The Way of the Fool

Far from the madding crowd, a whisper called to me, its soft tiny tenterhooks tugging—this way, this way. I followed its invisible trail.
Where would it lead? To whom did the whisper, the voice belong?
I walked until I saw him, expectantly poised at the edge of a craggy cliff, his left heel arching off the ground, essentially qualifying that foot as a dancer’s foot, lithe, nimble, prepped for sudden vigorous motion.
It was The Fool. Not a Fool, THE Fool. Satchel tied haphazardly to the wooden stick, a bindle I believe it was called, which was resting slantwise against the length of his arm, angled toward the sun. His little white dog, yipping and hopping, ready, it seemed, to jump over the moon once she arrived. That was the sort of dog The Fool had, the breed was irrelevant, it was a moon-jumping dog, one that reared its hind legs and jubilantly pissed on stars.
If the whisper had come from The Fool, now, nothing, silence. He didn’t even turn to look at me. The Fool, I suspected, was never one to look back, not even a little ways just to see who was standing behind him.
Fool, I screamed aloud in my head, why did you summon me?
The Fool stared straight ahead, his gaze anchored to a tomorrowless unknown. Rooted in the present while looking out toward the future, The Fool straddled paradox with ease and grace, a numberless mystic with a zest for airing and trespass, for lost worlds. I envied The Fool.
I watched his hand, the free one, slide along his waist, fingers wriggling, a signal for me to move forward. Hesitantly, I took a few steps, and immediately my legs were seized by trembling. That, and knots began boiling in my stomach.
I looked at The Fool, standing poised, serene, regal, despite his intimate proximity to the cliff’s edge, which made me feel even more ashamed of my nails that were digging like troubled refugees into my palms.
The little dog, yelped shriller and louder and hopped higher, and now looked like it was grinning.
I had a powerful urge to kick the taunting maniacal dog off the cliff, but held myself in check. After all, it wasn’t the dog’s fault that I was terrified.
Don’t worry, came The Fool’s voice crisp and steady, the fear is natural.
It is? my voice cracked.
Yes. It is natural and it is also nothing. Ignore it.
I wanted to, but the trembling in my legs and boiled knots in my stomach were not so easily dismissed.
Somehow, almost involuntarily, I managed to move forward a few more steps.
You are now at the cliff’s edge, with me, exactly where you are meant to be.
This is where I am meant to be?
Yes, otherwise you wouldn’t be here.
But you called me!
Did I?
Yes, you . . . didn’t you?
Though I couldn’t see The Fool’s smile, as he still hadn’t turned to look at me, I could feel the magnificent force of its light spelling wonder across his face. It was as if the glowing phenomena of his smile had been reflected into the wind, which had blown its brightness back to me as a fortuitous omen and generous ally.
Are you ready? The Fool asked.
For what?
The Fool, without looking back, reached out his hand to mine, and found it in one swift, rhythmically assured motion. The little dog had settled down, a fuzzball Buddha sidled against The Fool’s stockinged foot.
To make the leap.
To make the leap? You mean—
To take the plunge, yes.
Off the cliff?
It’s the only way.
The only way for what? Can’t I just turn around and go back.?
There is no more back.
What do you mean there’s no more….
I turned around and saw that The Fool was right. There was nothing behind him. Just a whole lot of groundless nothing, as if the reality from which I had come, and its accompanying geography, had been erased.
You have two options now, The Fool said, grinning much in the same way his dog had been earlier. You can, A) Stay exactly where you are, for as long as you’d like. There is no law against that. Or, B) You can jump. What will it be?
Can I … Can I think about it?
Thinking is the absolute worst thing you can do at this moment, and will be of no help to you whatsoever. None.
I was nearly parallel with The Fool and could see his face in profile. His cheek seemed to radiate goldenness, as if a slab of pure etheric light had been planted there.
The little dog had shifted from its position of repose to one of panting expectation, his blubbery tongue dangling in vibrato from the side of his mouth.
Are you ready, The Fool asked again.
No, I said.
Good. Let’s go.
The Fool released my hand and lurched forward, his chest a flock of fugitive birds leading the way, as his feet left their stony perch, and he became a full-bodied prayer, impossible in its flight and arc.
The little dog went next, a four-pawed broad-jump off the cliff’s edge.
I stood there, a trembling witness, and suddenly recalling that Now or Never was the ultimate paradox, I took the plunge, and in falling The Fool and I merged, like a rush of liquid molecules, as we moved, directionless, toward a liminal unknown.
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Visitation Rites

