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Sunday, December 8, 2013

RECEIVED IN GRACELAND

Tonight's guest writer is my son, Jeff, who is a good writer and who is getting better at calling.  This is something I love that he wrote in 1999.


Received in Graceland
From the Wild West
8 October 1999
by Jeff Wenger

What to do with that nearly-free airline trip when you just have 24 hours and you’ve missed the flight to New Orleans? Go a little further up the Mississippi River to Memphis, Tennessee and the home of the King of Rock and Roll.
A pilgrimage then to Graceland, the home of Elvis Presley, to see what it says of America.

MEMPHIS – As the line between ironic participation and my real life continues to blur, I found that Graceland wasn’t as bad as I thought it would be and it wasn’t as good as I thought it would be. It was just alright, or, as Elvis himself was wont to say, it’s alright, Mama.
There were, of course, certain expectations going in. For example, I expected there to be many large women in spandex sobbing at his graveside. There were just a couple.
Actually, the crowd was not only a pretty respectable lot, but diverse – people drawn from NBC’s demographic and that of CBS (by which I mean the young and old); people in T-shirts and people in business attire; black people and white people. In addition to the many Americans, there were Chinese and Japanese, German lads and a Czech couple, and two white South Africans who were indeed choked up by the end of the tour.
The young Elvis purchased Graceland in the late 50s, when he was just hitting it big. It had belonged to a doctor and was named after the doctor’s wife, Grace. Elvis liked the name and kept it. A tall fence and wrought iron gate separated the hills and trees and manse of Graceland from the real world outside.
Yet, as the homes of the rich-and-famous go, Graceland disappoints. The home itself isn’t that large. It’s a big house, to be sure, but it’s not a palatial as you might expect the domicile of the King of Rock and Roll to be. Ernest Hemingway’s place in Key West, Florida, by contrast, is bigger and more stately.
Graceland, is like, well, a doctor’s big house. It has a basement and two stories. I mean, come on – I have friends with houses that big.
The lot upon which Graceland rests is big, until you remember that Elvis and his pals used to race golf carts around while brandishing firearms and hey, its not that big.

But it is through the front doors where Graceland really makes an impression. The word “timeless” doesn’t come to mind when confronted with the King’s thick green shag carpet and poly-vinyl curtains so stiff as to be formed apparently from Tupperware. Indeed, not timeless at all, but very specifically at a moment in time – I’m guessing, March 28, 1973, around 3:30 in the afternoon.
Elvis’ décor had a shelf-life shorter than potato salad at a picnic. Graceland is one part Playboy mansion, one part suburban dream home, and one part trailer.
The shag carpet, the dark wood paneling, the mirrors, the esoteric curves in the design of practically everything, the veneer covered stereo hi-fis, the glass fruit – the home of the King of Rock and Roll looks like it was furnished from a thrift store.
Fondue sets and bell bottoms (which seemed rightly consigned to the dustbin of history until just a few years ago) have their roots in the late 60s and early 70s when the counter-culture went to the suburbs and became the culture.
Shag carpet on the walls of the “rec room” was too cool for school back then, and Elvis died before he could come to his senses and hire an interior decorator.
This then may be the key to understanding Elvis and America: Elvis lived like everybody else – only more so.
In other words, if you were to give ridiculous wealth and celebrity to most of my relatives, or most of my wife’s relatives, or most of your relatives, they would piddle it away on fast cars and whiskey and guns and drugs and women. They’d put in a swimming pool and a pool table. They’d give jobs to every wheedling grade-school buddy and every lazy relative, paying them many times what they were worth. And they’d put shag carpet on the walls if they darn well wanted to.
This may be the strongest argument yet for communism.

