
conception with a static form. It means...
|
|
well it means...
|
|
why do I return no hope
|
|
to those who would require to explain?
|
|
|
|
Why do I return no hope?...Life requires all that
|
|
isn't there, but is. From the micro to the macro.
|
|
From a superstring to...
|
|
Well,
|
|
I forget the rest. Or maybe I just choose to
|
|
not remain the same... nor to play the game...
|
|
|
|
I am tired of this thinking...everything tonight
|
|
tires me...is there no reprieve?
|
|
|
|
There has been no going out tonight.
|
|
No sense of pleasure. No fine argument. For?
|
|
Against? No soft persuasion to 'come home'.
|
|
No night of love. No fairness. No sweet voice
|
|
to comfort me...
|
|
It seems that I have been alone
|
|
so long. I can't remember when
|
|
I last set foot upon the earth. I have always been
|
|
an alien; but lately this reclusiveness
|
|
has made me force a sacrifice too many.
|
|
Too often I have wanted an 'aloneness', but always
|
|
found companionship, sweet voice of love and sex,
|
|
to be a bond available... I have found those bars
|
|
and friendly warm have catered to my needs.
|
|
But that can never force the dread despair away.
|
|
The mind implodes. And this emptiness refuses to
|
|
reveal a home.
|
|
No shred of evidence for hope.
|
|
|
|
I chose to live alone. The sequence of my life has been
|
|
even among friends...alone. Even among lovers
|
|
(yes there have been many) such a desperate feeling...
|
|
so alone...
|
|
|
|
O this tires me. And the poem is not finished.
|
|
(The poem's never finished). It craves an audience,
|
|
and yet there's none around. I remember:
|
|
|
|
'T.S. Eliot and Ezra Pound
|
|
Fighting in an captain's tower'
|
|
|
|
and even:
|
|
|
|
'Einstein playing the electric violin
|
|
on Desolation Row...'.
|
|
|
|
So much haunted by ideal...
|
|
|
|
Let me tell you how I felt. I was young and searching
|
|
for the 'truth', never more defined than how I
|
|
heard that song. The voice was like a mission
|
|
in a desperate jungle waiting for a god.
|
|
If the old gods let us down... the new ones
|
|
fizzled out. They gave us sanction
|
|
and they let us down. Remember of them fondly.
|
|
Play them on the radio...a grand nostalgia trip.
|
|
|
|
They say the 'good old days'...
|
|
But memories are more than good.
|
|
We are never that again. As youth explores.
|
|
The elders seek security.
|
|
It has always been like that.
|
|
It will always be that way.
|
|
The large arena of society
|
|
doesn't read much history
|
|
that is all.
|
|
|
|
I try cull the classics to familiarity.
|
|
Their sensibilities and how too few there are
|
|
comparing disability trough righteousness...
|
|
Celine commanded eloquence, but only through elastic verbs
|
|
denied to others. We hold the songs in awe, and precisely
|
|
won't create. Others own our thoughts and blood.
|
|
It's easier accepting when committed
|
|
to a TV screen. Death's not part of life...it seems...
|
|
Death's out somewhere...there....
|
|
This crisis should have made us realize
|
|
different societies. Some who deem
|
|
our lives absurd. Some we might call enemies.
|
|
Some tyrants. They might think of us the same.
|
|
We who make, like those, commitment
|
|
to their own.
|
|
|
|
The crusades...mostly turned against
|
|
our own society...(the child says: mother
|
|
why can't all us live in peace? Why fight
|
|
and kill? destroy the world? so, don't we like
|
|
ourselves? the home we have?)..why turn against ourselves
|
|
with vengeful insecurities?...perhaps it's only part of
|
|
Gaia's cycle. Perhaps we can't control the violence
|
|
Perhaps we're just too clean...
|
|
part of something that controls the earth, the galaxy the
|
|
universe,
|
|
and even god (if she exists) beyond the
|
|
universe itself...
|
|
|
|
Perhaps. If we exist at all, that is.
|
|
If we exist at all and Rama does not look too serious.
|
|
|
|
Ah. The light of morning. Second day!
|
|
And I have not confused myself the more.
|
|
Have drank of the waters of the Lethe.
|
|
And forced myself this ruddy air to breathe.
|
|
Which coats the windows with a foggy film.
|
|
Obscuring cancerous sun and acid rain.
|
|
How will we ever th'Elysian fields regain?
|
|
|
|
This is the Borderland. A step across the desert
|
|
to oblivion. A mirage in the distance.
|
|
A thirst for knowledge that is never there.
|
|
We falter and express a deep concern. We
|
|
stand upon the edge to learn! We blink,
|
|
and somehow it's another something over there!
|
|
another path to take, thought to ponder,
|
|
rage to rage. Another war to preach.
