SURINAME FORESHADOWS, TOIL WORDS

 

 

          Málá ke moti es rákhi jhalke,                          Like threaded pearls on a string the ash
        buni jes.                                                        gleams droplets.

        Yád ke guthe khát bát men ched kareke hoi,     In order to string the memories
        bát ke bartáw ke bháw kareke hai.                   words needed piercing
                                                                               weighing the worth of their usage.

                                                                      ≈  ≈ 

          Je sánp máre khát khud apne láthi banal
          apne burhápá men je apne-áp ke láthi bánais,
          oke láthi páwe men ká láthi khoje ke pari?

          Je lálac men phasie sát samundar pár
          jái garal,
          besat giral jaise bijli se katal dar phekái ke.

          Káhan badhuá kahán chutuwá major,
          kasur ke ná bát rahá.

          Mehnat men moh aur moh men mehnat,
          ekke dusar men ghuse dunu ke jiye ke sáth rahá.
                       
                                                                  He who to kill a snake became himself
                                                                  a stick,
                                                                  he who in his old age turned himself
                                                                  into a stick,
                                                                  why would he to find a stick look for a stick?
                                                                   
                                                                  He who in the grip of the lure crossed
                                                                  the seven seas,
                                                                  then squalled 
                                                                  crashed like a branch struck by lightning.
                                                           
                                                                  Slave labor, free labor  ̶  what's the difference?   
                                                                  guilt is not the issue here.

                                                                  Transfixed by toil, toiling in wonder,
                                                                  toil and wonder could continue
                                                                  to exist hand in glove.

                                                         (from "Poems" © by Jit Narain, Paramaribo 2003)

                                                                        [translated from Sarnámi by D. France Olivieira/W.W.]

RISING DOWN AND SERVING FIRE)

 

 

                          
                            ihear the trees, itouch your roots

                              Earth spinning out of control

                            heavens high rise, while hell lies low
                               Earth spinning out of control 

                            greenhouse gases, foraging masses
                               Earth spinning out of control  

                            raining toads birds show entrails 'inconclusive'
                               Earth spinning out of control

                            swollen four billion years mother nature knows
                               Earth spinning out of control

                            "bone gristle poppin' from continuous grindin'
                             grapes of wrath in a shapely glass"
                        
                            carat-color-clarity > clogged artery? momentum
                               Earth spinning out of control

                            scorpions in the head, helmet turban or cap
                               Earth spinning out of control

                            "know where you're going even when it's dark"
                               Earth spinning out of control

                            days rising down, while nights serve fire
                              Earth spinning out of control
                                                                            -W.W.  
             

                  

                            WAITING ON THE WAITRESS

                             Empty hands need fire
                             to play with, to burn by,
                             so as to smoke a new

                                 map of the world in her tired
                                 face now shadowing like a cloud
                                 the questions of your open hand.
                                   (from "Gift Of Screws" by Brian Chan)   


      

                             
                                                                     
                                

POEMS FOR MOBILE TONES (& BELL RINGS STILLED)

 

 

                                                                                    for John Mc T. & Zulaika A.

              Time was, papi still sighs, you'd shout
              after a purse snatcher – back when it carried
              your personals, cash (now credit cards): the quiver
              of signatures.

              Today an angry young woman blocks the car of a man
              who snatched her iphone, glares his getaway.
              NYcity kids turn back, refuse front entrance search,
              brood in class if told hand over mobiles.

              You must tell me what? you can't hold, eye to eye display?
              take back, retouch before your message finger
              scrolls or sends?
          
              Ah, papi,
              radiant chat could stack & smoke in the head
              that must be emptied. My time, your space not measured, brewed
              could serve an instant gamer. Dark villages awaiting postcards,
              footsteps pick up now; ol' folk walk & call like new;
                 like fireflies cells blue glow
                 like cicadas long distance beeps.

              Besides, new solitudes require
              offsets wired (& pharm domains). Not enough the wind,
              naked lip strolls; paint & brush myth making
              by the sea; your pet fur combed. 
                                         
              Bed mates betrayed dare not now swear – the evidence's saved!
              – that love was hardly there. Each suspect
              breath's now snapped & filed; we have visuals;
              smart cursors will track you while you dance or sleep.

                Hold on one sec
                That's my ring tone
                Minutes cost, I must answer
                  "Hola
                   You know what time it is?
                   Traders, day for night, is who they are.
                   Si…si...que madre!  
                  (These nets of need, this planet of desires)
                   I'm on the train now
                   On the train.
                                           -W.W.