Graceland is a snapshot of America at its apex. No nation on earth has ever been as wealthy as was the United States from 1946-1973. That prestige and affluence was largely spent redoing kitchens in orange and avocado.
Unnervingly, the 70s wash over the Graceland visitor. It is historically significant, but also personal. Because the cheesy furnishings are so accessible and familiar, Graceland is a snapshot of my childhood only without my old man passed out in the La-Z-Boy and mom’s unfortunate perms.
There is more to Elvis and America than wretched excess, however. There is an appeal that is at once universal and undeniable. I don’t know anyone who doesn’t like at least one Elvis song. This appeal helped to build bridges.
When Elvis was first being played on the radio, white people thought he was black. Black people knew that he was white, but thought here was a white guy who gets it. Today, Elvis songs are standard fare on the radio and karaoke discs from Manila to Montpelier. It turns out that, not only did Elvis get it, but everybody gets Elvis.
If we accept that Kid Rock is today’s bridge between black and white, we are in worse trouble than previously supposed.
Elvis was the whole package. He was sexy, but cute, benign and sensitive. (During a press conference following his discharge from the Army, he was clever in his appeal to both bobby-soxers and their mothers. Only now, 40 years later, has Ricky Martin – who can’t hold a candle to Elvis – duplicated anything like it.) Elvis was rebellious, but also blue collar and establishmentarian. (He was, after all, photographed with Nixon.) He played State Fairs and Vegas; he was a little bit country, a little bit rock and roll.
And in the end, he was beloved by millions, but lonely and alone. He was the King of Rock and Roll, but ignominiously died of a heart attack on the crapper. Like anybody could.

Saturday, November 30, 2013

THANKSGIVING 1953

When I was coming up on the family farm in Bindweed County,
Indiana, Thanksgiving would be an occasion for hunting.  My father, and on occasion, with my uncles would go out into the fields and see if they could get a rabbit.  Usually they did.
This was before deer and other larger game had worked their way that far south.  On other occasions my father would pick up his ancient 12 gauge shotgun and announce that he was going to go out and 'scare up a rabbit'.  He almost
always did.  The rabbits took shelter and foraged in the rows of corn that had been picked in the previous fall.  The old man could pick off a running rabbit with a .22 but the shotgun meant business.  A rabbit wouldn't run until you were right on top of him.  Then the rabbit would leap into the air and run at amazing speed, twisting and bobbing in and out of the rows of tangled cornstalks.  Their mottled gray sides and white tails blending in with the skiff of snow that is always present in Norhern Indiana winters.

Blam!  And it was all over.  The rabbit would tumble head over feet.  The old man would walk to the house carrying one or two rabbits in his game pouch.  He would nail their feet to the side of the woodshed and skin and gut them.  

My mother whose limited culinary skills were hampered by a primitive wood fueled cook stove would cut them up, roll them in flour and fry them in lard.  Sometimes the blast from the shotgun would shatter the bones of the game and there would be sharp pieces of bone sticking up.  At times I would have to pick pieces of shot out of the meat.  Amazingly, there are members of my family who have lived up into their 90's.

We never had turkey.  Our Thanksgiving dinner was fried rabbit.  Also it was our dinner almost every night for a couple of winters.
It wasn't that we went hungry but neither did we feast.  We were grateful for what we had and our carbon footprint was small.  But the thought of fried rabbit (or any other kind) to this day is repugnant to me.


I am thankful today for the Federal school hot lunch program.




Thursday, November 28, 2013

GOING OUT WITH A BANG

It was in the springtime of my 67th year.  April 29th, it was.  I was homeward bound and walked up to the bus stop at 15th and Stout in Denver just in time to see the #44 bus pull away.  
I now have a half hour wait for the next busThe stop at 15th & Stout is a major bus stop in Denver.  A little sketchy but not scarey although it seems to be well located for a drive by shooting.   So I plop down on the cleanest bench to wait.  Being a friendly sort I turned to the young woman beside me and made some brilliant comment about how great it was to be alive at midday on a perfect spring day.  I did not suspect that it was to become much greater.
We chatted.   She was dressed casual cotton, Target, T J Maxx.  She said her name was Toni and that she was waiting on the #38 bus.  She was a woman of color---the color of coffee with one cream.   She said she was 26 and I didn't think she was lying too much.  As we talked the #38 pulled up, loaded, and pulled away without her.  I thought it was strange but I was enjoying her company.  Shortly thereafter my bus, the #44, pulled up.  As I got up and boarded she followed me into the bus and sat next to me.  I am thinking that I don't know where this is going but I am going to go with it.
It went into my living room and onto my sofa.  And then to the floor. 

I will die a happy man. 



THE SHADOW SAYS: THIS IS INDEED A DAY TO GIVE THANKS


Tuesday, November 19, 2013


I have slept in a suite in the Royal Hawaiian Hotel in Honolulu and I have slept in a flophouse on Larimer Street in Denver.
The Royal Hawaiian smells better.

Saturday, October 19, 2013

ANOTHER #%$*#&!!! FESTIVAL

Saturday.  October 19, 2013, an absolutely beautiful day, 12 days before the High Holy Day of  Halloween.

