THE FLAGMAN’S OCCURRENCE WAVE BAND

     

     < Situations and Revelations of Passing Notice in Guyana >

      Locket # 6

      Young, naive and a bit idealistic is how I arrived in Guyana, excited to be
      chosen to work with other volunteers helping struggling nations (in the 
      case of Guyana an
ex-colony. I was assigned to a secondary school in the
      Canal District and quickly succumbed to the landscape  ̶  the luminous
      mornings, crossing the river, sandals, foot paths, the breeze on my skin;
      night time insect noise and total dark.

      At the school I endeavored to teach Shakespeare to the girls and boys,
      really wonderful children; lives of pure hopefulness amidst the cane fields
      (which still look like venues of joyless labour). They came neatly dressed,
      in colourful uniforms, to classrooms with limited resources.

      [I should tell you I met someone there, Miss Hempell, who had been
      teaching in the district for years. An avid book-reader, she had read "The
      Second Sex" by Simone De Beauvoir.

      This a book I had heard of, but had never got around to reading. She
      offered to lend me her copy if I promised to return it. She didn't have much
      to say about it. I couldn't tell what it did for Miss Hempell except to keep
      her tight-bodied and unmarried, strands of grey hair bristling through her
      braids. Much respected, though, and fondly spoken of by students and
      parents in the district.]

      Anyway, I introduced my students, first, to "Romeo and Juliet". They had
      heard of Shakespeare but had never read any of his plays. I pirate-copied
      scenes from the play. I tried to get them thinking about the issues facing
      the two lovers.

        We talked about Juliet's suicide plan. (I found out too late that death by
      poisoning is a rather delicate subject in the District. Suicide comes close
      to what I'm sure they think about but rarely "discuss".) In general they
      were not too forthcoming. Good virtues on the surface, with watchful if
      not always focused eyes.

      I tried next to get them excited about writing. I made them start a
      "journal" in their exercise books, putting down their thoughts and feelings.
      Find a place, I told them, a quiet place, in the cane fields (look out for
      snakes!), along the canals; take a cycle ride to the nearest sea front (they
      seemed rather amused by these 
suggestions). I told them to write about
      their dreams, what worries them about the world.

      One student who was proficient at this (and whom I grew very fond of) was
      Yasmin Deodat. Here, for instance, is what she said to me:

      I work hard. I study hard. At home they are happy when you tell them how 
      well I am doing. They think that with you as my teacher I will be the best
      in the class, and one day the best at anything in the world. I will go places
      and make them proud. There are things I do not talk to my mother about.
      Like what is happening to my body. I am slender, no hips. My breasts don't
      want to grow larger. I would like someone to take me seriously, caress me,
      tell me I am desirable. I want to know how I will be desired  ̶  will I be
      cradled? mauled? plucked like a flower?

      Unusual? To say the least. That Yasmin would put that down and fold it
      away seemed unusual. 

      The day before I left for home, a group of students came with a farewell
      gift: their exercise books, wrapped and tied neatly with pink ribbon;
      containing their schoolgirl fears and fantasies. "If we kept them someone
      might find them, then we'd be embarrassed, Miss," they told me. A bit 
      overwhelming, I must say.

      We made a pact, students and teacher forever friends. I promised I'd keep
      the journals. Years later when they were happily married I'd come back to
      Canal District (I don't know why I assumed they would all still be there).
      We'd relive the follies of those innocent years; shrieks and giggles!

                                      **                                 **

       I heard nothing from anyone until a message came through from Margaret,
       my replacement in Canal District, saying that Yasmin had disappeared. Off
       the face of the earth
. It sounded far-fetched. Canal District isn't the sort
       of place you disappear off.

       Some of the girls were known to gravitate toward overly friendly male
       teachers, neatly dressed, bush goat nibblers, if you ask me. Yasmin could
       have run away, to Suriname (which is next door to Guyana). Certainly not
       off the face of the earth.
Feet too timid for that range of possibility, I
       thought.

       Naturally I reached for Yasmin's exercise book. I discovered it was now a
       top secret document, with passages blacked out, "redacted", as they say.
       Each section, clearly dated, began with the same wistful line (from
       "Romeo and Juliet", I realized) "If love be rough with you, be rough with
       love." She wanted me to look inside her soul; she would not, however,
       
reveal every stitch of contemplation. 

