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Broadway for Paul

Page 5

by Vincent Katz


  After the reading, everyone came over to the apartment, which we had painted abstract-expressionist red and black for the occasion, carefully avoiding the Rolling Stones poster c. 1970

  Allen and Peter would be spending the night, and there was a lot of action

  Our band performed in the kitchen, as that seemed the room most like a stage

  I had called Morgan, and he had come down from Wisconsin for the reading

  He had brought his filmmaking equipment and shot footage of Allen and the rest of us

  I’ve seen this footage, and like all else regarding Morgan, I wonder where it ended up

  I headed east, for England, and Morgan west, for the promised land of San Francisco

  There, he fell in with a psychedelic-magazine crowd, first under the title High Frontiers, later as Mondo 2000

  I saw him “Out West,” one of the most memorable times being a drive to Bolinas on a day thickly covered in mist

  Somehow, we managed to find Bill Berkson’s bungalow and had a delightful afternoon together

  Morgan took a photo of me next to a sign that said “Dogtown, Pop. 5”

  We spent the night with friends of his in Mill Valley, and he took us to meet Jaron Lanier, who introduced us to early virtual reality

  Everything was an opportunity to be on the cutting edge for Morgan, and he made it into an art form

  After that, it was correspondence again for a long while

  He went to Europe and got involved with putting on large-scale multimedia

  Extravaganzas, bringing together young experimenters from many different areas in the arts

  He was in Budapest, Prague, Vienna…

  We were able to meet again when we took a trip up the Danube in the early 90s

  Everywhere en route, Morgan provided contacts, people for us to meet

  Finally, after techno parties and too much schnapps in Vienna, we made it to Budapest, where Morgan was living near some farms outside the city

  He met us in a café with lofty ceilings at a prearranged time, that was how

  Europe was then, and Morgan tapped into that

  As up-to-the-minute as he was in terms of tech and its connections to frontiers of the mind, he also valued traditions, and we shared a love for ancient poetry

  We wandered around in post-sickness daze with Morgan and Hilda

  They had been in love but were currently not, but they came together to be our hosts

  They were amazingly sweet toward us, bestowed such gentility

  Somewhere I have a video we made of Morgan in his backyard, biting into a long, green pepper and speaking, I dubbed him a Medialogue

  The house he lived in had dirty dishes piled in the sink, water ran across the floor when you flushed the toilet, and he hadn’t paid the rent in about six months

  He sent us to other media people in Prague, who put a poem of mine up on a circuit, pre-Internet, it traveled from computer to computer on a fragile network

  Later still, Morgan moved permanently to Vienna

  He once asked me to help with a passport snafu

  He also occasionally made purchases via the Internet that were then sent to me for safekeeping:

  I still harbor a set of Ted Berrigan’s In the Early Morning Rain Morgan purchased

  He probably saw them as talismans against an unthinking, bureaucratic world

  It angers me that I won’t be able to give them to him

  But I’m going to find homes for them Morgan would have approved of

  When we got our mini dachshund, Luis, Morgan took him on as part of the family

  Future correspondence always included good wishes to Luis accompanied by some specific, dachshund-friendly, reference

  And then, when Isaac and Oliver arrived, Morgan asked to be called Uncle Morgan

  And Uncle Morgan he was:

  He sent them both vintage pull toys, and he sent them hand-colored prints he’d found in a Viennese flea market

  In exchange, we sent Morgan a cache of the boys’ earliest artworks

  I always felt Morgan was accompanying me on my travels in poetry

  When I embarked on translating Sextus Propertius, he was as excited as I was by each new discovery and as delighted to find a real, living person from 2,000 years back with whom we’d have loved to spend a night, or nights, drinking, reveling, and in Morgan’s case, revealing, any place our minds had occasion to alight

  When I started editing Vanitas, I let Morgan know

  He wanted to have something in each of the seven issues

  He didn’t quite make it, but he published some remarkable pieces:

  Two poems and three sections from an ongoing memoir

  I was proud to have their wit and youthful energy in the magazine

  I can’t believe I’ll never hear from him again!

  His phone calls could be lengthy, and they got longer, and his voice slower, with the years

  But I always loved hearing from him

  What can I give to get him back?