 

 

 

                   CLOUDWALK

                  The wind and sun collaborate
                   in a kindly balance, the grass
                   nods and points towards a new church

                   still being built whose steeple draws
                   me on along a ridge towards
                   you. This is one way of being

                   within you as you drift away.
                   So the wind dandelions know.
                   I think of picking two for you

                   but decide against offering you
                   bleeding things and leave them to breathe
                   without fear. Near the church

                   I can't yet get past the facade
                   of an old beauty taking new
                   shape too early now to enter.

                   But now's the right time, late enough
                   to turn and hurry back to you,
                   making flowers wince as I run

                   to meet you dripping green rain
                   through cracks of the new spire pointing
                   in the clear distance that we share.
                          (from "Fabula Rasa" by Brian Chan)


                 

 

 

POEMS FOR INFANT REPUBLICS (& NURSERY LIMES)

 

 

                                                                                 for Carroll M. & Joseph P.

                While shepherds watch, what choice? what chance?
                our grounded brown black flock: dreaming
                of pastured futures; weary
                of crabgrass from the past.

                The Skipper, we tried, all cricket-sweatered; the cracked field
                strips not level;
                plus now the roster's not for gentlemen at play.

                The Captain recaps those first tossed ocean renting
                timber ships; bulked labour in irons below, the stomach turns
                anchoring here.

                The Chief spreads fear of fat bricks and lying rumps; dogs in cartridge
                garlands, must wear shades; plus natty public servants plotting
                panty raids.

                The President, Prime Minister? skull caps for Trust me,
                I studied overseas! They talk bowl smooth like stool
                softener, making life so easy to pass.

                The Boss – dem fellas ride hard, boy! overseeing
                what we do with warning cuss and stop watch; can't
                catch a quick break with doudou.

                No, no don't mention the King, and don't try the gender thing;
                yes, Auntie K and Sister P
                folk friendly and carnival is we ting.

                O, the Shaman – well, hear nuh,
                this writer chap camped out in the forest with that
                to feasibly survey; he came out hearing voices, grabbed wing
                for doctors mapping ghost trails faraway. 

                Our last big shot > the space ship > crop circles
                in the sugar cane fields: when it land spindly-legged
                fellas, tendril
                arms wave wide, will appear offering work and party.
               
                Call them what you will, come along;
                and roll out red carpet today;
                and smile,
                'cause if they fancy they might promise lift up & away.
                                                                        – W.W.

                        


 

                         NOTIONS OF A NATION

                         A Problem somehow to be solved
                         by our achieving a Consensus
                         then turning back to our unsolved lives.

                         A Future we cannot afford
                         not to invest in, lest our children
                         curse us for leaving them less than heaven.

                         A tribe we must worry about
                         before it's Too Late and it breaks up
                         and we're left wandering in a desert.

                         Strands of rock and river and road
                         woven slack by the keepers of light
                         that confounds the terms of earnest men.

                              (from "Fabula Rasa" by Brian Chan) 

              

                
                         

 

 


POEMS FOR YOUNG LOVE BROWSING SIGNS UP THERE

 

                                                                                                                 for Jean-Ann F-R

 

                          Heard from a young man the other day: about his girl,
                    Savitri, and her aurora moment: she walks into a store,
                    the Bazaar Bombay (no, in Georgetown's Regent Street)
                    intent on buying some lovelaced wispy thing to cache
                    his eye in her green heart's bursting folder.

                    Back among the bolts of blue, the layers of crimson spangles: a bony
                    neckless face, earrings of metal, eye wells of abeer, cries Holi,
                    Holi
. She flees the store into midday streets stuttering from heat,

                    straight to his front door, his couch; stripped speechless –
                    what just happened?

                    Limb tinder twined for fires that curve and calm the eyes
                    stared at the ceiling as the mystery spread. He worked,
                    a drill shift, vowed to root all spirits unsummoned out; spike
                    & beam a faith up down like girders for their love.

                    After she'd gone, he logged, he said, on to a soccer match:
                    ballers at London's Wembley Stadium, after halftime; trotting
                    back on the field: making signs of the cross,
                    pointing to the sky, touching the ground:

                    So sure someone is watching…that cruising satellite
                    eye, or, after the first star ignited, the undivided
                    One in front a galactic plasma screen, Chair
                    of the grand design – from microbe to first breath. 

