July 4th and all is Hell. Outside my shuttered breath the streets bubble with flame-loined kids in designer jeans looking for people to **** or razor. A madman covered with running sores is on the street corner singing: O beautiful for spacious skies… This landscape is far too convenient to be either real or metaphor. In an alley behind a 7-11 a Black **** dressed in Harris tweed preaches fidelity to two pimply ****** whose skin is white though they aren’t quite. And crosstown in the sane precincts of Brown University where I added rage to Cliff Notes and got two degrees bearded scientists are stringing words outside the language inside the guts of atoms and I don’t know why I’ve come back to visit.
O Uncle Adrian! I’m in the reservation of my mind. Chicken bones in a cardboard casket meditate upon the linoleum floor. Outside my flophouse door stewed and sinister winos snore in a tragic chorus.
The snowstorm t.v. in the lobby’s their mother. Outside my window on the jumper’s ledge ice wraiths shiver and coat my last cans of Bud though this is summer I don’t know why or where the souls of Indian sinners fly. Uncle Adrian, you died last week—cirrhosis. I still have the photo of you in your Lovelock letterman’s jacket—two white girls on your arms— first team All-State halfback in ’45, ’46.
But nothing is static. I am in the reservation of my mind. Embarrassed moths unravel my shorts thread by thread asserting insectival lust. I’m a naked locoweed in a city scene. What are my options? Why am I back in this city? When I sing of the American night my lungs billow Camels astride hacking appeals for cessation. My mother’s zippo inscribed: “Stewart Indian School—1941” explodes in my hand in elegy to Dresden Antietam and Wounded Knee and finally I have come to see this mad *** nation is dying. Our ancestors’ murderer is finally dying and I guess I should be happy and dance with the spirit or project my regret to my long-lost high school honey but history has carried me to a place where she has a daughter older than we were when we first shared flesh.
She is the one who could not marry me because of the dark-skin ways in my blood. Love like that needs no elegy but because of the baked-***** possibility of the flame lakes of Hell I will give one last supper and sacrament to the dying beast of need disguised as love on deathrow inside my ribcage. I have not forgotten the years of midnight hunger when I could see how the past had guided me and I cried and held the pillow, muddled in the melodrama of the quite immature but anyway, Uncle Adrian… Here I am in the reservation of my mind and silence settles forever the vacancy of this cheap city room. In the wine darkness my cigarette coal tints my face with Geronimo’s rage and I’m in the dry hills with a Winchester waiting to shoot the lean, learned fools who taught me to live-think in English.
Uncle Adrian… to make a long night story short, you promised to give me your Oldsmobile in 1962. How come you didn’t? I could have had some really good times in high school.
Indian/Native America/First Citizen (take your PC pick) poet of considerable talent and power.