|
|
Just think of it! Eternity!
|
|
Forever and forever. Each
|
|
our soul to keep...
|
|
|
|
Are we the ones to populate the universe?
|
|
Are we the only ones alive?
|
|
Sometimes astronomers look at the midnight sky
|
|
with trembling in their eyes.
|
|
Sometimes we just have to be inventive
|
|
with our own philosophy.
|
|
|
|
Come gaze into the crystal ball.
|
|
She met me in the hall.
|
|
She said 'I came'. I mumbled
|
|
'There is justice after all'.
|
|
She wondered why my poetry
|
|
was too much too difficult.
|
|
She wondered why I read so much.
|
|
Asked so many questions
|
|
that I had no answers to.
|
|
She asked me about the olden songs.
|
|
And how the sixties were, and how
|
|
I changed from what I was and then...
|
|
I said 'We all get older'. She was yet so
|
|
young. First year university. Studied art.
|
|
(Or so she said) Made some comment on my canvasses.
|
|
Said ' Why not have a show...?'
|
|
My art is private. I said that.
|
|
My art is private. I don't compromise.
|
|
'We all do'. And she pulled me down
|
|
upon the sofa and was warm and comforting
|
|
and soothed the savage fever on my brow.
|
|
She was something of a 'beauty queen'.
|
|
Knew too much of 'love', I deem
|
|
It wasn't right for me to be with her.
|
|
But then...she never came again.
|
|
And I forgot her just as fast.
|
|
|
|
I said I cannot compromise. But then I live alone.
|
|
Paint shadows - this imaginary brush says all.
|
|
I light a candle burning and I gather up my trash.
|
|
And hum the tunes the radio ignored, ignored too long.
|
|
Sometimes sundays are a mess. And sometimes
|
|
I refuse to divulge my address
|
|
to those who would become my friends.
|
|
And sometimes I refuse the mirror image
|
|
of myself. And sometimes I refuse to see at all.
|
|
|
|
Sometimes I can't see at all.
|
|
|
|
Bright ears in the jungle of my thoughts.
|
|
I ponder shadows. I ponder sounds I cannot separate.
|
|
I ponder the expressions of the trees.
|
|
Motionless, yet bending in the breeze.
|
|
Waves of the savanna. Waves of sound and
|
|
waves of light. Waves of everything denied.
|
|
|
|
On the beach a woman waits
|
|
for the raft of the Medusa.
|
|
On the telephone another waits
|
|
for the answer...
|
|
and somewhere one more poet sings
|
|
who isn't heard at all
|
|
|
|
and all the women come and go
|
|
|
|
I guess it's not what it might seem
|
|
The matrix of the universe
|
|
churns.
|
|
A forest burns.
|
|
(The bones rattle
|
|
but the skeleton is pure).
|
|
Shackled, shackled, shackled to a wall.
|
|
(A whore)
|
|
The poem's dead.
|
|
The poet sings. I guess
|
|
he's still alive.
|
|
Somewhere singling the afflicted
|
|
out. Dogs bark. Humans shout.
|
|
Where's the difference...?
|
|
Blow the candle out.
|
|
|
|
|
|
-- Klaus J. Gerken
|
|
|
|
============================================================================
|
|
|
|
**************************************************************************
|
|
[ POST SCRIPTUM ]
|
|
**************************************************************************
|
|
|
|
FIVE HAIKU POEMS
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
1
|
|
|
|
Tonight I visited
|
|
The grave of all my dreams,
|
|
No one else was there.
|
|
|
|
2
|
|
|
|
Why did that crow
|
|
Scold me,
|
|
As he flew away?
|
|
|
|
3
|
|
|
|
Lark on the wing,
|
|
Tracing melodies
|
|
In the sky
|
|
|
|
4
|
|
|
|
Desert of pavement
|
|
And old buildings,
|
|
Only pigeons remain.
|
|
|
|
5
|
|
|
|
Enraged wind
|
|
Wildly thrashing
|
|
Defenceless trees.
|
|
|
|
|
|
-- Lawrence Thurlow
|
|
|
|
============================================================================
|
|
|
|
+=====================================================================+
|
|
| A New Age: The Centipede Network Of Artists, Poets, & Writers |
|
|
+---------------------------------------------------------------------|
|
|
| - An Informational Journey Into A Creative Echonet [9310] |
|
|
+---------------------------------------------------------------------|
|
|
| (C) CopyRight "I Write, Therefore, I Develop" By Paul Lauda |
|
|
+=====================================================================+
|
|
|
|
URGENT REQUEST TO CENTIPEDE BOARDS:
|
|
|
|
Paul Lauda's Revisions Systems had a tragic disk crash and may
|
|
take a while to become operational again. Tom Almy's Bitter
|
|
Butter Better BBS has been officially announced as the temporary
|
|
hub of operations. To continue your Centipede service, please
|
|
send netmail to Tom Almy at 1:105/290 or dial up BITTER BUTTER
|
|
BBS at 1-503-692-5841 and leave a message.