                    The Bombay girl? seems now she knows – the first
                    communion saved – how longings interned hold and surge;
                    what profiles sleepless roam the earth. With navel bare
                    come March she'll spray coloured water powders flowers
                    of shielding; she'll chant to chase shadows & shudders
                                                                                 of lingam away.

                    Did what?…her young man see the light…nah..
                    stopped playing the field, though.
                                                                                                – W.W.

 

 

 

 

                 

 

 

 

 


                                       RECOGNITIONS

                    Scraps of the soul drifting over the river of my eye,
                       each on his or her angled way of essential
                           forgetting of the threads linking us all,
                              shred my heart into sparks of fear

                      and of joy that leap with the finding, and fade with the loss
                        of links frayed by the tension off seeing too well,
                          the impulse of recognition staggered
                             by a relentless remembering

                     both the finest stitch and the most ruthless unravelling
                         of a quilt still spreading, impossible to check
                            whose patches of light are too brief to be
                               held and too sharp to be ignored.
                                                           (from "Gift Of Screws" by Brian Chan)      

 

 

              
              

 

          

             
                 

            

POEMS FOR NATION HORSES (SHOW & WORK)

 

                                                                            "In paradise all clocks refuse to chime
                                                                    for fear they might, in striking, disturb the peace
." 
                                                                                      – Joseph Brodsky, "Lullaby of Cape Cod"

 

 

                       
                   Not yet a nation, worried what other nations might think,
                   we send show horses off to the world, our more or less
                   refined. One stand out steed, tasseled & pimp referenced
                   for you're Ok awards (a player who tenantlike knows them, look
                   how he bouncing with pedigree!) through shires, rows of trees
                   will bear the standard: our forked up best from bush lots of aspire. So,

                   you guys, harnessed at home, lucky if working,
                   best stop complaining; some day the wild coast fevers, wounds
                   stitched up for now, will squish death creeping. Don't sweat
                   our stadium amps & champs; and, look, kites commissioned for the sky!
                   They do declare our borders, shores (the sluices open wide)
                   can handle business runnings (private vice on the side.)

                   Our cropped over State's from Empire…godfactors…the numbers
                   to rule and so forth…What?
                   for a breaking volcano? an island beach? swop our waterfalls?
                   …surely you joke. Seal off
                   the cynics, sphincters for weary elitist viral lies. Like the forest
                   green we screen playactors by appointment and party ties. 

                   (Yo! terraqueous furies, our nemesis; cart wheels of progress, the field.
                   The game's for left right bipeds in dressage and dray. Ph.drivers wanted.)

                   You watch, the stream of faithless, pipered rats en route to rivers
                   will make a U turn, haul deliverance through Arrival days.
                   Till then, home rules apply:
                                                            cheek by bowl, vices hide;
                                                              ground fast looming, pull up, tribe!
                   (Yo, comrade! want not what you need not.
                   The force is not with you. Abide.)                         
                                                                                           -W.W.

 

                       NOTIONS FOR A NATION

                       A space other than the room we
                       are sitting in, talking about the
                       Other we will never be but are.

                       A club we are dying to join
                       for which we must produce credentials
                       impossible by our own standards.

                       A Promise whose spirit of Real
                       Estate keeps trickling out our fingers
                       to wrap itself round our hands and feet.

                       A land stolen from other tribes
                       we give some back to so they'll have no
                       excuse for not cleaning up their act…

                       ……………………………………..
                        (from "Fabula Rasa" by Brian Chan)



Review Article: BOOK OF TEARDROPS

  
      
    Poets from Guyana wouldn't be poets if they ignored the     ____________________________
    landscape. The savannahs, the dense forests, the
    grid-ordered city all invite wonder and engagement.              THE JOURNEY TO LE REPENTIR
    Among colonial labourers the first flicker of literary                by Mark McWatt 
    (self) awareness could have happened late one afternoon:
    someone pausing to look across pastoral rice fields or             Peepal Tree Press
    lush cane stalks and thinking, Hell of a country. I could          England, 2009 
    write poetry 'bout this place. Generations later a                  146 pgs.
    relative or neighbour, better educated and with fine
    penmanship, might have made the first self-conscious          ____________________________
    stab at the sonnet form.

    Today we can read what happened next to that capacity for wonder and (self) possession.
    Wilson Harris would travel and drill deep into Interior layers, extracting myths and mud- 
    obscured symbols of alchemy. The more city-bound poet Martin Carter found his fire
    as street riots & political upheaval disrupted Georgetown's colonial order, and Coldstream   
    Guards set foot on his Demerara shores.