This is the last day I have this week to complete three projects which I am multitasking on.  I also have a couple of errands to run.  The errands easily win out.  A quick shower and I'm off.  I miss my bus by one minute and wait, breathing automobile exhaust for a half hour before the next one.  I am in downtown Denver by noon.  Plenty of time to do what I need to do and get back in time to finish my work. 

I make my purchases and have lunch at my favorite place, Leelas.
Leela European Cafe.    
There is still time to catch the free mall shuttle down to the Office Depot, pick up some copy paper and ride the shuttle back to the bus station and home.  I limp over to the mall and wait for the shuttle.  It is nowhere in sight which is not unusual because sometimes it runs sporadically.  

All day I have noticed an increasing number of younger people on the mall, all walking toward the lower end.  Everyone seemed to be made up in costume with a lot of painted scars and fake blood.  As usual I am totally obtuse to my surroundings. If they wanted to look like a fool t was OK with me.

I limp to the center island to look for the wayward shuttle.  No sign of it so I sit on the edge of an empty planter to wait, propping my cane against a nearby tree.  Within 5 minutes a polite woman in a yellow vest appears.  It was almost, almost as though she has been directed to me, perhaps by a small two way radio, after I am spotted through an overhead camera sitting on a flowerpot.  She smiles at me.  I look at her and say "What do you want?  She indicates to me that it displeases the Powers That Be for me to sit on an empty flowerpot.  Suddenly I am imbibed by the spirit of Rosa Parks.  I play the poor, sick old man card.  I tell Shelia that I don't care what she or the city wanted, my foot hurts, I am tired and I am simply not going to get up from my big flowerpot.   I plan to sit there until my shuttle comes.  Shelia keeps her cool.  She appears to  agree with me.   She tells me the shuttle stopped running.   I react with confusion.  The shuttle is a given.  "What do you mean?"  The shuttle has stopped for the festival.  "What festival?"  The Zombie Fest.  Why am I not surprised?  This explains why all of these people are walking around looking like idiots but it does not explain how I am going to get off the mall.  I have already done Zombie.  I did it for the 26 years I drank alcoholically.  I have also seen enough blood and brains and gore to last a lifetime.  

So the city stops commerce so they can put on a show.  I am thinking that if they want a show, I can drop my pants and bend over.  But I don't say this.  It dawns on me that I am probably already close to being put on the lunatic fringe list.

I take my leave, faintly hearing a voiceover of Woodie Guthrie Singing Alice's Restaurant.  I start walking toward the upper end of the mall and after a block realize I am no longer capable of walking much further than that.  I double back, take a slow train out of town to a park and ride.  After a half hour wait I catch a bus home.  It takes me three and a half hours to run a small errand and have lunch.

Imagine A Great City / FREDDY PEÑA






Sunday, October 6, 2013

UNWITTING MARTYR

IN MEMORY OF

MATTHEW SHEPARD

DECEMBER 1,1976 ~ OCTOBER 12, 1998


MURDER IS MURDER

IF BLUEBIRDS FLY THEN WHY, OH WHY, CAN'T I

FOR ALL THE YOUNG MEN
Here’s to all the young men –
Who have thrown a noose over a beam in the haymow.
Those who have sat by the water with the shotgun, contemplating who to shoot first.
Those who would put the muzzle in their own mouth.
Those who have driven unfamiliar Nebraska country roads too fast at night.
Who drown their talents in bad whiskey to seek oblivion.
Who marry for validation.
Those who sob into their pillow at night because it is not getting better.
And they can’t express their angst to anyone.  No one.  Because no one can handle 
such unspeakable things.
For the sensitive ones without the hardcock assurance that the jocks take as their birthright.
For those in the hinterlands who would run but have no idea of where to find asylum.
For those who already know the policeman is not their friend.
Those who have endured the flaming words of flaming hate.
Support the ones who would spring the trap and drop into a permanent oblivion.
Persevere.  Endure.  Your day will come.  Don’t give up.  Keep 
the faith.  You are the strong ones tempered in the flaming words of hate.
                                                                             Daniel Wenger     
                                                                             For me.
                                                                             January 20, 2013
(C) copyright
Daniel Wenger 2013                                               Reblogged from Jan. 20, 2013

Friday, September 27, 2013

CHILDREN OF GOD





YEA, VERILY, THOU SHALT NOT SHOW ME
  
INCONSIDERATION,

FOR I, LIKE THEE AND ALL OTHERS,

AM A CHILD OF GOD.....

..... AND CHILDREN OF GOD

ARE NOT TO BE FUCKED WITH! 

