Monday, June 6, 2011

Recollection

The songs
We sang
The moments
We shared,
pipedreams.
The rusty hum
That rocked us
Gently asleep
Is forever
A finger stroke away.
I know it,
That life
Is better spent
In a garden.
But sometimes
It’s simply too easy
To carry on
Hiding in the cellar.
The shape of the bottle
Never changes
And the drink is still
A mellow dry
But the light,
The light is
Different.
Your glowing face
Once brought me tears
Of joy.
Your glowing face
Once brought me tears
Of loss.
But now
Your glowing face
Brings no tears,
Only a smile
And a happy
Recollection.

Graham Cohen

Monday, May 30, 2011

Trains Across a Field

Chapter 2


          I loved a girl once, ya know.  Back in what shoulda been my college years.  When I was first with her, that’s when it started happening.  That was the first time it all stopped.  Didn’t last long, the first time, only a couple of seconds really. I think she taught it to me, how to make everything go away, just from laying there with me.  It was a late April afternoon, damp out but not humid..  Thunderstorms had been coming and going since the early morning, so it was nice and cool.  The world outside was a real deep green, like spearmint.  We weren’t fooling around or nothing, just lying on my bed with the window open.  I couldn’t tell you another time I was so happy.  We lay there for the longest, sweetest couple hours of my life, just napping with each other.  I stared at her the whole time, wondering if she was awake, admiring her little features.  She was so beautiful and soft that I couldn’t stop grinning.  You know how huge things can look when you get up nice and close to ‘em?  She looked like she went on for miles.  Damn humbling, it was.
            Her tender little face, it made me swell up so much that I thought I’d burst and flood the streets.  I couldn’t blink for hours.  I gazed, mesmerized by her thick and dusky brown hair.  It was like a jungle.  I gazed at her paper-thin eyelids that hid away her dense green eyes.  I even gazed at that tiny bit of translucent hair that sat above her upper lip.  You could only spot it if you was spending some time round there.  I loved the way it brushed against my lips when we kissed.  It felt like something.  It made me feel.
            My old ass is rambling.  She’s gone.
            I goggled and goggled at her ‘till my eyes were like a pair of little thirsty deserts.  I had to shut ‘em.  That’s when it happened.  My house, the record player, Knoxville, everything fell away, disappeared.  The only bits of matter in the whole realm of existence were her, my bed, and me.  The only thing I could feel was her fleshy waist.  I didn’t quite know what to make of it at first, but after moment or two I realized it was the greatest thing in the world.  Nowadays I’ve learned to… I don’t wanna say control because I can’t control something I don’t completely understand… instigate fading.  That’s what I call it, when I make everything go away, fading.  Course I s’pose that’s a hair funny, seeing as how I’m the only thing that ain’t fading.  I’m the only thing that’s real.  Everything else is swallowed by nothing.  When I opened my eyes again she was staring at me with this kinda sullen and understanding glare.  She knew what we just did, but she didn’t wanna talk about it so we laid there in silence instead.  But she knew.  We didn’t say anything else for the rest of the day.
            I never got around to eating them pills that night.  I reckon I just didn’t have it in me quite yet.  I awoke to the blare of a convoy of minivans and the thousands of little brats they bore.  They poured out of their sliding doors as they battered their younger brothers and best friends and leapt over one another in grizzly fashion to get to the very front of the line, laughing and crying and belting the whole way.  Each of them tugging their mother’s jean shorts with demands of cotton candy, soda pop, teddy bears, and hats.  The bigger ones trampled the younglings to ensure their place in the food chain.  They had excited themselves into a stupor, completely indifferent to the torment they caused one another.  It was the most gruesome thing I had ever seen.  I was outside the zoo.