       There is this about her mother sending her to spend a weekend with an 
       uncle in Georgetown. He's a pastor of a Presbyterian Church in town. One
       morning she wakes up and sees him through a bedroom door getting
       dressed:

       Maybe they forgot for a moment there was a relative in the house. I had
       not slept well, the bed was so strange. His children were fast asleep. I
       saw him standing naked, his back toward me, like a boy getting dressed
       by his mother. But that mother was my aunt, she sat on the bed, she
       dried his body with a towel. I didn't want them to catch me staring. I
       must have stood there for eternity, and in that time she dropped the
       towel, leaned forward, and seemed to concentrate on his crotch, moving
       her head
[lines crossed out; then:]

       What kind of church leader is Uncle Ram? What sort of boy grows up to
       be a man wanting devotions like that in the morning from a woman? I
       don't know if my mother does this with Pa.
[lines blacked out] These are
       not the fireflies I want in my head.

       I turned the next page and the next. Here's a section where her mother
       takes her to Georgetown to visit the same uncle, hospitalized on account
       of a chest complaint. She avoided looking at him, she said, refused to bow
       her head when they said a prayer. At the hospital entrance she turned
       back, went up to his room, surprising him; she came close to his bed, and
       whispered in his ear:

       I know what you are. You are being punished. You should learn to live like
       a man. Stop making people kneel and pray; grow up, and stop making
       Auntie dry your skin and do head swell things for you in the morning.

       You're probably wondering why I am telling you all this; why I have gone to
       all this trouble to reveal what was intended as private (dare I say intimate)
       disclosure. I don't mean to expose Yasmin, nor to accuse or blame anybody. 
       For young women in that land of old cane  love is without meaning. The
       green fades, the fields get flattened; child to mother to grandmother are
       bonded about, sown or bored to death. And true love saves its breath, I'm
       certain avid Beauvoir reader Miss Hempell would testify. 

       I should tell you, as an endnote, that I did receive a postcard from Yasmin,
       its source Venezuela (so at least she wasn't "abducted"). It said : I am here
       because I found a way over the wall, and a waterway that brought me here.
       
I'm not sure know what to make of that. It continued (lines plucked from
       Romeo and Juliet
), "If in thy wisdom thou can give no help, do thou but call
      my resolution wise."

       Well, so far I have respected Jasmine's "resolution". I don't think I've betrayed
       her in any terrible snitchy way. While the whole of Canal District and the
       country might still be searching for her  ̶  consumed with fear and conjecture,
       wanting her back where she belongs  ̶  I would like to think she is doing just
       fine.

       She must have realized that keeping journals and secrets, with parents and
       uncles and teachers all around, were the baby steps to the edge of the 
       spring board. The pounding heart, the start of new life, now I think she
       knows.

       I'll clear space in my room in case one day her "waterway" directs her to my
       door (unless there's someone else she's listening to). Trust is so elusive. I
       just hope she gets this right.

       Penny Nobbs
       Essex, England.

 

THE FLAGMAN’S OCCURRENCE WAVE BAND

 

       < Situations and Revelations of Passing Notice in Guyana >

        Locket # 5

 

        Straight from secondary school, August holidays, I joined the staff of one of
        our newspapers; my dream was to become a correspondent. Mr. Mulch, an
        editor there, told me first off the newspaper didn't have money to hire and
        send people anywhere as "correspondents". I had to lower my ceiling beams.       
           
    
    My school teacher uncle had sent me to him  ̶  he called him "Mulchie", like
        they were old school friends  ̶  with the recommendation 'the boy is good at
        English Composition'.

        Usually they didn't take on people with no qualifications, Mr. Mulch said,
        but that was alright; look how far he'd reach and he didn't have paper
        qualifications either. He laughed as if that was supposed to be a joke just
        between us.
   
        He assured me if I worked hard, build up some experience, show good news
        writing skills, who knows, "things" could work out.

        Later I could go to a college, get newspaper word training; then I could start
        thinking of travel to "far flung" places; investigating and reporting back to his
        readers who lived mostly in the city; and who these days can't seem to find
        time (or some outhouse use, like back in the days?) for newspaper.

        I didn't last long. I gave up after three weeks. Mr. Mulch was a fellow who
        sat at his desk with a view of the street and goodmorning sunlight presiding
        over columns; the only man I know with suspenders holding up his trousers.
        He was difficult to please.

        For instance, after one report I wrote about a woman found strangled and
        possibly assaulted in a bushy area, he accused me of being a skinny fellow
        writing a skinny report. he wanted more "fat" in the writing. With the strangler
        still at large in the country and the police in some form of pursuit, I should
        fix up reports so readers get "the play by play". And don't mention race, the
        victim's name is sufficient.
 