Above all else,
(she told me,
her smile a glowing sickle)
dignity and grace,
for each and every soul
on this planet,
no one above,
no one below,
and everything
I mean everything
you truly need to know
you’ve already learned
a thousand times over
in the lighted prehistory
of your starstuff origins,
I’m talking slowbaked pat-a-cake
wisdom
in the throes
of eternal kindergarten,
so remember, kid,
when get things complicated,
muddy, kinked, or strained,
remember that
dignity and grace,
above all else,
are Love’s sacrosanct
twin flames,
and their union
the divine proof
and memory
of who we are
beyond mortal register
and forgotten claims.
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Devotional

Remember me
to the
ease of light,
its pause
and passage,
we
are not long
for this earth,
which swallows
us,
and our lovetagged
bones,
as a matter
of natural course
and radical recomposition,
all the gifts,
and hopes unwound
like a carnival of kites
in a ghostfaced sky,
must be returned,
it is part of the deal,
the equalizer
that rivets
the wonder wheel
to its own cyclical surge
and motion,
and I, bearing the privilege
of passenger,
for what amounts
to a split second
between
God’s inhale
and exhale,
cannot help
but air
my epitaph,
with the utmost
gratitude
and reverence,
for every dream
that held me bated
and green,
for every sweetness
and sorrow
that carved my interior
into a well-lighted cathedral,
where basking became
my truest art
and devotion.

 

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Processing Claims

Note
to metamorphosizing self:
every cocoon quivers
and trembles,
every process of change
brings with it
a new set of keys,
and claims,
every slumber
implicitly contains
the charge of wakefulness,
and every grief
minnows
within a sea
of holy fire.
P.S.
Upon re-emergence,
feed your old skin
to the earth.
It consecrates myth,
and helps balance the food chain.
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The Soldier