|
|
|
|
. . .
|
|
|
|
Come one, come all! Welcome to Centipede. Established just for
|
|
writers, poets, artists, and anyone who is creative. A place
|
|
for anyone to participate in, to share their poems, and learn
|
|
from all. A place to share *your* dreams, and philosophies.
|
|
Even a chance to be published in a magazine.
|
|
|
|
Centipede offers ten echo areas, such as a general chat area,
|
|
an echo of poetry and literature, and also on dreams and
|
|
speculated history & publishing. In all of the ten conferences,
|
|
anyone is allowed to post their thoughts, and make new friends.
|
|
For that is what CentNet is here for: for you. Ever wonder how
|
|
to accent a poem at the right meter? Well, come join our
|
|
PoetryForum, and everyone would be willing to help you out.
|
|
Have any problems in deciphering your dreams? Select The Dreams
|
|
echo, and you're questions shall be solved.
|
|
|
|
The Network was created on May 16, 1993. I created this because
|
|
there were no other networks dedicated to such an audience.
|
|
And with the help of Klaus Gerken, Centipede soon started to
|
|
grow, and become active on Bulletin Board Systems.
|
|
|
|
I consider Centipede to be a Public Network; however, its a
|
|
specialized network, dealing with any type of creative thinking.
|
|
Therefore, that makes us something quite exotic, since most
|
|
nets are very general and have various topics, not of interest
|
|
to a writer--which is where Centipede steps in! No more fuss.
|
|
A writer can now download the whole network, without phasing
|
|
out any more conferences, since the whole net pertains to
|
|
the writer's interests. This means that Centipede has all
|
|
the active topics that any creative user seeks. And if we
|
|
don't, then one shall be created.
|
|
|
|
============================================================================
|
|
|
|
|
|
** ** ******
|
|
** ** **
|
|
[ YGDRASIL INTERNET ]
|
|
**** **
|
|
** **
|
|
** ******
|
|
|
|
**************************************************************************
|
|
|
|
RESOURCES
|
|
|
|
The collection of Ygdrasil Press is now available on Internet through
|
|
the World-Wide Web, accessible as "http://www.rdrop.com/~igal/ygdrasil".
|
|
This site contains the collections as: 8-bit MS-DOS ASCII text,
|
|
universal 7-bit ASCII, ANSI color graphics, GIF pictures, word-processor
|
|
laid-out files and other goodies. The entire collection can also be
|
|
accessed by FTP as "ftp://ftp.rdrop.com/pub/users/igal/ygdrasil". Each
|
|
month, the Ygdrasil Magazine is posted to the Usenet newsgroup
|
|
rec.arts.poems.
|
|
|
|
We hope this will give readers a break from having to dial long distance
|
|
and figure out which BBS has Ygdrasil available for them; provide a more
|
|
intimate link to the world outside our beloved Centipede; and increase &
|
|
broaden the audience & coverage of Ygdrasil to better serve the readers.
|
|
|
|
E-MAIL USER'S GUIDE TO YGDRASIL
|
|
|
|
Any person that can access Internet e-mail (ie. FidoNet, Prodigy, AOL)
|
|
can access Ygdrasil's online resources. To get a E-MAIL USER'S GUIDE TO
|
|
YGDRASIL GUIDE, send e-mail to the Internet address
|
|
"listproc@www0.cern.ch" (if you don't know how to send Internet e-mail,
|
|
please ask your system administrator for instructions). In the message,
|
|
leave the subject line blank, and in the body enter two lines into the
|
|
message: "www http://www.rdrop.com/~igal/ygdrasil/wwwmail.html" and on
|
|
the second line "quit". The Guide will be waiting in your e-mailbox
|
|
within a day. NOTE: CASE IS SIGNIFICANT - "www" is not the same as
|
|
"WWW"; if you don't type it the exactly same way, your request will
|
|
fail.
|
|
|
|
COMMENTS
|
|
|
|
Klaus Gerken, Chief Editor - for general messages and ASCII text
|
|
submissions. Use Klaus' address for commentary on Ygdrasil and its
|
|
contents:
|
|
Internet: klaus.gerken@bbs.synapse.net
|
|
|
|
Igal Koshevoy, Production Editor and Web Coordinator - for submissions
|
|
of anything that's not plain ASCII text (ie. archives, GIFs,
|
|
wordprocessored files) in any standard Unix & MS-DOS way, and Web
|
|
specific messages. Use Igal's e-mail address for commentary on
|
|
Ygdrasil's format, distribution, usability and access; or you may send
|
|
files via FTP to "ftp.rdrop.com/pub/users/igal/ygdrasil/uploads". Igal's
|
|
PGP key is available on request to ensure privacy of transaction.