           Where was the strangled woman going when she left the house? how she meet
        the man? were they strangers or lovers?  her clothes in disarray like she put
        up a struggle? This could be the crime of the year! Get "proactive" with the
        reader; build up, build up to the dastardly act.

        I have to say this: I don't know in which Oxford or Cambridge drawer he does 
        keep
"dastardly" and "far-flung"'; also "cognisant of". Some words and phrases
        show up like regular workers in the columns, acting all sophisticated; doing
        dress-up sentence service, along with adjectives that halt you at every turn
        wanting admiration or salute. Is true what they say: some folk have self worth
        bells to ring; a little knowledge is a fool's big thing.

        I told him I arrived at the strangle scene too late; the police had already covered
        up the body. Did you talk to relatives and friends about the victim? (A statement
        from a neighbour, "Everybody did warn she about he", eventually found its way in
        the article; he didn't get that off my report.)

        He wanted blood, "fat" and spoken fears. And he wanted a photo of the man who
        found the body, standing at the spot of the "dastardly" act; looking out at the
        reader with blank face, his finger pointing down at the spot in the bush where
        the victim was strangled.

        I told him the man might not cooperate (he probably wondering if now he in real
        trouble for "pointing"); and besides, where the body was found might not be
        where the actual assault took place.

        He leaned back from his computer screen and caressed the nave of his neck, as if
        already I was a disappointment on the job. "Readers have hot and soft spots," he
        spoke slowly. "You have to reach in, rub the spot."

        Next I wrote a report about a house fire. He changed it up and added this: "A
        large crowd also gathered to get a glimpse of the burning building". I have
        noticed this line appearing in every fire report. According to him people always
        seem to "also gather to get a glimpse".

        I told him that's not what I saw happening. People didn't step out their yard or
        pull over on the road, gathering "to get a glimpse". If anything, they appear out
        of nowhere; they prefer to "stand and stare" like they waiting for more excite-
        ment, spreading flames. Always one eyewitness who know how the whole thing
        started; always the 
children who should be in school, hanging round, just
        waiting for the fire hose to spring a leak.

            He laughed. "Aw man, you have a lot to learn in this business!"

        As far as he was concerned, to say people "stand and stare" would give readers,
        especially "morning coffee" visitors to the country, the wrong impression; as if
        the general population had nothing better to do with their time. (It just so
        happen a trade delegation from China was visiting that week.)
 

        I left him right there in his stuffy, glassed-off cubicle; always reminding people
        what some "far-flung" holy man said about serving with humility; or quoting
        Thucydides like he was the local reincarnation of the man.

        Right there  ̶  with or without his cricket stump!

        My uncle had advised me that at the job interview I should ask "Mulchie" about
        the cricket stump. It was grabbed by a cricketer at the conclusion of some
        famous cricket match vs. England. It somehow found its way into Mr. Mulch
        office; he kept it there like a conversation piece, an object of historical
        importance he preferred instead of a wall painting.

        Every time I went in his office I would sneak a peek, looking for this cricket
        stump. Couldn't locate it anywhere; couldn't even locate a cricket stump bail
        which might have worked better, come to think of it; like a paperweight on
        the desk? so you couldn't help noticing?

        I asked him if he'd read "A House For Mr. Biswas". V.S. Naipaul? He said he'd
        heard the name but the man was not from our country; and in any case
        reading fiction was "outside his remit".
 

        Since I had failed miserably as reporter of fires and death by strangulation, he 
        said maybe I should try something "less complicated", like covering sports. 

        I would observe young men in flashy whites with fancy bowling action and Test
        Match travel dreams; hoping like flash in pan to catch a selector's eye. I was also
        to collect end of day scores; identify and separate rising talent from fellows 
        considered still "not ready"; and disgruntled for the rest of their young lives. 

        So let him stay right there! (he probably know how his bread is plaited.)

        I am happy to report that a really really fat lady has set up a vendor spot under
        the tree shade across the road from his window view; selling cooked food, cane
        juice and pastries to company employees at lunch time. Wait till that enterprise,
        and the supporting music box, start build up, build up.

        Sounds like I ungrateful? like I need real ambition? you think I care?

        The times will pass; hair does grow, hairs will fall out. Mr. Mulch will remain 
        there gathering the years to get a glimpse. Right down to his last breath, on his
        death bed; his thick neck stiffening when he realize (only God knows what). 
        You watch.
  

        D. Camoud,
        Georgetown, Guyana

  

HOW THE CASSAVE MEASURES

 

                                                          "…..light like a feather, heavy as lead."
                                   