  I’d like to write to Morgan now about gnomic aorists

  I’d like to send him a poem Oliver discovered: Paul Blackburn’s “7th Game: 1960 Series”

  Now Isaac is going to college: Morgan would certainly be applauding from afar

  He didn’t like to go outside in later years, he’d stopped traveling, I think he found his imagination the safest place

  Morgan was a dangerous person, in that he thrived on challenging assumptions

  But he was a humanist first and foremost, he adored his mother, and from that, found something to love in most people

  As we drive to college on Monday, we’ll take Morgan with us

  AUGUST 2018

  for Isaac, with Love

  There’s something about someone walking

  That makes New York City always amenable

  Even at its 90 degrees of August

  With your music on, they’re in a different world but it’s still your world

  A certain extended cuff, a fit of pants, gives eternity

  Its ever-present possibility

  Not just one, but a ceaseless evolving array

  Each looking good, their best, despite the heat

  On the corner, the heat no longer feels hot

  It’s simply the language we all speak

  You are leaving this place but temporarily

  You will return, will always find a place here

  That is yours, but now, ahead!

  The future needs you and your kind

  You who have always known better than the rest of us

  Who is who and the quality of their mettle

  It is still Wednesday

  I am happy it is still the middle of the week

  This week is a bracing blissfulness, a kind of waiting

  That is also pleasurable

  There seems to be no limit to what one can do

  And the heat perpetuates that feeling, always walking to continue

  At its idiomatically leisurely pace

  It is Thursday

  We are still in a week with its languorousness and delicacy

  We have time to shop and figure things out for the week ahead

  We have time to see our friends, have lunch

  And you have time to go pick up your guitar from the shop

  Everything feels as though it is moving at its appropriate pace

  We are beginning to learn to live with everything that is happening

  Friday, there’s the beauty of experience

  The things we do together, like shopping for college,

  And the thi
ngs we do separately, you going to a party, me staying home and writing

  Suddenly, it is all exciting

  There’s the possibility of experience

  Another day, look out the window, see the tree in the courtyard, the building behind, people starting their day, make a prayer

  That’s it, to find the beauty, the excitement, the possibility

  It will all be good, even when it doesn’t seem like it

  Saturday night, out for a walk, to friends, in the rain

  Sunday, the last day, the last night

  There’s no such thing as getting it right

  Except in life, there you can

  LATE AUGUST

  I am a different person, but I don’t have to tell you how.

  I celebrate difference, and people’s right to delineate their details,

  But I also feel it is right to keep one’s difference to oneself.

  I have passed a hurdle. Yesterday, I passed it.

  Now I am in the country, and I can see

  That time is passing at the pace it is meant to pass.

  I no longer feel anxiety about the summer.

  I love the autumn, and I love to see the leaves beginning

  To turn, already now. I am marching forward

  Toward greener pastures. And I will achieve them,

  Furnished support by such allies as I can count beside,

  As the sun sits in late afternoon, late August sky.

  ISLAND

  When someone looks at the sea,

  Not when they are thinking vindictively

  About fame and why they didn’t get

  Their fair share, how to get back at

  Someone—then, the mind is free,

  Momentarily, the human ability to

  Look and be free. But that’s only

  On the boat. On solid ground,

  Mind grinds to thinking, to be

  Alert, witty, back on terra firma.

  I want to scent water, fresh this

  Time, get these sensations

  Like of an earlier time, or maybe

  A time to come, when we all will

  Have a sense of water, the birds,

  They continue to call through air.

  A LONGING FOR BUGS

  I want to get bitten by bugs.

  There are no more bugs here,

  And my dad says there are no more birds.

  There are still fish in the pond though.

  Isaac caught a big bass earlier this summer

  Before we dropped him off at college.

  I hear crows cawing in the trees.

  Today is the first rainy day in days.

  It was 90 degrees in town the other day.

  That is unheard of this far north.

  But the days have been blissful:

  Calm blue skies, gentle breezes.

  And canoe rides on the pond have been

  Ultimate essences of something that was,

  Is, and shall remain, if we can help it.

