I
was rummaging around in the catch-all drawer of my dresser and came up with a
number of interesting items—missing cuff links, a nice never used Christmas present wallet, a great
bright and braided cloth hat band perfect for my battered everyday brown felt,
and a little red pocket note book missing one cover.
I
had been searching for that little book for some time. I carried it in my shirt pocket in 1979-80. It was sent to me as a present by the British anarchist Arthur Booze whose
quirky cartoons I had made a regular feature in the Industrial Worker. It was
a pocket diary from the Transport and
General Workers Union. It contained a map of the London Underground inside the front cover and a few pages of almanac
information including high water tables at London
Bridge and Rules for Shop Stewards. In the back were a few color pages of
maps of London, Great Britain, and Ireland. A little elastic band could hold the book
closed.
I
used it not as intended as an appointment book, but as a phone book and a catch
all for notes. Among those notes, mostly
written in pencil and hard for even me to read, were several poems. These represented my first efforts at verse
since incredibly gwad awful juvenilia written in high school and my first year
of college. Taken together, I thought at
the time that perhaps they could be the beginning of a collection which I tentatively
named The Bluebird Cycle of Poems Absolutely Without Merit.
This
was the low point of my life. Early in ’79
I had arrived back in Chicago after
of few months of exile in Madison,
Wisconsin, where I had gone, tail between my legs after being disgraced in
my union, the Industrial Workers of the
World (IWW). That itself is a painful story which I
will refrain for the time being relating.
I arrived back just in time for the infamous Blizzard of ’79.
For
the first few months, I slept on a couch on the back porch of my friends and
fellow workers Mike Hargis and Judy Freeman. I would bundle in several layers of shirts, a
battered corduroy sport coat, and a great old heavy Air Force overcoat under several layers of blankets and quilts
often wakening covered in snow. Later
they would make room for me in the apartment and still later, after I got a
job, I moved into a near-by sleeping room or stayed in a single-room occupancy
hotel in Uptown.
I
got a job at a printing plant specializing in carbonless paper forms located a
few blocks away. I swept the floors,
baled all of the scrap paper and cardboard in a giant compressor/baler, cleaned
the restrooms, unloaded trucks, and sometimes helped load big paper rolls onto the
presses. It was the most menial work in
the shop. But it paid enough to get my
own room.
When
I was not at work or asleep I spent virtually every waking hour at the Bluebird Tap and Liquors on Irving Park Road just west of Ashland. This joint should not be confused with the
trendy Bluebird bar now patronized by yuppies
and hipsters in now fashionable Wicker Park. This place was a dive. If it was not actually
on skid row, it was within spiritual
spitting distance.
Underneath
the neon sign, the front was a dingy and cramped package goods store. Just behind was a narrow bar room—a long, long bar, rickety chrome barstools with cracking
red Naugahyde upholstery, a juke box, a single TV perched high over
one end of the bar, a perpetual blue haze of smoke, and the persistent odor of stale beer
and vomit. The joint opened promptly at
7 am with a line of shaky heavy hitters already lined up for the morning eye opener. It officially closed at 2 am, but they
frequently just turned the sign and the light in the liquor store off and kept
pouring till the last drunk passed out.
I slipped easily, far too easily, into regular status among a colorful
but used-up bunch. On lean days, I could
nurse a 35 cent glass of Old Style for
an hour or more. I made it my business to
be witty and entertaining and so was able to cage drinks from the guys with
real jobs—city laborers, cab drivers, machinists, etc.—or from the bar
tender. On paydays when I was flush I
would knock back shots of Christian
Brothers Brandy and stand a few symbolic rounds myself. Once in a while someone would hit it big at
the track or stumble into some kind of windfall and the whole damn place would
drink until the lucky one was broke again.
Besides winning bets on trivia,
telling tall tales, and occasionally singing an Irish or sentimental ballad, one of the ways I entertained my
fellow sots and earned my freebies was writing and reading poetry that I began
scribbling into that little red book.
Much of the stuff, as you would suspect, was too dreadful for further
consideration. Much of it was maudlin,
because that’s what drunks do best. But
in the interest of brutal honesty and personal catharsis, I am going to
publicly share some of those here for the first time 43 years.
The first entry showed no promise.
A record with a scratch
the same grove plays,
the same grove plays,
and will again,
and will again
I let the
tone arm rest
because I love the tune,
because I love the tune,
and fear to have it end,
and fear to have it end.