|
|
Internet: igal@agora.rdrop.com
|
|
Fidonet: Igal Koshevoy, 1:105/290
|
|
|
|
We'd love to hear from you!
|
|
|
|
============================================================================
|
|
|
|
**************************************************************************
|
|
[ YGDRASIL PUBLICATIONS LIST ]
|
|
**************************************************************************
|
|
|
|
THE WIZARD EXPLODED SONGBOOK (1969), songs by KJ Gerken
|
|
FULL BLACK Q (1975), a poem by KJ Gerken
|
|
ONE NEW FLASH OF LIGHT (1976), a play by KJ Gerken
|
|
THE BLACKED-OUT MIRROR (1979) a poem by Klaus J. Gerken
|
|
THE BREAKING OF DESIRE (1986), poems by KJ Gerken
|
|
FURTHER SONGS (1986), songs by KJ Gerken
|
|
POEMS OF DESTRUCTION (1988), poems by KJ Gerken
|
|
DIAMOND DOGS (1992), poems by KJ Gerken
|
|
KILLING FIELDS (1992), a poem by KJ Gerken
|
|
THE AFFLICTED, a poem by KJ Gerken
|
|
FRAGMENTS OF A BRIEF ENCOUNTER, poems by KJ Gerken
|
|
|
|
MZ-DMZ (1988), ramblings by Igal Koshevoy
|
|
DARK SIDE (1991), ramblings by Igal Koshevoy
|
|
STEEL REIGNS & STILL RAINS (1993), ramblings by Igal Koshevoy
|
|
BLATANT VANITY (1993), ramblings by Igal Koshevoy
|
|
ALIENATION OF AFFECTION (1993), ramblings by Igal Koshevoy
|
|
LIVING LIFE AT FACE VALUE (1993), ramblings by Igal Koshevoy
|
|
HATRED BLURRED (1993), ramblings by Igal Koshevoy
|
|
CHOKING ON THE ASHES OF A RUNAWAY (1993), ramblings by I. Koshevoy
|
|
BORROWED FEELINGS BUYING TIME (1993), ramblings by Igal Koshevoy
|
|
HARD ACT TO SWALLOW (1994), ramblings by Igal Koshevoy
|
|
HALL OF MIRRORS (1994), ramblings by Igal Koshevoy
|
|
ARTIFICIAL BUOYANCY (1994), ramblings by Igal Koshevoy
|
|
|
|
THE POETRY OF PEDRO SENA, poems by Pedro Sena
|
|
THE FILM REVIEWS, by Pedro Sena
|
|
THE SHORT STORIES, by Pedro Sena
|
|
INCANTATIONS, by Pedro Sena
|
|
|
|
POEMS (1970), poems by Franz Zorn
|
|
|
|
All books are on disk and cost $5.00 each. Checks should be made out to the
|
|
respective authors and orders will be forwarded by Ygdrasil Press.
|
|
|
|
YGDRASIL MAGAZINE may also be ordered from the same address: $2.50 an
|
|
issue to cover disk and mailing costs, also specify computer type (IBM or
|
|
Mac), as well as disk size and density. Allow 2 weeks for delivery.
|
|
|
|
Note that YGDRASIL MAGAZINE is free when downloaded from Revision Systems
|
|
BBS (1-609-896-3256) or any other participating BBS. Revisions, though,
|
|
holds the official version of Ygdrasil.
|
|
|
|
============================================================================
|
|
|
|
**************************************************************************
|
|
[ COPYRIGHT INFORMATION ]
|
|
**************************************************************************
|
|
|
|
All poems copyrighted by their respective authors. Any reproduction of
|
|
these poems, without the express written permission of the authors, is
|
|
prohibited.
|
|
|
|
YGDRASIL: A Journal of the Poetic Arts - Copyright (c) 1993, 1994 and 1995
|
|
by Klaus J. Gerken.
|
|
|
|
The official version of this magazine is posted on Revision Systems BBS:
|
|
No other version shall be deemed "authorized" unless downloaded from
|
|
there.
|
|
|
|
All checks should be made out to: YGDRASIL PRESS
|
|
|
|
Information requests, subscriptions, suggestions, comments, submissions or
|
|
anything else appropriate should be addressed, with a self addressed
|
|
stamped envelope, to:
|
|
|
|
+----------------------------+
|
|
| YGDRASIL PRESS *** |
|
|
| 1001-257 LISGAR ST. |
|
|
| OTTAWA, ONTARIO |
|
|
| CANADA, K2P 0C7 |
|
|
+----------------------------+
|
|
|
|
============================================================================
|