  SEPTEMBER POEM

  Instead of throwing it out the window

  I place a tiny crumb into a small wax paper bag and close up the bag

  There are many signs that summer is over

  Including one advertising Commercial Grade Winter Pool Covers

  There’s a shimmer out there that cannot be denied

  And light that falls on tree trunks in the woods

  The blue heron suns himself on the float in afternoon sun

  In the shade, dew still lingers on foliage underfoot

  Sparkles out there afar draw one to where the couple lies

  Manna falls from where, hours earlier, the stars crowded

  NOTHING IS LOST

  Not the keys with the GPS attached that is somehow not functioning

  Not the sunglasses that I was wearing in the morning but not by evening

  I open my bag and smell the country on a shirt I am unfolding

  I have rescued several items from a desk where mice had decided

  The items in the drawer could be eaten and turned into beds

  They must have been living in the drawer this summer

  I looked in that drawer earlier in the summer as I was searching

  For a photograph of a long-ago meeting over poetry with a friend

  I didn’t find it, but I reorganized everything in that drawer

  Now I find the ends of a stack of letters eaten, destroyed

  There are still bits of manna that float from the pine trees

  All day every day lying on my laptop’s keyboard

  A QUIET ZONE

  Entering the park I hear cicadas

  In the distance a low foggy turret

  Talking to people in and outside

  A commonality near the monument

  You see, the monument’s not to some

  Ancient general or governor

  The green pond and ornate fountain

  I try to make sense of the city and our years

  Ancient depths not only theirs but ours as well

  And even they are human

  Couples and coupled bikes chained

  On the heights temporarily this morning

  Pond’s glassy lime green reflection

  A walk on earth and hand to trunk

  TWO DREAMS

  In the first dream I am in a small laundry room with Donald Trump and a woman, and the woman is explaining how she takes care of a small animal, a pet of hers probably. Trump seems fascinated by the story. Eventually, she leaves, and he comes over to me and says “The little animals,” with tears in his eyes. Then he puts his arms around me and hugs me. I feel a little bit nervous and try to wriggle free. In the second dream I am on a veranda and Vivien is somewhere inside, nearby. I am with a large American bald eagle. He has adopted us as his family. He is sitting right in front of me and he seems tired. He is allowing me to hug him and I do this for a long time. He doesn’t move or seem to have any desire to fly away. I look inside to where Vivien is and say we should call him Tecumseh.

  A MARVELOUS SKY

  I don’t need to buy any records but there is a record store

  I don’t want to play chess but there are still chess shops

  I don’t really want to pay for anything right now

  The sky is blue, the air is warm, and youth is the tenor

  Most people are not excited by their lives

  But there’s something in the air that might give them a lift

  The younger they are, the easier it will be

  But there is youth enough for everyone today

  A side street provides protected solitude

  Suddenly music is in my ears again

  Music reaches body brain and heart simultaneously

  The ones one wants to reach are reached by music

  CAFÉ WITH BRYAN FERRY

  If Bryan Ferry were sitting at this café

  He’d be sitting outside, as we are, watching the people pass by

  He’d have ordered a plain croissant and coffee

  And he’d be putting butter and jam on it and admiring

  The freshness of it in his mouth and the soft caress of the warm October air

  The breeze is causing the canopy edge to flutter,

  In turn causing a shadow to enter and retreat

  On the edge of the café table

  Its pulsing is mesmerizing and also calming

  It helps put him in a general trance of midday

  On thi
s quiet back street in a quiet neighborhood

  There’s no telling who may pass by

  Whom he may have the opportunity to meet

  He chats with the delivery man, a young bearded guy with tattoos up his arms

  He compliments him on his parking job, how he got the large truck

  Just onto the curb so that the small street

  Is passable and the sidewalk as well

  The man seems genuinely pleased that

  Someone noticed a detail in his workday

  And then went to the extra effort

  To compliment him on it,

  There’s a tenement on the corner,

  Cornice intact, elaborate terra cotta

  Accents, parallel lines alternating with brick,

  Geometric leaf motifs above the windows

  CAVALLERIA RUSTICANA

  for Gary Lenhart

  My grandfather takes my grandmother by the hand

  And they walk down the aisle

  Not of a church, they didn’t have much use for those

  No, it was the Metropolitan Opera

  Not the gaudy one we have today on Lincoln Plaza

  But one we’ll never know.

  Like much else, the memory of it went with them,

  But that’s as it should be.

  “Just the Intermezzo,” hums the announcer,

  “Herbert von Karajan,” and it feels good

  To be alone here, reading poetry, listening to music

  On the radio, that something called “radio” still exists,

  And the music too, not to give it any particular name.

  “All Is Calm,” the announcer announces;

  Because we had weather in the 50s today,

  He has us listen to Midsummer Vigil,

  But it’s a mistake, it’s too schmaltzy,

  Grandma and Grandpa wouldn’t have liked it.

  I took them to La Traviata once, when they’d

  Already lived in New Jersey for years;

  Afterward, my grandfather told me

  He preferred La Bohème.

  YOUNG IN THE HAMPTONS

 

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