Songs of
pain and passion
waiting for the bump,
waiting for the bump,
that sends the song its way,
that sends the song its way.
Then there was a woman. Of
course there was a woman. There always
is. This one was a lovely bar fly with
shining dark brown hair and large warm eyes.
She was the steady girl of my best drinking buddy, a tree trimmer for
the Parks Department.
Too many
poets have
written of her eyes—
like pools in moonlight,
like oceans to get lost
in,
like midnights of
anticipation
But they
were not your eyes,
yours when the glisten in laughter,
yours when tear with pity.
I lack
the words to say
how they make me ache and long,
how they make me hope and grieve,
how they make me want to live and
die.
Your eyes—
blue eyes, green eyes, grey eyes
shifting and changing,
jet black at the center,
dark somehow.
And I
miss them already,
I miss them so much
I wish I had the voice
of those dead poets
to tell you just how much.
You get the picture now. Not exactly
immortal verse. But wait! There’s more!
How about that specialty of drunks, self-pity!
I have been where
the heart breaks
echo of the walls,
so have you.
I have
been where
the smoke hangs
as heavy as the hearts,
so have you.
I have been
where
dead men speak as live
yearning all the while,
so have you.
I have wept when
they have wept,
for them but apart,
so have you.
I have been
where
I am torn asunder,
aching with the pain
so finally have you.
Stuff
like that ought to win any woman’s heart, right? How about simple bitterness?
I have fucked by
life
like a fifteen year old virgin
with a five dollar whore.
clumsy and quick,
two jerks and a squirt,
wilt and then guilt.
There
came a time when the barfly of my dreams had a fight with her old man, my best friend. Being of sterling character I stepped right
in and she seemed amenable. I even took
her and her two children down to meet my father who was managing the old Sports and Vacation Show at the International Amphitheatre. I told him we were getting married and I was
going to be a step dad. I confirmed for
him all of his worst fears. Of course I
was pre-mature. Before we even consummated
our new found love, the lady was back in the arms of her old man. It was not the first such experience of my
lovelorn life.
I was
only the eunuch
they could fly to
when lovers frayed
their lives to unbraided hemp,
when other hands
reached out in solace
with prick straining
against their BVDs.
Only
the eunuch
of
the four walled
empty
harem
with
ear and eye
but
no other organ
playing
a tune to them,
no
cantatas of passion,
never,
ever a fugue.
Only
the loving eunuch
with
the sweet
castrato
voice
to
sing them
velvet
solace,
wrapping
them in memories.
Only
the healing eunuch
who listens
to their daily crucifixions,
pulls the nails from their hands,
anoints their wounds,
and sends them
safely back
to their persecutors.
There
was one last entry.
At a certain
stage
of drunkenness and stone,
dreams drift
as the seeds of cottonwoods
by a dry Wyoming creek.
There
you have it in all of its sordid glory.
Say fella, all this crap oughta be good for a couple of rounds of
Christian Bros….
I'm just thankful that God didn't give up on this Murfin man. He was really down - what pitiful stuff. What humble beginnings of our Murfin poet lauriette today.
ReplyDeleteMy dad was a regular there and the owner (Whitey?) Was a good friend of his. My dad was John Lannon...maybe you knew him. I was just trying to figure out where the place was, I forgot, it has been many years. Saw your blog, very interesting. ..looks like a lot of memories were made there.
ReplyDeleteMy dad's second home was the Blue Bird Tap. I spent many happy hours on the last barstool there, as George fed me those beef sandwiches he'd make with the wilted pickles on the side. My dad made me draw pictures for George, which he'd put up behind the register. My dad spent many a pension check from the CPD there, stumbling home way after 2am, when my mom would scramble him a dozen eggs as he sang, "I love you truly...truly dear...." Often I would have to call George to send my dad home, because if my mom called George would lie. I'm a paranormal investigator and writer now and am planning to go try to record for EVP at the end of that bar and try to talk to George...and maybe my dad, rest in peace. He'd be 101 next week. At his funeral the whole crew showed up at Burkhardt funeral home...Billy the Goat, Harry the Hat, Duda.... My brother gave Billy the Goat twenty bucks and then they went to smoke in the funeral parlor bathroom, setting off the smoke alarm and summoning the fire department. Good times. This was great, thanks.
ReplyDelete