    Newer, almost reclusive, poet Brian Chan seems "engaged" even when his poetry hints
    at disengagement. Caught up in the post-Independence turmoil his city poems record 
    the setting up of defences, private kokers to regulate (or keep at bay) the flow of 
    unfriendly governing sentiment. For someone who didn't travel far around the country 
    Chan's poems are dry, well-insulated places of empathy, buttressed by Emily Dickinson-
    style epigrams, where insight & feeling hatch.

    In his latest poetry volume, The Journey to Le Repentir (2009), Mark McWatt invites
    readers into new untractored terrain: The North West region. If Ian McDonald had 
    carved out Essequibo as his place of escape, discovery (and now faithful old world
    newspaper musings) McWatt takes us to places in "the North West district of Guyana/
    (before there was 'Region One'"); and back in time to the 1950s

    The collection contains an introduction from the author explaining how the poems came
    about, the book's narrative sequence structure; it includes the "voices" of travellers to Guiana: 
    an English sea captain in search of Eldorado; a Frenchman exiled to Demerara (not Chateau
    d'If).

    McWatt is a (retired) University professor so it's not surprising to find an academic warp-
    weave of themes in his material. The Journey to Le Repentir melds history readings   
    and personal recollection in a way that makes for an intelligent (if sentimental) parsing
    of experience.

    His "journey" starts with references to his growing up years; it moves out in sections
    through the Mazaruni; through "mortal-midway" poems, and postcard poems sent to
    friends encountered on the way; and then to Le Repentir, Georgetown's now jungle-
    overrun burial grounds.

    The Mazaruni poems are not quite what you might expect, dense, ecologically sensitive
    elegies to a landscape made famous around the literary world as an imaginary locus
    where events foreshadowed and unforeseen occur. McWatt seems wary of some poets'
    fondness for symbol-making and transcendence-offering. "I know/you poets and the
    irresponsibility/of your traffic in tropes and symbols".

    Still, like Le Repentir, the Mazaruni region encourages rapture, the way less talented,
    more calculating Guyanese writers get rapturous about (ethnic) origins, closed
    communities & victim 'hoods; reinforcing perimeters within the nation in proud columns
    and often poorly constructed lines.

    The Journey To Le Repentir is arranged in four sections, and readers might find pleasure
    in the varied narrative voices (creole chatty, lyric evocative). The opening lines - "This is
    my
song of the universe/of the past that is now and the future that is never" – set a   
    pulpit
high tone of sincerity. Again, unlike Ian McDonald – bypassing that poet's excited
    scenery description - McWatt  searches for language that makes the landscape more
    globally meaningful, not  just parochially lovable. 

    He is less concerned with rhythm in his lines or with word precision ("vast as estuaries, he was
    that riparian aristocrat/whose alluvial accent sounded in the bedrooms of all rivers.") Craft
    though important seems secondary to his heart's content and motion. When he reaches for
    metaphors he picks sumptuous, ripe ones: "All the rain long/the world wept/like a wound in
    the soft/of you."

    There are moments, too, when you wonder what to make of strange lapses into banality:
    "Beyond this destination/there are other destinations and still/another Destination". And
    soppiness: "Sometimes I look at my hands/the hands that wield pen and pointer/that cup
    your rounded breasts/that chop garlic and green onions."  

    Though one can't be sure how deep the incisions go the collection is marked by lament,
    confession
, gratitude, innocence; and pain, under the mask of poetry's "luxurious atone-
    ment". What the back cover commends as "brave candour" in his lines feels sometimes 
    like the brave armature of a poet of faith who, on occasion, can be "ambushed by sudden
    tears." 

    Readers in mid-adolescence could share McWatt's delight in revisiting places: "our first
    house in Mabaruma", "the wind-kissed river"; glimpses of Amerindian "budding breasts
    exposed", and a black tiger which to a school boy might have seemed a manifestation
    of the forest spirit, Kanaima. These perceptions have stayed with the poet and have
    accrued over years into deep affection for his cultivated swath of Guiana. 

    Somehow in his forays into living environments and inner life experience McWatt steers
    clear of the toxic air in Georgetown politics ("fleeing the vulgar coercions of Burnham's
    land" is as close and as current as he gets). There are poems that offer reprise and 
    variation on a familiar theme, "Independence"; and poems about love (in "The Museum
    of Love") which are done with a curator's sensitivity to human loss and revaluation. 