            I’ve long thought there’s a difference between happiness and joy.  You can be happy one hour and sad the next, those feelings come and go, but joy is an absolute.  Those kids, they were joyful.  They were so damned full of joy that it was spilling out of them in tears and spit from their screaming little mouths.  They were excited for the sheer sake of being excited.  Couldn’t wait to pass through those fortress gates and stand, bewildered, before all of the gigantic horned monsters they’d all seen pictures of in kindergarten.  I don’t remember the last time I felt that way, probably when I was their age.
            In the middle of the war zone there was this one little boy standing all by his lonesome self, clinging to the side seams of his shorts for dear life, biting his lower lip, holding back tears.  You could read him like a book, as he was scared straight to fucking hell.  Didn’t know where his momma was and he didn’t like it one bit.  I started trudging towards him, real slow like so as not to scare him any more.  His eye caught me awful quick, he knew from fifty god damned yards away I wanted a word with him.  I had to talk and he wouldn’t know how to ignore me.  Gazing at each other I just limped, inch by inch to him.  Took all of two minutes, each of us getting more riled up with each passing moment.  By the time I got over to him he was practically in tears and my eyes were so damned wide that I couldn’t have blinked if I wanted to.
            We were statues for minute, beaming at one another.  I’m sure in his head he was going through what they’d told him about me in pre-school over and over again.  Say no to me, don’t follow me anywhere, scream fire, don’t accept no candy from me.  He must have thought me the most awful piece of shit that ever walked the earth.  I was nothing to him but a smear on God’s otherwise beautiful green planet.  But him, he was beautiful.  He was so small and frail.  His skin was a long and shallow canvas of a burnt tan yellow, Cambodian, I think.  He wore a fanny pack and baseball cap, little symbols of his innocence.  His shoes had Velcro straps ‘cause God knows he sure as hell couldn’t tie his shoes.  He was a little human soul that hadn’t had enough time to turn sour, not yet at least.
            “You lost, boy?”  I asked him.  He took a small step back and kept his eyes fixed on me.  “You got a poppy?  Or a mommy around here?”  He gurgled a bit when he tried to breathe in through his mouth as he wiped his snot on his forearm, then he nodded at me.
            “Yes sir.”
            “Well, which is it?”
            “My mother, sir.  But I can’t find her.”
            I took another step towards him.  My jaw was hanging, my eyes staring a hole right through him.
            “Your daddy, is he at home”
            “Yes sir, he is sir.”  He stuttered at me.
            I reached out and place my hand on the side of his face.  That just about sent him over the edge.  He was leaking like you wouldn’t believe.  His eyes were tearing, his nose was the mouth of a green river, and he drooled all over himself every time he tried to catch his breath.
            “And your daddy, does he treat you good?  Is he kind to ya?”
            He just nodded at me as I caressed his face.  Running my thumb along his eyebrow.  I crouched down so we was at eye level with each other.
            “My pa, he was monster, you know.” I whispered to him.  “He used to hit us, me and my mother, on account of the bottle.  Your daddy, he don’t drink none does he?”  He violently swung his head back and forth, barely holding it back.
            My daddy really was a brute to us.  I grew up on the Cherokee reservation outside of Gatlinburg with him, my ma, and two a little sister.  He was a scarred man, to put it lightly.  Ma said he was never the same since he came back from Korea.  She always used to pet me and my sister after he’d hit us or drink himself into a blurred rage, telling us that that wasn’t really him and that the war had made him cold.  The reservation was a sad enough place even without his barbaric ways because every other house was the exact same way.  Everybody’s daddy drank and everybody else suffered because of it.  He used to fling his empty bottles at me, yelling that I’d never be a man and that I wasn’t’ good for a god damned thing.
            Course in retrospect I’m glad I was born a boy that’d never become a man, it was better to be that than a girl in our household.  My father wasn’t your momma’s run of the mill daytime ogre, he was a fiend.  Sometimes he’d tell me and my sister to run outside to play, we’d just run around to the side of the house and crouch below a window.  The walls were so damned thin that we could hear everything.  First he’d cozy on up to ma and start caressing her sleeves, whispering slurred poetry into her ear, telling her how lovely she was.  She’d always shake him off, that got him awful flustered.  He’d slap her, saying a man’s got needs and a wife’s got duties to her husband, but she’d always resist.  Once he realized that she wouldn’t give him what he wanted he’d try to take it from her.  Sometimes he got it, other times she’d cut him with a steak knife and force him outta the house.  Upon a certain age he stopped telling me and my sister to go outside, and started telling it to just me.  It would always be the same way with her as it was with my ma.  That is, until when my ma found out about him coming after my sister and she cut him a little deeper than the flesh can take.  She was killed in prison.
            “Get away from him!”
            Time thawed out real quickly when mother bear came home.  And she was none to pleased to see me getting friendly with the cub.  I’ll spare you the details as I’m sure you can guess what was said by who.  Awful lotta words like ‘monster, criminal,’ and ‘predator’ got thrown around.  Truth be told I can’t quite blame the lady for getting all riled up at me for getting cozy with him.  I wasn’t looking to get married to the little fellar, but I felt I owed him something for slaughtering his extended family, for turning them into pulp.  But then, I said to myself, ‘maybe I’m already paying for my actions simply by being so.  Simply by having to fret over where I’ll sleep tonight, how I’ll put gas in the tank, or if there’ll be a tomorrow.’  It was foolish thinking.  And it was foolish to think that I would have been allowed to stick around the parking lot, moping.  Momma bear squealed that a frightening grizzled street creeper was making friends with little kids in the Knoxville zoo parking lot.  Didn’t take blue but five minutes to get there, find me, and brandish his bat belt stocked with all kinds of hobo repressors, and tell me to kindly ‘move along.’
            I didn’t want to leave.  I wanted to watch those toddlers piss themselves by working up such a nervous sweat, giddy with excitement to see the furry dangers that lurked behind the zoo walls.  I wanted to see families sharing overpriced buckets of popcorn and arguing over which souvenir that should get, the tiger shirt or the elephant hat.  I didn’t have a choice, I picked up my pack and my six stringer, tipped my hat to the kind gentlemen who were sweet enough to move me, and carried on.  I couldn’t take much more.