                              Bob Marley, "Misty Morning"

               Flesh and blood unrest in youth with no tide no kumina
             chip foot print . grabbing any need repair with hands on
             wheels untrained for lanes only to be followed by gold
             rim rides from bonier faces pulled from gun lagoons for pock
             mark
cases  ̶  as if scatteration was every general's first
            
business of order.

             Which leaves the rally run come mask force with fronts
             to tier, galvanize alley ways for little ones to crouch
             behind till the day is over.

             Even our Nan's sheltering ankle hems step tight 'n' tense
             as the sun takes cover, time left no longer sustainable by
             dance habit such is the thatch dread of lamp flicker . boot
             raid limb lay rip _ redress . all you own.
                                        

                                            You reel? so you fold back . as fight
             we might at the holding yard where roosters louder call
             at dawn than head wrapped song and where . to next
             wind strong? 

             Kingdoms come . hearts packed wait each last flight out :
             crows hover blades swish dust requesting unlock words
             which, bark strips round her bed, our Granny passed :

              
 my Soul to Thee . with eye lash dew : "Mon Dieu!
                   
what kept you so long?" 

                   As breath ends cabin belts release . navel cells
                   applaud a ground safe landing, faith complete.
                   Out side clutching lines doubt sky board times
                         short as a prance, this life.

                                                                      – W.W.

      

 
 
               

 

                  
 

                      

                          A FEATHER'S GRAVITY

                           'Strenght through assertiveness!'
                      And through strength?  Ageing, disease,
        
         corruption and slow rotting
             
to translate such compost into buds. 
             This is the field of flesh as a lot
                of stinkweed. Even popes get sick
                     and end up begging Heaven
                          for mercy. Even kings,
                          rich cowardly bullies
                     and heartless thugs must, on their
                death-beds, regret their feats of force.
             Not even a healthy lazy sage
             is free from earwigs and razor-grass. 
                Perhaps all such men are trying
                     too hard?  Whatever became
                          of plain-old wood-chopping
                          and water-fetching?  They
                              also are hard but at least
            
   the path they form between the shed,
            
the river and the stars is not forced,
            
except as a mantra may be thought
              
  to be forced, but is a willing
                  
   surrender to a sure glimpse
            
             of Light beyond the gnomes
             
            of pressure by weight, Light
             
       beyond the weightless undines,
             
   sylphs and angels of air and fire,
               L
ight behind masked eyes of hinting stars.

                    (from "Readiness" by Brian Chan)

  

      

GONE THE BLUE THROUGH

                                                                               for Alison K.                      
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                               
            Back then few could imagine how planes refuelled
            in the sky; everything had to be grounded : ambition
            like car engines switched off while someone with a wipe
            rag checked your gra
dient, and mongoose village eyes
           
assessed Atlantic storm marks ~ day break egret strollings.

            June afternoon's green house, the Morne deck view : sun 
            ironed leaves seemed wearable ~ the wind patient like brides
            maids waiting for turbulence to toss high sigh . unzip
            in amber sky.

            We could make out just below the rusted galvanize roofs
            of Placide Valley . history was hardly kind to shell drawn 
            island turtles on haunch lime.  

            Our smiles wheel feeling about intended lift as if already air
            sworn ~ long felt latitude lines known ~ already there!
            before "solar" like "audacity" coined clearance for so long 
            on one leg standing . elections coming.

               Lock unlock would set the hand that chance tapped our
                 crouched shoulders  >  the open will fill mission.

               Indigine news?  like close shave fears click! peel 
                 away as fin blades gleaming path shear clear
                    cross overcloud burst range.

                                                           Our miles flamingo forming :
            as North-South plains dry burn again
            as East-West wing tips stretch again
                                                    Ends up . gone the blue through :

                                                                                 – W.W.

 

 

             

  

 

                
                     CONVERSATION

               
                     When in silence alone I walk on
                     the winter city's hard
                     concrete going nowhere, my knees start
                     to needle me with their whispered screams.    

                     Now as beside me you walk above
                     words of hot stone your heart
                     translates to feather cloud, water wing,
                     stone light, I feel no pain but the wave

                     of love rising and falling along  
                     the seashore of our breath
                     out of whose spine sprouts our wall-less house,
                     all windows and doors, of shining speech.