    Heart-energized, magnanimous in its navigations The Journey To Le Repentir makes a
    plea for teaching moments in Guyanese classrooms. As a teaching tool, beside a porten-
    tous Martin Carter volume (filled with stoic lines & solitary foreboding) it could achieve
    an odd coupled partnership of spirit.

    Mark McWatt – winner of the Guyana Prize (1994), the Commonwealth Writers' Prize (2006)
    and a university professor – has come a long way since boyhood days walking home from
    school through the jungle (when not riding in daddy's Land Rover). Readers might sense
    some measure of unease in the poet's divided self, as establishment and native identities
    jostle. The pull seems stronger toward a romancing of McWatt's unusual forest origins – his
    intimate rivers, its memories and ghosts, "the [native] solitude and detachment" they
    engendered.

    The Journey To Le Repentir ends with a postscript; the poet takes one last updating stroll
    through the Georgetown burial grounds. "So our places of death, like our lives/are tainted 
    with the rot, the disorder." (Flag: authored insights like that might upset the retro
    ideologues currently on stage who bristle at any form of "negative" or "unpatriotic"
    sentiment).

    The poet's closing thoughts are expressed in a sonorous swell, not unlike the chords ("This
    is my song of the universe") with which the book opened. You sense a choral build up, and 
    (for all the rumours and deformities of State) a purity of message meant to bring long-
    patient Guyanese readers to their feet: 

                 "Yet we live with the transfiguration of rain
                   and bright sunlight on grass…
                                             …the consecration of sorrow,
                   of memory, of hope – and thoughts of that chalice
                   filled with the blood of love, and the Amen
                   of forgiven yesterdays, the Amen of all tomorrows."

    In other words, like those plantation labourers in the Guiana cane fields, at the end of
    the day or the work song or the journey, looking back might leave you feeling tearfully
    cued up to gasp or sigh, Goodness, grief! or What a country!   (W.W.)

 

                               

 

 

   


 

POEMS FOR JAZZ ICONS (& THEIR SOUND)

                                                                 

                                                                          Miles Davis 1926 – 1991

               [That climate changing horn, breath and instrument twinned 
                after centuries of mating, since chance & genes
                in consummation = 'the one' a Mary knows; like no sound on earth.
                There, too, birth marked in (our) Kitch, Sparrow, Marley
                Shadow (few since). 

                I mean the Miles sound, sinew & curve pristine
                until he took off into 70s fusion, bored with gigs cool
                & origins; playing back to audience bored
                with audience; asking all to listen like birds
                alight on power lines sensors gripping;

                until he started chasing young girls' gold-
                haired hits like Lauper's "Time After Time",
                and you wondered: where's he going with that?
                the hot breath quick of pretty young songs? new
                hip swing for hipsters grown too old to rock?

                In the ballads, I know now, he felt the tremble of innocence
                & risk, heard chords immortal blue;
                horn husks to dig for.

                I hear Young Jeezy "Crazy World", Phoenix "1901";
                and think: Miles would have loved vamping that
                juiced up throng and throb; shoulders hunched to shaft in
                for a sweaty duel or three then turn away;
                streaming up a brew fresh as tomorrow, horn-
                miracled; like no bitch on earth, yo!]-W.W. 
 

                                    THE SONG IS YOU
                                                        
Ella Fitzgerald 1918 – 1996

                                    Now, more than before, we know
                                    there is no song you have not
                                    sung: we have only to think
                                    of one for it to become
                                    a bell whose tongue is yours,
                                    moreso now in the silence
                                    of its new dangling balance.
                                         (from "Gift of Screws" by Brian Chan) 


                                    
                                    SONNY STITT'S SAX

                                             A voice like a boy's sure scrawl
                                    of question marks across a blackboard
                                    of silence, a chalky scrape
                                    whose tails fade to fine points as though they
                                    are their own firm erasers.
                                       (from "Fabula Rasa" by B
rian Chan)            

                                        BIRD,

                                    your silence of screeches lends me
                                    the faith to scratch on the air one more
                                    noise of us who fly without wing.
                                          (from "Thief With Leaf" by Brian
Chan)  

                                                        

 

 

 

 

 

 

POEMS FOR DISTANT FATHERS (& THEIR ‘SPRING)

 

               Your mother blames the breakfast scramble, late commutes
                why you never "took" to Sunday mass; cat
                sleeping like your father 'til midday. She shows off
                postcards mailed when the carrier drops anchor - 
                her only son leaving family footprints 'cross the globe!
                Handsome, unsmiling in uniform your picture's framed
                for duty in the living room.