Graham Cohen

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Trains Across a Field



CHAPTER 1

            I walked into Market Square one Saturday, looking for just about anything they’d give me.  It was one of those farmer’s days and those Quakers, and Amish, and hippies are all kind folks.  Real giving.  The Amish families usually give me a spare loaf of bread without my even having to ask for it.  They’ve always been respectful like that, not bringing me to beg for nothing so as to mind my own respect.  I still have that, least I think I do.  Anyway, I’d just grabbed me a fresh apple and was gettin’ some shade in Crutch Park, it was a scorcher that day, I think it was in early June.  So I’m sitting there and outta the blue I hear someone picking away at a twelve stringer singing “Little Boxes.”  They were damn good too.  Couple of em even whistled the chorus, all sounded effortless
            I followed the sound ‘round a couple trees to where I found all these youngsters sitting together in a circle, just listening to this one fella playing, and singing, and whistling.  I recognized their type right away, they were a bunch of kids that listened to Woody Guthrie.  Fell for the ole Hollywood prank, always building us up like we’re walkin fortune cookies.  Like we’re the only ones that can see straight anymore.  There was seven of ‘em, dirtied up good, but I could still tell they were new at hopping.  Too young not to be.  Mighty peculiar looking bunch, all clad in torn up black and white shirts, big leather boots, camouflage pants, and hair all tied together and matted. Figured I’d help break ‘em in.
            “Excuse me boys, you got any more room for an old fella and his steel stringer?”
            “Of course.”  They all replied.
            “Much obliged gentlemen, much obliged.  Ah, just gimme a minute.  My back ain’t what it used to be.  There we go.  Now then, lets get to it shall we?  What else you know, boy?”
            “When I die.  Learned that back in the old church days.”
            “That’s good, that’s a good one.  I’ll lead us in and you follow.”
            We sat there picking, and humming, and wailing away ‘till the Sun was ‘bout hidden by the plateau.  They were good kids, the lot of ‘em.  Gave me a couple cigarettes, shared a little pot they had with me, and I passed around a quart of shine I had brought back from the reservation.  We had a good time.  After a while I inquired as to how they came round Knoxville.  Sure enough, they chased down a train from Nashville, just like they felt they were expected to.
            “Boys,” I said, “I suspect you’re all fairly new to hopping.  Am I mistaken?”  They all grinned and nodded, said they just took their first ride from Nashville the day before last.  “Well boys, I don’t mean no intrusion, but what if I may ask are you after/”
            “Seeing the world.”  Said the kid across from me.  I couldn’t help but chuckle.  What a load of corn shit.  He looked a little short by my snickering, I could tell I’d hurt his feelings.  Naturally I meant no offense, but they were so damned naive.
            “Sorry boy, sorry.  But you’ll have to wise up sooner or later and realize jes what you’re getting into.  Now I don’t boast, but I’ve been on and off the tracks for ‘bout thirty years now, that is till I settled down in these hills.  Anyhow, I know the ins and outs of hoppin like the back of these prunes I call hands.  I’ll give you my two cents on staying in one piece, if you’ll hear it.”  That got em all in a bunch.  They were like kids on Christmas, jes giddy with excitement.  You’d have thought they were hearing the president.
             “Now first things first, never stay on the cars at night.  They’re bound to stop at loading docks and the folks they got there’ll take the dogs to the last damn inch of the train, lookin for fellars such as yerselves.  And them dogs ain’t your momma’s poodle.  They’ve got weilers, pits, boxers,, the whole lot of fighting breeds.”