Thursday, September 19, 2013

DIABLO

Yesterday I ran into Luis.  I was standing next to him at a store counter and I recognized his voice.  Luis is Puerto Rican, New York City.  We go back a long way. 

I remember the last time I ran into him  on the street.  It has been several years, probably more than I realize.  It was about 10:30 that night and we started walking on East Colfax in Denver just North of the Capitol Building.  We were casually strolling on the sidewalk talking  about "back in the day".  It was dark.  Luis was carrying a badminton case.

Then I saw this mammoth figure looming and rapidly approaching us from an alley.  It had shaggy hair which added to it's size.  Oh, Jesus, it's Sasquatch!  My only thought was "Omygod, we're dead."  I don't remember saying a word to Luis nor did Luis utter a sound.

This obviously insane man, who I later learned was aptly named Diablo, reached us and centered himself in front of us.  As the man approached Luis had been fumbling with something.  He opened the badminton case and pulled out a stiletto.  Holding it palm up he pointed it about three inches below Diablo's belly button and said in a flat voice, "Look, youse has got your choice.  Youse can keep on going or youse can get stuck.  Which is it?"

Diablo apparently wasn't as crazy as he looked.  I never saw anyone that big disappear  so fast.

Twice more in my life after this was I doomed to cross paths with Diablo.






 

Saturday, September 7, 2013

IF by Rudyard Kipling

If you can keep your head when all about you   
    Are losing theirs and blaming it on you,   
If you can trust yourself when all men doubt you,
    But make allowance for their doubting too;   
If you can wait and not be tired by waiting,
    Or being lied about, don’t deal in lies,
Or being hated, don’t give way to hating,
    And yet don’t look too good, nor talk too wise:

If you can dream—and not make dreams your master;   
    If you can think—and not make thoughts your aim;   
If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster
    And treat those two impostors just the same;   
If you can bear to hear the truth you’ve spoken
    Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools,
Or watch the things you gave your life to, broken,
    And stoop and build ’em up with worn-out tools:

If you can make one heap of all your winnings
    And risk it on one turn of pitch-and-toss,
And lose, and start again at your beginnings
    And never breathe a word about your loss;
If you can force your heart and nerve and sinew
    To serve your turn long after they are gone,   
And so hold on when there is nothing in you
    Except the Will which says to them: ‘Hold on!’

If you can talk with crowds and keep your virtue,   
    Or walk with Kings—nor lose the common touch,
If neither foes nor loving friends can hurt you,
    If all men count with you, but none too much;
If you can fill the unforgiving minute
    With sixty seconds’ worth of distance run,   
Yours is the Earth and everything that’s in it,   
    And—which is more—you’ll be a Man, my son!
Share this text ...?

Friday, August 30, 2013

BREAD AND CIRCUSES

I love this city.  I loved it when it was a cow town.



Mountain City uses untold resources in manpower and money, subterfuge and chicanery and brute force to quell a peaceful protest of unarmed citizens exercising their First amendment rights (the right to peaceably assemble ) having first to obtain permits from the people they are protesting against.   Employing among other means, harassment in the form of petty chickenshit regulations like after the fact ordinances such as closing public parks, public camping and sleeping on the sidewalk to name a few.  All this in the sight of the gleaming new courthouse where gold letters high on the front proclaim LIBERTY AND JUSTICE FOR ALL.  

And now, even as I write, barricades are being put in place, and scores of identical white tents spread outward like a malignancy. Mountain City is  blocking the major streets and  intersections of a major metropolitan city in the western United States for a street fair!  I have not seen the permit and know better than to ask for it.  Nor do I know who has the tent concession.   It is the Labor Day weekend kiddies and it is time for Mountain City’s annual Tin Can Festival, coming hard on the heels of the annual Rat Festival, the annual Flea and Tick festival.  Whose labor are we celebrating this Labor Day?  The workers in America  or the workers in The Peoples Republic of China.

And as long as Americans have Monday Night Football and A 6 pack of Blue Ribbon, does anybody really give a shit?

The beautiful thing about my country is that I am free to write this.  So far!

 

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

IT'S BEEN A LONG HARD SUMMER



Sometimes you need to remind yourself that you were the one who carried you through the heartache. You are the one who sits with the cold body on the shower floor, and picks it up. You are the one who feeds it, who clothes it, who tucks it into bed, and you should be proud of that. Having the strength to take care of yourself when everyone around you is trying to bleed you dry, that is the strongest thing in the universe.