Excerpt from All the Last Furies.
He swept me into the storage room of the inn. Baited me with the promise of candy. Something so simple, and yet candy might be the ultimate siren for children, its lure a golden hook.
The storage room smelled of musty cedar, and was crowded with wooden crates.
He, the soldier, dressed in his gray-green uniform went to the door and bolted it by sliding a wooden cross-bar into place. This he did casually, almost gently, as if it were naturally ordered logic to lock us in. It’s something, quite something, how the closing of a door can change everything. The noisy patrons of the inn, their bawdy revelry, immediately became muted and distant.  A closed door, and darkness, really does slide you from one reality to another.
 The soldier reasoned aloud—I don’t want any of the other children to wander in expecting candy. I only have enough for you.
His voice matched the creaking of old friendly wood, the worn smooth gliders of a rocking chair. It lulled me into a stupor, yet I managed to remember why I was alone with him in the cramped darkness—Where’s the candy?
It’s funny, I hadn’t even wondered what kind of candy it was, just the fact that I was being offered candy was enough. Though I did wonder about its color. Color always meant the world to me.
The soldier didn’t seem to hear what I asked, or ignored it, as he drew nearer to me and began stroking my hair.
You are such a fine and lovely creature, do you know that?
I had never been called a creature before and my stomach felt uneasy. Candy seemed like a fast-fading-illusion, part of another reality that I had conjured. I had wandered into the wrong dream.
The soldier continued stroking my hair, gently ever so gently, and said—You really are a perfect little angel. Can I kiss your perfect little angel mouth?
The soldier lowered to one knee and leaned in. His coarsely-whiskered face was now blotted and out of focus, a moon that had transgressed its orbit. His breath smelled of onions and anise.
Just a little kiss okay, and I felt his piscine lips forced onto mine. My small mouth felt in danger of being swallowed whole.
After he removed his lips from mine, I dumbly asked—Where’s the candy?
It’s okay, he says, leveling his gaze with mine, trying to project reassurance from his eyes into mine, just be quiet and let’s have this time together. It seems as if he hasn’t moved at all, yet I can now feel his fingers like tweezers pinching me down there, and he begins unbuttoning my trousers. I lose track of time, myself, where I am.
I’d say the soldier was tall, but compared to what? I was seven and he was a lot older than seven and so it would be more accurate to say he was a giant.
Beyond the slope of his massive shoulder, I see a spider crawling along the edge of a crate. It stops, keeps perfectly still. Was it watching us? Watching the scene unfold through its spider-eyes?
The soldier forces me down.
To become a master of silence will take time, but I know that I have begun.
……………………………..
That was an adaptation excerpted from the play, Polestar, written by Viola Manzetti, about the life, myth and legend of the 19th century poet, Arturo Arcturus. The text was read by Evie Chase, the actress who plays the role of Arturo. Viola and Evie will join us live, in the studio, tomorrow to talk about the play, which will be launching on a national tour at the end of the month.
………………………………..
Arturo turns off the radio. They, people out there, god knows when, are talking about him, he is being performed on a stage for an audience by a woman named Evie Chase. The world is creating him while he lies here in a hospital bed, decaying, besieged by things he didn’t understand, voices floating in from this inexplicable marvel of a thing called radio, and somewhere out there, far far away from this remote island of a hospital room, there were people talking about him, writing about him, staging him, there was a play titled Polestar inspired by the life, myth and legend of 19th century poet, Arturo Arcturus. He was the 19th century poet Arturo Arcturus, that was him.
Why couldn’t he remember having been raped by a soldier in the storage room of an inn? Was that an invention rooted in artistic license, a fabrication that had snaked its way into the narrative of this Viola Manzetti’s play? Or, perhaps, he was blocking out this trauma which had occurred when he was seven? Perhaps it was a memory entombed in a cinder vault, one of those catatonic untouchables?
Even though the program had said that Viola and Evie would be in the studio tomorrow, that didn’t mean that his tomorrow would match theirs. There was no consistency upon which he could depend, or set his dial, when it came the radio and its offerings. Maybe he’d stumble upon the interview with Evie and Viola, maybe not. In this respect, Arturo’s relationship with the radio was one of fragmentation and cliffhangers. He longed to hear what Viola Manzetti had to say about him, why she wrote him, the play, same as he wanted to hear from Evie Chase, and what it had been like playing him. Why had they chosen a woman? What did this Evie Chase look like? That being said, what did he, Arturo, look like? He could almost see himself reflected within his memory-reels, but the images were vague, insubstantial, irresolute.What did he look like now? There were no mirrors in the room, no reflective surfaces. When his stump throbbed, or he felt pain elsewhere, he became aware of his body, this derelict residence in which he was a rooted clawing tenant, but what about his face? He hadn’t given thought to that in a long time. He felt that it was reasonable, or within the realm of possibility, that he might look in the mirror and see no face at all reflected back to him. Or perhaps it would show a featureless face, an embryonic mold. Yet the deliberate inquiry conducted by his fingers, registered a nose, mouth, eyes, so why not trust these tactile findings?
Was there really a coarse-whiskered soldier, smelling of onions and anise, that had trampled his innocence? A cedar-scented storage room, wooden crates, a spider crawling along the edge of a crate. Did memories make fiction, or was it the other way around?

rothko

(Artwork by Mark Rothko)
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Desert Spleen