            I suspect I sat with em for upwards of three hours, sharing my little bits of advice and what have you ‘fore we went our separate ways.  It was getting towards dusk, and I had to find a couple bones if I’s to get myself drunk that night.  As I said before, it was summertime and all the rich folks were out and about, all along Gay Street.  That was sure good news for me.  Didn’t have to put on too much of a pitiable look for them to give me a fair bit of change.  Anyhow, it didn’t take but an hour till I had three bucks, so I headed back toward Broadway.
            I stopped by the deepest part of the creek round seven thirty, or so.  No one was around so I took a quick dip and rinsed myself off before I laid on my blanket.  Lemme tell you, there ain’t nothing quite like laying on a bank, shirtless, on a good and muggy summer night.  I just closed my eyes and felt the mosquitoes pick away at me.  They didn’t bother me none, nothing did at the moment.  You probably won’t remember this because you went away with everything else, but right then, just for a few minutes, the whole world up and disappeared.  That is, everything but me, the grass scratching against my back, and them singing cicadas.  There wasn’t no sun, there wasn’t no sky, or concrete valleys, or waterfalls.  There was just me.  I opened my eyes right when everything came back, right when a car honked a block away.  I picked up my things and kept on keeping on.
            I got down to the store right as the sun was going down and bought myself a gallon of yellar.  I never much cared for the stuff, being what they call an ‘antiseptic’ and all.  But it’s 30 proof, goes down easy enough, and you can get yerself three quarters of a gallon for under four dollars.  Shit, for that I gladly paid and went about my merry way.
            Round about two or so I’s good and drunk out east.  I’m sure you’ve noticed how far I’d gone by now and I suspect you’d like to know why I’s all about the place.  Truth be told when the half way houses won’t take you anymore and blue won’t let you sleep nowhere then you got not reason not to keep moving.  Remind yourself that you ain’t dead quite yet, but God sure as shit knows your working on it.  Anyhow, I was heading to the gas station when a little black missus waved me down in a back alley.  I didn’t have no money, but she didn’t no that and I reckoned she didn’t need to.
            “Looking for a good time, handsome?” she asks me.  “Ten to blow, thirty for everything.”
            I wasn’t looking to get married or nothing, but a man drunk on yellow belly, a man in my condition at that, is a man that will do just about anything if it’ll feel good.  Now this missus was a damned fool, for she got started on me before asking to see the money.  Didn’t bother me none at the time, I got myself off, sure as shit.  But right after that shit went a little more than sour.  She starts taking off her pants and I quickly see that missus was a mister.  I was furious.  Damn near puked my whole guts out.
            “What’s the matter sweetie?”  He asks, “Didn’t see what you were getting into?  Well don’t take the field if you ain’t gonna play ball!”
            “You fucking faggot!  I ought to cut that thing right off you!”  By this point I was kicking through every little heap of shit in the alley, looking for something, anything, to kill that son of a bitch.
            “You owe me money, honey!  Now pay up and head out before you get the law on both our asses!”  He kept screaming at me, but I wasn’t paying him no mind.  I had one thought and one thought alone, killing that sick motherfucker.  “Hey!  Did you hear me?  I said I want my god damned money!”
            He grabbed his purse and wailed on the back of my head over and over again.  But I didn’t even turn to face the little fag.  His sticky little ass couldn’t hit as hard as a summer breeze.  Finally I found a good brick and spun round with.  I aimed for his head but I was’t seeing to straight and caught him in the chin.  He yelped like a helpless little puppy and bolted holding his face and jetting blood all about.  I should have let the fucker go, but I wasn’t even thinking by then.  I was just hungry.  I stumbled forward a couple steps and gave the brick a good heave at him.  Thud!  Caught him in the back of the head and he was out cold.  I fell over to him, turned his ass over, closed my eyes, and went to town on that pretty little face of his.  I punched and punched till I couldn’t feel nothing in my hand.  I opened my eyes and he wasn’t there no more.  All I saw was a pool of glossy crimson and glitter wearing a tube top dress.  I sat and stared at him for a minute, trying to decide if I felt sorry.