                     (from "Scratches On The Air" by Brian Chan) 

             

 

THE FLAGMAN’S OCCURRENCE WAVE BAND

 

          < Situations and Revelations Of Passing Notice in Guyana >


         Locket #3


         Fyzabad and I were classmates in secondary school. He had this thing about
         dogs and cats. You wouldn't catch me dead hugging a dog or petting a cat,
         but Fyzabad (that was our name for him) would get angry and shout at people
         throwing stones at animals.

         Years later he make this big turn, and now he is this big animal protector.

         I was in the gold fields trying my hand at shaking and sorting. (Actually I have big
         plans: setting up an employment Agency for the gold fields; with me as Chief of
         Operations; yes, man). On a trip back to the city I heard he was in trouble with
         his Village Council. And I want to believe this all started with late-night cinema
         shows.

         Late-night weekend cinema was our schoolboy passion. It look like he never
         really gave up the habit (electricity was not reliable where he lived). After
         the show, while people on the road drinking and arguing, or planning nefarious
         activities with guns in their cars, Fyzabad hurrying home on his bicycle, the
         orange reflectors flashing on the pedals; slowing down only when he pass
         animals on the public road; a stray cat, a stray dog.

             He started riding with a shovel, cause some cars and minivans blasting through
         the night does lick up anything that don't get out the way fast. Drivers leaving
         animal carcass like tire tread strips on the road. All of a sudden he is this burial
         man for hit-and-run animals.

         He would stop, lean up the bicycle; scoop up the dead animal, and bury it in a
         shallow grave off the road.

         If you driving home on the country road late at night, and you notice somebody
         digging and digging on an empty piece of land, like he find a map and he
         searching for buried treasure, that was Fyzabad.

         The property had to belong to the government or somebody; he never stop to
         find out; wasn't worried an officer might jump out the bush and arrest him. In 
         the heat of the moment, in the dead of the night, he there giving these animals
         a proper resting place.
              

         Eventually he had to stop. Somebody sneak up one night and steal the bicycle;
         left him right there on the road with the shovel and a crocus bag, looking round
         in the dark, wondering how his bicycle could disappear just like that.

         He buy another bicycle but the same person or somebody else sneak up and steal
         that one too. That was how the whole late night burial business come to a halt.

         I hear next that Sanita, his wife, went back to her mother with the children,
         saying she tired staying in the house all day cooped up; couldn't even relax
         outside in her vegetable garden.

         What really distress her, and this is what start the problems with the Village
         Council, was her husband's new occupation. Fyzabad was now driving round in
         a van rescuing animals.
In the middle of the night he out there in this van
         looking for stray dog and stray cat.

         He decide next to open an animal sanctuary. When I visited him he had 99
         stray dogs and 31 stray cats in his backyard.

         He started giving each of them names, but he had too many animals, or maybe
         he run out of names; so he stop with the names. But he kept correct count and
         'Date of Rescue' in an exercise book.
 

         "These creatures are like family. Nobody want them. I taking care of them," he
         told me. Then pointing with owner's pride, he said: "You see these two?  
         Spartacus and Shane?"  He whistled, and they came over. "They show more faith
         in this country than most people I know, I'm telling you." (Spartacus and Shane
         were assigned front yard warning duty, to keep intruders off the property.)

         People in the village were up in arms: who in their right mind would drive
         around saving stray dogs? not missing pets with collars, mind you  ̶  stray
         dogs
! This country could barely afford anything like a Dog Pound, and he 
         there playing big Dog Saviour.

         The backyard with the mango tree and with wire mesh fencing and food
         bowls and the galvanize shed was a living disgrace. It was hard to imagine a
         place like this anywhere in the world.
 

         The next door neighbors condemn it as a big health hazard; the owner not
         even qualified or trained to look after animals. "He bringing these dogs from
         the public road into the village, which in turn bringing down property values,"
         the lady across the road was saying. "At least with chickens, they give you eggs
         you could eat or sell. All we getting from his backyard is noise and smell. And
         on hot windy days this place is real hell."

          Fyzabad was convinced he had the only human solution to the problem: "All
          they doing is complaining and complaining, they wouldn't lift a finger to take
          care of these creatures. You see the people I have to live with?  Hold their nose
          at corruption, everywhere is corruption. Smelling to high heaven. But you
          should hear how they address an honest working man like me."

          I wished him all the best. I told him to be careful; do what he think is right,
          what make his life start up and run every morning; but look outside every now
          and then just in case somebody sneak up in the dark and thief the van while he
          at the back with the dogs and the cats.

          T. Sennah
          Georgetown, Guyana

VISHNAVI IN ALICE LAND

             
          
               Local gentry pass around her _ One of you now. She likes the cane             
               field forbearance of shires, Mt. elsewhere in Mozart moments.