Excerpt from All the Last Furies, novel-in-progress.
Bert and George. A Couple of Real Coons. That was the title of the program. Arturo didn’t know what the term meant, why coons, but he could feel the seeds of malignancy implicit within it. He could smell and taste the wrong of the enigmatic title.
Yet Bert and George did make him laugh. Cry too. Laughter and tears. What else was there?
All Bert and George ever did was wander in the desert. An endless wandering, sandblasted peregrinations to nowhere, a tubercular odyssey with no point. They wandered, kept each other company, drove each other nuts, got into and out of scrapes and follies. The desert, in all its starkness and death-resin, might not seem like an ideal breeding ground for vaudeville, but these two men showed otherwise. They showed that comedy’s scoliotic backbone originated in a sturdier more epic spine.
There was the episode when Bert and George found an oasis, except it turned out to be a tainted oasis, at least for Bert.
The oasis was flanked by several hunched ashen trees with fringed fronds, and scant patches of grayish green grass grew miraculously in a semi-circle around a modest stream. Both men gulped down the cool water from the stream, both men bathed their faces. Except, and here’s where the oasis affected Bert and George differently, Bert started screaming.
What Bert what, George checked in.
The water is burning my tongue and my face.
Bert was covering his face with his hands.
George ordered him to put down his hands.
Let me take a look-see.
George went quiet real quiet.
Bert flutteringly opened his eyes, which had been shut, tears streaming down due to the acidic burning.
Bert gauged the mystified look on George’s face.
Bert went over to the stream and sought the clarity of its mirror. No reflection. No face. Just the porkpie hat and bowtie and empty space where his face should have been.
Bert walked back to George, his fingers searching for his face, finding it.
George do I still have a face? Do I?
George nodded.
You still have a face Bert but something’s happened to the pigmentation, you’re, it’s lightened.
Lightened?
Yea it’s lightened. It’s whitened. Now you’ve got the face of, by god I’m sorry to say this Bert, but you’ve got the face of the white devil.
The white devil?
Yea.
THE White Devil?
Well maybe not THE White Devil, but A white devil. You’ve got the face of a white devil Bert. I’m awfully sorry.
Bert begins weeping. Dark inky tears cut along the length of Bert’s face, like tire marks on ghostly plains. After a short violent spell of weeping, Bert and George left the contaminated oasis and resumed their wandering.
Bert wondered why George’s face hadn’t been whitened by the water, and when Bert asked George, Why did I become a white devil George and not you, George’s shoulders peaked in a shrug, Dunno. This desert has got me all kinds of mixed up.
For the rest of that episode, Bert and George wandered on, exchanging quips and observations, except their relationship was different, a bit strained, carrying the agitated seeds of a wariness that had not been there before, with George remaining a Real Coon and Bert having become a White Devil, or at least appearing as one, and the two men interacted from an unfamiliar distance as their trekking continued.
The laugh track, which punctuated much of the action with orchestrated roars of canned laughter, disturbed Arturo. It reminded him of the plastic roses. The laughter, like the roses, was an unpardonable disfigurement, a blatant travesty.
Arturo wondered if Bert and George could hear the laughter. Perhaps it rained down on them like some enigmatic phenomena of Delphic origins, strange weather balloons born of vanity and sin.
Where exactly did the laughter come from? It came on as a torrential and anonymous chorus, but if broken down into isolated segments, who were the people behind each laugh? There had to be a true source, an original one, Arturo thought. Same as the roses, which had to have been manufactured somewhere. Even betrayals, or perhaps especially betrayals, had their sincerest origins.
In today’s episode Bert and George see an emaciated woman in a bird-mask, bound to a cross. The woman’s sun-branded body is darkened by ash and soot, and bears a geometric riot of lash-marks. The woman is covered only in a tattered loin-cloth, splattered with dirt and dried blood. The loin cloth covers her from shoulders to hips.
Bert and George stop and stand before the woman.