            It’s a strange thing, killing a man.  That was by no means the first time I’d done it.  I’d ‘fought’ in Kuwait back in ’91.  If you can call what I did fighting.  Didn’t amount to much more than sitting in an Apache while holding down a button and watching the little dots slow down then finally stop moving.  Then we’d just shrug our heads and go home.  I suppose that was about the only real effect the army had on me.  I learned to kill and feel okay about it.  They ought to teach that to kids in schools.  But all of those little dots I killed were just that, little dots.  They were far away and didn’t have a face.  They were like pixels in a video game.  This motherfucker was real.  He had blood, and a face (or he used to…), and he made sounds when you struck him.
            All this ran through my head immediately after I’s finished with him.  I had just assumed anybody’d be dead after an ass pounding the likes of which I gave him.  Lucky for his bloodied self I heard a gurgle and felt a hand on my side.  He murmured something to me, but I couldn’t for the life of me make out what.  I’s through with him.  I figured anybody that can live through that kind of beating has got the right to live.  He earned it.  I helped myself to the $100 he had in his purse, of course.
            Now I can’t speak for nobody by myself, but if I come across $100 all of the sudden then you ‘d best believe that I’m heading for the closest fellar that can set me up with a couple .  Just so happened I was, at the time, mighty close to a black kid that didn’t have no reservations about dealing with someone of my condition.  Frankly, it’s hard as hell to find folks that are more interested in dealing with us beyond the point of chucking a couple dimes at us while we’re asleep, or pouring us a bowl of soup and reminding us that Jesus thinks were just fabulous.  Anyhow, I came across him on of cherry street, same place as always, right when he was having to tell off some poor little cracky.
            “Fuck you nigger!  That ain’t what you said last week!”  She hooted.
            “Get the fuck outta here, bitch!  You can’t suck your sorry ass’s way to getting your fix!”  He yelled back at her.  “Like I even want that shit!”
            She moseyed off on her lonesome, crying the whole way.  In retrospect I suppose she was a sad case, pathetic little thing.  But at the moment I didn’t right care, I just wanted my shit.
            “Fuck you want?”  He asked me.
            “You know me, just a couple of big boys.  Nothing fancy.”
            “Shit, you still owe me for the last ones.  I ain’t giving you shit ‘till I been paid in full.  Come back with my money and maybe then I fix yo broke ass up.”  I knew I didn’t owe him anything, but the cards weren’t in my hand.
            “Don’t worry, I got your damn money right here.  All 20, with 80 for the boys.”  I said as I tossed him the wad, “That’s enough for two, ain’t it?”  He stopped counting and glanced up at me, not saying nothing.  Just staring, real quiet like.  “Well ain’t it?”
            “Blood.”
            “What about it?”
            “It’s all over the money.  Mother fucking…” He started squinting at me.  “The shit’s all over your bloody ass too!  What the fuck you been doing?”
            I was getting a little too anxious for the good of either of us, and that nigger was rightly testing my patience.  “You ain’t my god damned biographer!  Now, you gonna sell me the shits or not?”  He reached into his pocket and chucked a bottle with a couple pills at me.
            “I don’t like bloody fucking money, or bloody fucking anything.  Get yo ass outta here, and don’t ever come to my corner again.  You hear me old timer?”
            I’d already turned and started off.  “I hear ya, ya son of a bitch.  I hear ya.”