               For other metaphors and worlds who would not scratch away
               at ground bird humming weeds undraining furrow seeds.

               Tells no one of one dog dream retracking : lost 'n' dressed in  
               city streets pushing a red wheel barrow, ear rings snagged in old
               North hair extensions; while vowels leave lungs target circling, 
               lips measure their poured proper tea.

               What happened to your bundle, county lab coats poke; don't you
               walkers cross the desert with knotted bundle?
                                                                                      She's up for stuff
               like that : didn't walk didn't cross I flew . and my baggage fell
               somewhere over the ocean if you must know.

                   In a silk chamber, ripe contractions pinging, Come Soon
                   uncramps, kicks warn : birth roots lease hold strain there
                   after.

                Now do us both a favour, she backs back to the wind, harness
                  sire my fate, at least for awhile, till I release the old
                    form new leaf tendency.

               Was your prime cut satisfactory, this heritage chef might
                  table. So much depends on what now? long friends point
                    grey skies unable.   
                  
                
   She could fall through again : compost or pose from cloud
                 
or cave  ̶  tell tale seams faux glazed  ̶  dot marked Here
               Here! head light ending . Not so Sorry?  say, Cheerio, then.

                                                                                 – W.W.

 

 

                              

  

 

 

                            VIRGIN WHORE

                         She wears dark glasses to mask her eyes red
                           with fear and grief and fury and bliss
                     but the cold lenses also clear her vision
                       in these glaring streets which she walks, aware
                           of the easy horror and sadness
                     and nonsense and beauty about her, needing
                      
to cringe weep scream bless but merely mumbling,
                        
 like the mad woman she's meant to be,
                    
with a voice not her own, though no one's else's,
                        
whose lonely freedom is its one meaning
                        
 as rooftops and gutters and pavements
                     strung together by the words hooked in her flesh
                        pretend the hooks have never existed.
                            I listen beneath her breast, read and
                     sing her dribbling tongue, and score her bleeding feet
                        and the daily changing lines of her palm.

                      (from "Within The Wind" ©  by Brian Chan) 

 

            

THE FLAGMAN’S OCCURRENCE WAVE BAND

           < Situations and Revelations Of Passing Notice in Guyana >

 

          Locket #1
         
          This work getting seriously out of hand. People don't realize I am the sole and
         solitary porter employed at the Canal District 2 Mortuary. I can't do any better,
         otherwise I would seek to secure permanent employment elsewhere. I have a
         brother living in Trinidad. He write telling me how bodies piling up with all the
         killing over there.

         I here working twenty four hours per day. Receiving payment for just an eight
         hour period. Advantage is being taken of my situation.

         And seeing as how I living close by the mortuary parlour, contact is being made
         to me at any given time to provide service which includes (a) washing and
         cleaning of parlour (b) stitching and dressing deceased after postmortem
         examination (c) Pick up dead morning noon or night and deposit same dead in 
         freezer. (d) Operate emergency power in case of blackout (e) Remove body
         from freezer as per request of family midday or midnight.

         Sometimes is me they call upon to bathe and dress the dead for quick religious
         burial, but the money paid for performing "special tasks" goes straight in the
         biscuit tin of the parlour supervisor.

         Only the other day a dead fell out my hands which was under heavy strain to
         transport the body from one location to another. This is a clear indication that
         I alone cannot do the work with only two hands. More hands are needed and
         urgently for the dead to be properly taken care of.

         To add insult to injury the supervisor who drives the hearse is in the habit of
         going from abuse of privilege to abuse and cursing related to my job abilities.
         Bad enough I have to see and handle what temper or getting old does breed
         and do to people.

         This is clear indication of the action to come that is piling up. Advantage is being
         taken of my situation

         A. Sadhoo,
         Canal District, Guyana
                                                                 *
                                                     
                                                                                 

          Locket #2

          The Magistrate at the Canal District #2 Assize has his listening and sentencing
          ways. This is what I hear from the Clerk of Court Records (I am telling you in
          the strictest personal confidence. Your ears only.)

          Monday:    
          According to the prosecution, Defendant (name withheld) went to Lot 133
          where members of the Pentecostal Church situated at above address observed
          him during the service in a mango tree with a bag picking the fruit. An alarm
          was raised and the defendant was later arrested and charged. Quantity of
          mangoes found in bag: 32.