Reblogged from: Love_Live_ Music

Saturday, August 17, 2013

THE TASADAY: REAL PEOPLE OR IMPOSTERS?



                                

 (This is a reprint of an article written by my son, Jeff and published by the  Asian Reporter for whom he was writing a column a few years ago.  He is my firstborn and I am very proud of him (Even if he doesn't call often enough).
                                         
                                       
                                                 At times exploited and at times protected.

During the time in which the Tasaday were returning to relative isolation, huge changes were taking place in Filipino society.  There was social pressure on the Marcos dictatorship to change.  In 1983 Ninoy Aquino was killed and around that time Manuel Elizalde disappeared  from the scene.  Ever a poor nation, the Philippines worked more than ever  to develop its natural resources in timber and minerals.  In 1986, Marcos was deposed and the government of Corizon Aquino began.



It was also in 1986 that a Swiss journalist claimed publicly that the entire Tasaday story  was a fraud.  Journalist John Nance, living again in America, began second guessing himself.  He recognized that he was no anthropologist but he’d been among people who were and who believed that the Tasaday were just as they seemed.  He was willing to see himself as fooled, but found it fantastic that scientists of  the stature of Douglas Yen and Robert Fox along with other anthropologists and linguists, NBC news and National Geographic were all likewise fooled.
Mr. Nance returned to the Philippines and tried to run down the truth about the Tasaday and the persistent rumors of hoax that surrounded them.  Before it was all done, Mr. Nance would appear before a congressional  hearing there concerning the issue.
He went again with an NBC news crew to Mindanao to the Tasaday preserve and was able to spend four days with the Tasaday before gunmen arrived and persuaded them to leave.  This and more is explained In his new book Where the Eye Sees too Far, currently submitted to the editing process.
The gentle Tasaday, upon his return, were hurt and irritated by his long absence, like your mom if you don’t write.  Their 45,000 acre preserve, claimed by loggers, Muslims, the Christian Right and the Catholic mission remained intact, protected by Federal decree.  However, satellite photographs showed that logging tracks move in all directions up to the edge of the forest.  The Tasaday preserve had become the linchpin to the entire Mindanao watershed.
Modern war was waged around them as members of nearby tribes were enlisted by the Federal government to fight Muslim and  Communist insurgencies.  Certain tribes throughout the archipelago became critical of the deal which bestowed the very few Tasaday with vast amounts of land.  As is the local custom, they wanted more for themselves, or at least less for the Tasaday.  Everyone wanted a piece of the action.
            The Tasaday themselves had undergone profound social changes.  They had taken wives from nearby (and more advanced) tribes.  Women who had known the opulence of nipa huts had a hard time settling for caves.  Likewise, to satisfy relatively more cosmopolitan tastes, the Tasaday took up agriculture to grow that which they could not forage.
In due course, the ABC television magazine 20 / 20 piled on, fueling the hoax story.  According to Mr. Nance, the Tasaday were coerced into saying untruths and wearing certain clothing out of a desire to please the outsiders and because the outsiders gave them material things they wanted.
In 1988 the reverend Cory Aquino authenticated the Tasaday by saying that they had nearly been exploited by “unscrupulous businessmen and scholars”.  The other side claims it was part of a deal that had been cut.
 Deal cutting isn’t high art in the Philippines; it’s bread and water, the stuff of subsidence.  Are the Tasaday authentic?  I would guess so, but I’m from Indiana and, believe me, I have no trouble at all believing in backward tribes. The Tasaday seem to have displayed a childlike willingness to please (and to receive goodies) and were, like children, at times exploited and at times protected.
Looking from their home among the dense forest, the Tasaday  looked into a clearing and called it “the place where the eye sees too far”.  Geographically and spatially, this world can indeed see quite far, yet the limits of its greater vision are often limited.  The Tasaday have their  land and their name and all of these new troubles.  Their way of life as it was discovered by the outside world, is gone.  Their life has changed irrevocably and entirely.
            The same can be said about fraternity brothers who return to the class reunion with their wives and kids.  The same could be said about a thousand Midwestern towns that have either dried up or become suburbs.  Rather than rail against the change, it seems to me wiser to be happy to have caught a glimpse of the gentle Tasaday at all.  The problems assailing the Tasaday-----------greed, betrayal, ignorance---------are problems assailing the Philippines.  Ultimately, the problems of the Philippine islands are only the problems of human life on earth.
 