-Graham Cohen

Monday, February 21, 2011

"Summer"

Gentle orange
resting on evening’s canopy.
From lush opaque green
like a chameleon it shifts
to the benign and melancholy
blank brown pages overlooking.
Never blinking, stoically, not a wince.
Water showers a bulwark
between the doughy field
and the grilling asphalt.
All the while your dreams
and cloud visions and games
of youth rest on the outlying
oaks that stand as the van guard.
Choruses of fouls chant,
“We live!  We die!  And yet
We live regardless!”
Quickly a raccoon darts
across the porch and into woods.
His tiny feet bearing proof
of a thousand tales
and scents of capricious wilderness.
The sweet sound of water
peaceably conquering stones.

Graham Cohen

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

"Place"

I am humbled by the magnitude.
Just as Caligula instills terror by way of
perversion in his uncouth world of carnality,
I tremble in awe at the lexis of the poet.
The immensity of the sharpened chasms
protruding into the depths of ethereal canyons
could all shatter and collapse at the sound
of conduction and compelling melodic sobs.
Giants were once volubly presented upon
rectangular maps of inventiveness.
But like so many magnum opuses,
they fade into the peripherality of man.
Count the soft tides, rolling upon the sands,
each one a star, erupting in life’s beautiful fury
as the child emerges while grandfather passes,
a smile warmly resting upon his understanding face.
No one can know what it will become of it, for
realms of chance are boundless.
As Hitler found numerical perfection
we find also imperfection in all.
The beauty of chaos encapsulates the
grand absurdity of the parking lot beneath.
How one deviates…
See the immaculate clouds on high,
witness the mighty tumbling horsemen
and their just Gatling guns hailing
the most consummate equalizer in all physicality.
Caress the pasty veil of patriotic cells
while they siphon through the perturbing blue,
and admire the flawlessness of their rhythm
and know, always, that everything
shall accompany everything while the
Lisbon's cliffs erode in perfect polyphony.
Stroke the sanguine fauna and recognize
its minuteness, and the beauty therin.
Colors, the only immortal being, subservient
to your desires, are true slaves.
Rub the clay pot and will forth the tower
of angelic might in smoldering gold.
Try and fail and try and fail
to recapture the glorious bland expression
that was wrought in the rediscovery
of aesthetic old men draped in purity.
Sonorously crawling through murky
flatness, bards wail of their own plight.
And all are made happy, if only for their own eternity.

Graham Cohen

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Forest Fires

When did it spin out of control?
Tokyo was once enough to sustain
the voracious need for the coveted trophy.
True plugs in the levy hold,
but the great ones are forever
beings of a higher consciousness.
Run run, through the wild cold
beauty of the vast unplanned
enormity.
Drink from the Velcro bark
and eat from the mouth of Apollo.
Fill to your bullshit ends,
the great laughing berry.
Feel its intricacies as it mocks you.
Find its flaw and humble
in the stadium filled log.
Was the dance to close?
Did it break the precarious cord?
Why not?
Cretin.
Learn from your elders.
Yield to the dangers
of the unchecked  grains.
Find the thermostat and cling
to it for the dear and precious life
that Malta built for you.
Encase it in ice.

Graham Cohen

Sunday, February 6, 2011

"Wasted"

My abhorrence mushrooms.
Engulfed in dullness.
Tedious and insipid.
Ostentatious red blood.
Pathetic.
Buxom fools of
orange and black.
Cool and expectant
to be detached.
Spending hours in a warp
of the fourth dimension.
And yet go nowhere.
Gain nothing.
Could they know their fall?
Could their hearts
leap up?
Could they make
the landscape their own?
A soft green breeze.
No elation equivocal
to lack of sadness
to death.
Always and simply
wasted…

-Graham Cohen