          Magistrate frowning: Praedial Larceny. Defendant given options (a) dedicate
          rest of his natural life to the Pentecostal faith or (b) 32 days in prison.
          Defendant chose Option (b).

          Tuesday:   
          Defendant in the court (bony fellow with scar across left cheek, name
          withheld).

          This lady open her shop doors but went to the back of her premises to do some
          washing. After fifteen minutes she hear a noise coming from the front of the
          shop. Came back to investigate only to find this fellow walking away with a
          bunch of bananas and a carton of cigarettes and cigarette lighters valued
          $2,000. Like he picking and choosing what he wanted that day with no intention
          to pay.

          Matter was reported to the police. Arrest was made. Defendant confessed to
          charges. Magistrate scowling : Simple Larceny: Defendant sentenced 50 days.

          Wednesday.
          Defendant claimed he picked the mangos from a loaded tree in the compound
          of the District Medical Office because no one else was picking them. Magistrate 
          glaring: Praedial Larceny: Defendant given 70 days.

          You see this country? People does grow like guava and turn hard, that is all
          I have to say.

          A. Sadhoo 
         Canal District, Guyana

 

 

VIJINIE EN PRINTEMPS

                                                                                     

                                                                                  for  L _ C _ & _ Z

 
            These days Vijinie and I have reached our city limits  ̶  which 
            way through district road rim crumbling partners duty lottery
            bound : harmonium sold. 
                                                      We haven't felt the Kaieteur
            rocks since our first river rapids . blade flash in Carib sync;
            strapless soundings past fall stairs to myth made treasure
            caves : worth more our weaving lives. 

            Dreary one grows at home page formatting  ̶  Holy gladioli!
            bursting pods!

                       The issue for us now: destination, destination

            A grand hotel links transit fare and parks in the dark suggest
            a squirrel furtivity; back seats we never felt inclined . the
inter
            screen
net face  ̶  her daughter's constant touch place, Vijinie
            
frets  ̶  fixed stare inset hand holding.

            Bird nest away on virgin island?
                                                     Sky grey surveillance might type
            set hawks side track our orbit path : seat choice discreet lips
            bite grip the other till Come in now! some desk watch sniffs
            and rails our mount rush Kilmanjaro. 

                   D'accord : plateau for out source leap clear found.

                                                                       Now comes the hard
            part : deep breath savings . moves that suit space simulations
            for our planet wide arms glide the life sole purposed soaring
            synth : Amalivaca!                                              
                        
                                              Flight control : you won't believe  ̶  
            how attendant
we are to loved ones safe on the ground.
                                                                                                 
                                                                                      – W.W.

 

 

                        

 

 

                                     
                          CALL

                          Now I must be content with the flesh
                          only of your voice through this plastic
                          hollow at my ear that tastes the salt
                          in your laugh and swallows the silence
                          gluing our words of resignation. 
 

                          But no complaint: never too much pain,                
                          always just enough; and we will keep
                         
magneting ourselves into words
                         
that amplify our avid missing
                          
of each other until we arrive

                          at that moment waiting to use us
                          as only one of its many rhymes
                         
by which it will prompt itself to be
                         
more itself, without apology,
                         
and uncover itself, without shame.

                          How else can it be? We are born of,      
                          and into, overlapping desire,
                         
and out of such mutual dreaming,
                         
this egg of disembodied yearning
                         
is one day bound to translate as flesh.

                     (from "Scratches On The Air" by Brian Chan)

  

BAT WINGS FOR BREAKING BALLS

             

              So how does it feel, he pivoted, stretching possibility on your island;               
              how old did you say you were? Twenty six?  My . goodness!
              And still a taxi driver . taking this lens capturer of sun laid 
              yoke to the airport  ̶  see my shoulder parrot posts. [

              From the back seat who understands why axles drive on blood cut
              corners, and one pothole 'n' route hijacks your grid. Or why some
              evenings midriff Meena looks at you . view find taboo . look spins
              parasol lines from henna palms.
                                              Tree hollows signal roost at some flambeau
              road junction . Please Wait . fixed wing circle breakers, safe
              flight home. [   

              Some nights you sink, Yes, let the locust swarm the days
              remaining
: close! wild coast rites, blow! ashes; service for
              
shadow limbs in pain. Boxed straight you cross  ̶  no rise back
             
wind I used to know him bare face lime.]