ON REGRETS



Chronic remorse, as all the moralists are agreed, is a most undesirable sentiment.  If you have behaved badly, repent, make what amends you can and address yourself to the task of behaving better next time.  On no account brood over your wrongdoing.  Rolling in the muck is not the best way of getting clean.
                                                Brave New World / Aldous Huxley

ON BROTHERHOOD




John-----I never did know his last name----is a drag queen.  Flamboyant to a fault, he is at times hard to take.    The disease has pulled him down to the point that he is all black skin stretched tight over bones.  This time his hair is clipped tight against his skull. Still there is some gray showing.   He does not wear a shirt today.  He wears a huge multicolored earring.  He is defiant.  His voice is strong and it carries.  Oy, does it carry.    His mind wanders.  I think perhaps it always has.
          
 People stare at him as they pass on the street while I stand talking to him..  Almost all of them do.  Sometimes I meet their stares.  They quickly look away.  John will not acknowledge that he is glad for the short visit.  Yet I know he is.

I always talk to him.  I have known him for years.  He is my friend.  We all need all the friends we can get.  He has always treated me well.  He has never said or done anything mean or spiteful, unlike some of the people I have known.

“I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.”

Monday, July 8, 2013

THE CAT FIGHT

On a balmy Saturday evening the summer before I turned fourteen I was hanging out on the main part of downtown Jimson City which  consisted of five blocks.  It was about 9:00 at night and there was a sizable crowd, mostly farmers, in to buy groceries and get hog feed and such like, with a smattering of residents of the town.  (first time I ever said 'and such like')
I was standing on the sidewalk at the alley with some other idlers when two women approached from opposite directions.  They met at the mouth of the alley, placed their purses on the ground and proceeded to go at each other.  Without a word they pulled each others hair and scratched each other.  They fell to the ground and rolled around on the dusty bricks, hitting and tearing each others clothing.  All this in almost slow motion like an intense silent movie.
By this time a large crowd of onlookers had gathered.
As suddenly as it had started and without a word being spoken they broke it off, dusted themselves off, picked up their purses and walked away in opposite directions.
And I could hardly wait until I could see this again, confident in my youth that this went on frequently and possibly even for my entertainment.  In almost fifty years I have never seen anything to approach it.

I sent this story to a girl I graduated high school with.  She wrote back;  "I remember my dad talking about the fight on Main Street.  He said the women fought like cats and dogs!  He said the people who saw it said they would rather fight a man than those women."


THE SHADOW SAYS:  WHO SAID SMALL TOWNS ARE BORING?





Friday, July 5, 2013

METROPOLIS REVISITED




everywhere

in the city

it cost a pretty penny

to maintain

a standard that only a few aeons before

had seemed attainable



acquire squatters rights

in a decent slum

and the first thing you know

here come the homosexuals

with the quick dart and thrust

of their paintbrushes

obsessive butterfly shades

well  yes  it does look better

but.............



and then the trendy

nouveau riche

bourgeoisie

flatulent parvenu

who discard a twentydollar cigar

into the gutter

after three puffs

because they don't know how to smoke it

inflating rents

driving

the price

of a piece of property

                                                up

past all grasp of reason

of the universal man



real estate developers

quick to exploit

as a buzzard hawk

senses carrion

have vanity pieces

written into the local rag

which would sell

its grandmother

for the price of a barrel of ink



the ghost of herr goebbels must chuckle

when the city "relocates"

the homeless interlopers

as god bows to Mammon

they close the place at sundown anyhow

and padlock the tearoom doors



but the paddyrollers will shoot you

if you don't watch out

and you will not pass go

and they will not go to jail

and they can collect $200

"administrative leave"

and blood will out



while our future

is pissed out upon the street

$100 REWARD

LIONEL

RUNAWAY

SCARS ON BACK AND ARMS

AND PSYCHE

METAL RING IN NOSE

LAST SEEN WEARING

BLACK LEATHER JACKET

WITH PENTAGRAM ON BACK

AND AN ATTITUDE



and the congregants

hire their preachers

to wax so highly

in their chapels

of jesus the redeemer

not a social

activist among them



while the people

cheeer the garish colors

of the gladiators

in their temples

along the platte



and they will all go to heaven

in coral gables

and I will search for new slums

each more scarce than the last



i think of the land

i so swiftly left as a youth

and of the arbor with the sweet purple grapes



the gospel according to saint john

chapter eleven

verse thirty five


                                                            daniel wenger
                                                   2/97

 Re posted from Jan. 12, 2012