he dies in 1975 and today he was born at the bottom of a drawer in the kitchen, his coffin and crib: he is swaddled in moth-eaten dishtowels by a nameless undertaker or perhaps the autophagic author himself
his crib and coffin: he was buried a lifetime, deaf to my own cacophonous et cetera
amidst cardboard boxes he arises, stretches and sits on our couch, transparent and whispering his earliest recollections in ink from distant trenches: he eats sliced-up milky way bars, listens to little orphan annie and the manhattan rainstorms as they flood his empty pillowcase;
my earliest recollection is a blank notebook, never happened, didn’t fall from the sky till three-quarters of a century later in drops of impossible invisible ink
in 1934 i smell decades-old storms and tobacco smoked by children; today he tastes dough from hands of women he could have loved
we break toys, apologize to our ghosts listen to drops on macadam phantoms.
we think tonight was cloudy.
we left identical sleigh tracks in identical snow laughed identical laughs whose echoes and imprints are separated only by city and by many, many newspapers.
we remembered the same sun, the same rain and lightning
and we both wrote that we may be heard over the century’s thunder but stopped, hid, tired, retired—
shaking hands halfway to tomorrow, never touching—
two strange strangers left sleepless and motionless in the same notebooks, the same house: in the same cradles and the same coffins.
--written 1/3/20--
title stolen apologetically from the roky erickson song
inspired by finding my late grandfather's unpublished handwritten memoir at the bottom of a drawer of dishtowels
"Because I was a child and a man of my time--and because I nurtured the hope that the future will be better for my having walked this life… for this reason, alone, I write, that I may be heard."