                                                           *

             
I know I'd feel fear foul ~ futurus interruptus ~ cooped on a bloody
             cruise ship : captain crew sea sky port frame ~ hubris sharking white
            
cap flotage; enough to turn friend fiend. I mean, people would
             reach
to leech

             or fathom swapping mates room hasps unhinged ~ fat wives belly
             pushing hard men over board. Then there's your money well of little
             word
bond lift off shore so grope hands hoist your deck cheer rocks
            
away all for the rake 'n' fun of it ~ ghastly business!

             Wish you all the luck of the world, young man. All the luck
             of the world! What am I saying?
                                                                                EXIT : are we coast
             clear?
[ Atlantis . like white rum off the breath . making you scent
            
fast turn and waiver. Wheel tight I grip 'n' tack I don't . pretend
            
it's choice : sure, almost there.]
                                                                                       – W.W.

 

                          

  

                                                                                          
                                             
                                

                            ORSON'S OASIS

                          Is that my own words surprise me evidence
                             of Recognition's ubiquity,
                          or of a 'comprehensive understanding'
                             beneath a patent stupidity
                          that knows no star of speech but 'the universe
                             in a grain of sand' in the desert
                          of a blank page which the parched crab of my hand
                             gropes across towards some oasis
                          of meaning perhaps only one more mirage
                             desperate but no less essential
                          to breath than are rainclouds to dry tongues and wells?

                         
                          This sideways-slow but crystal-clutching-fast crab
                             has stuttered often words blind to pain
                          and joy, the very seeds of all utterance,
                             seeds whose flares and flames can melt the snow 
                          shrouding the only food the delving crab needs:
                             Truth's impersonal crystal of Earth's
                          carbon transformed to a lucent loneliness
                             that would now belong to a new Earth
                         
on which collective crystal-clouds, unsnowed, rain
                           
  that charity that erases all
                        
debts of cold hearts, false words and their cruel coin.

                               (from "Readiness" by Brian Chan)

                                     

SERENE . NOT ALWAYS THERE

                                                                                 

                                                          "It was a feeling of need and perturbation and sadness she
                                                                could not account for  ̶  an acute spirit of meeting and
                                                                parting and of eternal distance that was still nearness."
              
                                                                     – Wilson Harris, "The Whole Armour"

 

              Beyond serve nerves of steel they claim could insulate space rafters,
             observe the player who brings to net no practice in fame holding.

                  "She tends to drift away, lose focus . doesn't want the win that
                   bad." Lean in : the deer hunter's third eye has opened runway
                   clear through sport page leaves . it heeds the conch alert. 

            Face towels gauge the sun's stake hold, that glare never in doubt
            in search of sag point. Moon shot bellows vapor risk. Galleries row
            packed look on cheer swizzle chat ( > one day lisp fade away).

            "But in the middle of a thought . sex . congregation? Call that good
            timing?" On any stage for the good of the flow churn units break,
            prayer bows pin east; chambers redress a breach head on its way.
                 Yo, who caught the future's wink? 

                                                        *

            Pointillion pixels screen the frameless face sometimes near
              tears. Grass clay take note as wrist snaps back ace makers,
                as hearts draw string speed muscle tight : Boy, chase that
            called out burner.(Even in good seats the old body frets.)


                                             On side switch light might amble in
            a miss fit toss time out : some star far set in motion world code
            centres scent implosion; just so the cause unknown bests shade
            index.
                            Not over
 ̶  valley riffs leaps above dance invocation
           
in the fault box  ̶  around in lead feet turn : optics refit, arms paid
            dear for the end swing whack. 

                              Ordinarily, tugging the tail of the tiger, we'd go: I need
            a moment : enter the pain shed . pride thigh wrap  
̶  there, now. 

                                                                                        – W.W.

 

 


                         

  

               

 

  

                                INFLUENTIAL EFFLUENCE

                                Yes, all must fade, but those who would not  ̶  except
                                as form-shifting stars with their effulgence not 
                                limited by labels of 'burn-out' or 'fall'  
                                        (which are masks of fear,
                                   failure and final loss),
                           
   stars whose new scrawls figure form's humbling fate but
                               on as many night-slates as there are eyes ripe
                               to become conscious sparks of undying Light  ̶  
                                        those who would not fade
                                   determine to relay  ̶  
                               to our still breathing world of both reluctant
                               and willing witnessing  ̶  their lives masked as knots
                               of nests of eggs to be untangled and hatched
                                      by brooding midwives 
                                  of births beyond the self,
                               births that restrain the self's egg to so release
                               its ripeness from its stubborn shell that would keep
                               failing, burnt-out, falling ideas of its form
                                       which, fading, must kneel
                                   to stars that pass to stay.

                                   (from "Readiness" by Brian Chan)