Are you real, George asks.
No response. Windless, dry, harshly blank, the climate seems to have become the woman, or viceversa.
Maam, can you hear us? I’m Bert. He’s George. We’re wondering…are you real? I mean real-real. We’ve been wandering in this here desert for a long time and…well we’ve run into our fair share of the not-real masquerading as real.
The woman, whose bird-masked head has been lowered, lifts slightly, then lowers again.
Guess that means yes, huh?
Can I touch you, George asks. Maybe on your ankle or something, just to make sure…
George breezes his fingers against the woman’s shin. The woman violently jerks her head up and back and emits a raptorlike screech.
George jumps back—I’m sorry miss, I didn’t mean…I was just seeing if…
Bert huddles with George
What should we do?
We can’t leave her like that. Let’s get her down.
(Here is where you, the audience, should play the song “Protection” by Massive Attack, ideally on vinyl or cassette, and allow the song to seep into you like the essence of tea leaves steeped in boiling water, and when the song is over—or rather when quality seeping has occurred, which may require listening to the song several times, rejoin Bert and George and their dilemma with the Girl on the Cross)
Maybe she doesn’t wanna get down?
Well who the hell would want to stay tied to a cross baking in the desert sun?
I don’t know George, you may be right, but let’s not forget the desert’s got a logic all its own.
Maybe the desert does, Bert, but look at what’s right in front of us. Right there. A woman strapped to a cross.
When you touched her George, when you laid a finger on her, did you hear that scream? you ever heard a scream like that come from a human? And that bird-mask she’s wearing, what’s that all about? She may not be what she seems. This may not be what it seems.
Leave me, comes the low whittled voice of the woman.
What, Bert and George respond in unison.
Leave me, the woman repeats, a bit more firmly. You are right. I am not real. Not in the way you think.
Bert gets lost in the woman’s mask. Tufted with golden-brown feathers, its beak sharply narrowing into the incise symmetry of a talon. Bert thought he could see spots of dried blood at the very edge. That, or sunspots.
We can’t leave you hanging there miss, George says.
You have left me before. Leave me now. This has nothing to do with you. Keep walking. Forget me. I am exactly where I need to be. What I need to be.
Excuse me if I sound, I don’t’ know, perhaps a little naïve, but won’t you die if we leave you out here?
You two have been out here wandering a long time, right? Have you died?
No we haven’t—
Yes, gentleman, you have. And you haven’t. Have. And haven’t. Until you can understand that, you won’t understand a goddamn thing.
Bert and George were startled by the sudden surge of venom in the woman’s voice. Bert thought she was a mirage, or a curse. George thought she was more and less real than both of those things.
I guess we’ll go then, George says sheepishly. Before we do, are you sure that—
Yes I am. May ______ have mercy on our souls.
Bert and George both heard something different.
George’s blank was filled with a guttural melody, some sort of aural rune. Bert’s blank was filled with the sound of water running.
The two men departed.
Slowly, slowly, and they never looked back. Not even when they heard the unearthly screeching, and smelled the smoke.

 

Bert Williams and George Walker - c. 1903

 

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Moodscape

J&D5 II

Down a lighted alley.
From The Jackdaw and the Doll.
Illustration by Izumi Yokoyama.
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Come Rain or Come Shine

 

89716182_2889610437759195_87923323488436224_nIllustration from The Jackdaw and the Doll.
A fable about love, compassion and the magic of storytelling, presently being illustrated by Izumi Yokoyama.

 

 

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The Shrining

Grace-note to self:
Make a malleable shrine
out of everything,
everything,
and trust that reverence
is astoundingly radical
in what it will include
as sacred and profound–
there are no limits to this,
build malleable shrines,
like a child mating ceremony
to favored innocence.
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Still Life w/ Wonder

Wherever I am,
adrift and wonderwheeling,
the lay of dreams, still.
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