                She'd much prefer you
                wear a gentler safer (Ph.d not Sgt.) badge on your chest.  
                She worries: who are these older women showering
                gifts on him? what do they ask in return
?
                In the wilderness cries of loss
                & loneliness are not wolves' only.

                The Marine Captain's retirement party must have been
                a blast, though why is he the greatest guy you know?
                (Sometimes the enemy's in camouflage salutes
                or bows; 'the kiss', remember?)

                Always too busy, orifice-overwhelmed: your mother's
                pow! pow! at my hard boiled eggs. Might be true; too late
                to reel you back in. Stay in touch
                   on line is all
                                      for now I ask.
                                                                        -W.W.

 

                  TO A DAUGHTER

                  He never hoped for you, he never not:
                  it was you who gave birth to a father.

                  A baby, you wanted often to play
                  with the only friend you had all day long

                  but the drug of Work would pull him away
                  to a desk, piano, easel or stove.

                  If he felt you were keeping him from other
                  life like salt running out, he might bark

                  Leave me alone, in the anger of fear,
                  and he would feel his voice quiver your spine.

                  But you never stopped running to embrace
                  him, teaching how gratuitous is love.

                  Your father's love for you, shadowed by pain,
                  clouded by duty, was never as free.

                  Yet though you're now 'tall as a lantern post',
                  you still sit on his knee and hug his neck; 

                  but that he once frightened you still frightens him
                  should he snap Leave me alone, meaning now Don't.
                     (from "Fabula Rasa" by Brian Chan)  

                  POEM FOR DISTANT CHILDREN

                  A mother gives
                                           birth a father
                  can only witness,
                                            separated
                  from the fruit of his seed, his only
                  cord of connection (which must also
                  be cut) between soul and soul, mind
                  and mind, heart and heart (for as long
                  as hearts allow), all intangible
                  except the giving witness heart 
                  which still moves and
                                                    can still be touched. 
                       (from "Gift Of Screws" by Brian Chan)

 

 

   

 

 

 


 

   

  

ARRIVAL DAYS, DEPARTURE TIMES

 

               Rigged to happen every year now, with onion skin speeches and
             bright remembering fabrics; jerky-hip dancing girls and servers
             fanning coal pots of blame and avowal; though bet your bulging
             jewelry box there's a man in the crowd counting head like votes,
             and women looking man like mate. Party time, yes.

             The horror is gone; but someone on mission & Ministry,
             who frowns on Carnival & chipping bass lines, softens
             for these microphone solemnities: the field of faces,
             the whipped-up batter of maltreatment. 

             The stage is set so walking off the ships dubs every cane bound cutter 
             hero; every scribbler, poet; those labour strikes, famed victories.
             Who can refuse these reparations to the spirit? ignore
             the "time for reflection" drizzle?

             Well, after the plantation, "flight" (& cunning) slipped in
             our DNA, the notion of "anywhere but here". Consider
             what happens now on crafts outbound to any "there".   

             Knees bent in cabins cramped like old mizzen-mast ships;
             air like seasick puddles at your ankles; seat belts, the chains;
             someone in the walk space making sure you're strapped in.

             Time to disembark, the drill's the same: step off
             the transport, follow signs, straight verifying lines; turn right
             to fat free runaways, the heat of welcome in wintered eyes;
             row houses, burrows leased to guard the old ingathering ways; 
                                                                                            turn left
             alone to wonder: your first powerbike down expressways! far   
             off to Chance! Discover! the toll?  paths grassy green, trails
             stone strewn to Growing Old.

             Trust me, go left, left, young man; and pay attention.
             There's more to any "there" than changing seasons.

             This city puts on street shows for Arrivals: marching bands,
             the Mayor sashed & waving, crowds with flags and iPhones;
             back to work, yo!
 
                                                 -W.W. 

 

 

                    THREAD

                    Last year's song's easier to recall
                    than today's which has slipped in and out
                    of the cloth of the air, a needle I forgot
                    to thread, a thread I forgot to knot.
                    Nothing to retrace but a line of shrinking holes,
                    shadowed punctures in a field of white.
                           (from "Thief With Leaf" by Brian Chan)

                     BARFLY

                         Here I pause
                    to  remember how not
                          to sleepwalk
                    through trenches of custom,
                          how to wake
                    the one essential voice
                          held like wine
                    in cupped hands whose fingers
                          lust to spread
                    themselves apart to shed
                         their burden.
                         (from "Gift Of Screws" by Brian Chan)