Saturday, January 22, 2011

Fight of the Century - by Klecko

As the son of a drunkard - I had to be patient
Since intentions and whiskey don't mix

On Fridays in April - My father would call me
It was always late in the evening

He'd promise adventures - We'd go to the circus
Everything would be first class

But, the pinball machines - and slurring background
Made me wonder if it would turn out like last year

By the time I was 7 - I couldn't pick him out of a police line up
He left L.A. before I turned 2

He got bored rather easily - And married 5 times
Each wife bore him a daughter

I was the only son - from his first betrothed
We eventually relocated in the Midwest

Then on one day - The date was March 8th
He decided it was time to catch up

A lout in an Impala - Pulled into our driveway
The guy who got out looked like Jackie Gleason

Our homecoming was surreal - when he lifted up his fists
While asking "Boy do you like to scrap?"

I didn't answer the question - so he pulled out 2 tickets
We were going to the fight of the century

My mother was tentitive - But, eventually released her grip
You could see the nail marks on my bicep

Somehow her distrust - would find a reprieve
Ali was attempting to reclaim the crown

I kissed her goodbye - And, went off with this stranger
Who was advised to give me no soda

The bout was in New York - At Madison Square Garden
Remember this predates HBO

So we went to the Met - To watch the closed circut broadcast
It was our cities only satellite venue

Tickets were sparse - Admission was coveted
I ran to be the first in a line

We marched straight to consessions - My father grinned large
"Sir, wouls you please give my son a Coke?"

Then we entered the auditorium - There were 1 million men
And, I was the only boy

The guys with gray hair - The type who wore pin stripes
Greeted me like neighbors from the cabin

"Who do you like kid?" - I answered Muhammad Ali"
To the applause of row 117

But, even in Nirvana - theres always one flaw
Ours sported a plaid coat and sat in the row just behind

He bragged that Joe Fraizer - was 26 and 0
And, 23 of these came via the knockout

The imcumbant from Philly - Wasn't a draft dodger
Like my dads hero who was barred durring his prime

When the man in the plaid coat - harped on this fact
My old man told him to shut the fuck up

For the briefest of moments - I waited for conflict
But, the oafs were both told to pipe down

I sat there in silence - Kinda digging the tension
The show was about to start

The screen was gigantic - Bigger than in the movies
Then along came another Coke

When the lights faded down - The cheers rang out loud
While I nesteled into a cloud of blue cigar smoke

Don Dumphy did commentary - He was the play by play announcer
And, was joined by boxing champion Archie Moore

Burt Lancaster did color - He had never tried announcing
I loved the Birdman from Alcatraz

Leroy Neiman painted the moment - Woody Allen was himself
While Sinatra took photos for LIFE magizine

But, thats how it worked - You did what was needed
If you wanted to witness history first hand

The fight exceeded expectations - It went the full distance
But, Muhammad got knocked down in the final round

The world went silent - And, I wanted to cry
For a hero I didn't know earlier that day

He popped up real quick though - to offer us hope
But, his jaw was swollen grotesquely

After the bell rang - Smoking Joes glove was raised
Ali had suffered his first loss

Besides a small fraction - the crowd seemed so sullen
But, my old man refused to abandon his smile

While everyone filed out - We stayed in our seats
For unknown reasons he didn't want to leave

And, before he stood up - He shared a confession
As if we both possesed identical understanding

"Listen to me kid - One day you're gonna get older
And, I'm guessing you might be upset

You'll probably figure out - I'm a pretty shitty father
But, if it's any consolation...................

I only had 2 tickets to the fight of the century - And, I wanted to take you."

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Ink -- by Kim Ode




When Johnny Cash died
They published memorials,
Ragged columns of ink
Reprising his life.

Kids still pick at his songs
Caressing frets with their fingers
While squinting at chords –
Ball-point dots of his strife.

Ink flows from pens.
Ink flows from needles.
Ink asks if we’re certain
Then winks when we nod.

Monks labored in abbeys
Illuminating the Word.
Shakespeare’s quill dipped and scratched
Soliliquies for the crowd.

Treaties and grocery lists,
Lyrics and lies.
Ink’s fluid nature
Both confirms and denies.

Tattoos are stories
Absorbed by our pores.
Injections of chapters
On biceps and calves.

Epiphanies, tributes,
Drunken stabs at eternity –
Ink walks the line
Lending all a blue beauty.

Silently, surely
The hand-drawn script letters
Deliver a message
As honest as dogs.

Ink flows from pens.
Ink flows from needles.
Ink asks if we’re certain
Then winks when we nod.

Monday, January 10, 2011

Polish Mystic Saint of Bread and Dogs by Tracie Morrell

Polish Mystic Saint of Bread and Dogs

Her last taste of broken
bread was in the Pradnik Sanatorium
Chapel.  That day was long
before they called her Saint. As Sister Mary Faustina
of the Blessed Sacrament coughed, the bread
speckled red with traces of consumption.

The day of her arrival was when the dogs
began to congregate.  In the chapel, kitchen
hands laid the bread of Christ, this time made
with gouda and stout, on a make-shift alter made of saw
horses and a broken mahogany door covered
with woven gold threads.  First, there was
an Owczarek Podhalanski, it was a very dirty
animal, but it could translate prayers.  Shortly, more
came, sometimes, by the dozens, and all different
breeds.  The Hounds of Hell came much later,
after there were already hundreds
there to hear a dying nun’s visions.

It was the arrival of beasts that told the men,
who owned the word, that she had been
touched.  Those men did not know that truth
never has the same meaning, especially when told
with lies.  But the day of speckled
bread, the dogs knelt before a Nun
carried to alter by Christ himself, as all the men
watched in horror.
 
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