Showing posts with label Brian Gilmore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brian Gilmore. Show all posts

Monday, January 5, 2015

Brian Gilmore's revolution (for my father)

Brian Gilmore is a poet about whom Peter Harris is speaking when he says that he values those poets who do not elevate themselves above the work, itself. I recently had the privilege of attending one of Brian's poetry readings. He read one touching poem about his father, a different one is copied below. I wonder if Brian is capable of writing a poem that does not touch my heart.

my father was a dictator.

in 1968 dad suspended the house
constitution
instituted a state of emergency
suspended any rights television
made us think we had.
he declared tarzan a fake
nat turner important
malcolm x a brother
we must understand.

it was strange this regime
always looming like lightning
during a thunderstorm, but never
to harm, though we know the sky
is no friend of careless boys
who sometimes end up
walking home in the rain.

often my brother and I rebelled against
this totalitarian despot.
we declared civil war by
staying out until 4 or 5 a.m.

el presidente would be awake
when we returned,
calm in his demeanor, greeting us with
one of those well-prepared speeches,
like castro.

this constant pounding on our brains made us
surrender eventually, and end our unrest after
nearly 20 years of disorganized resistance.
the will of this monarch
became our will:
like, “you will go to school.”
“you will not destroy your life.”

now when I stop by my father’s house
the state of emergency is over
the revolution he declared was successful
the laws he passed are no longer in need
of enforcement.

these presidential duties
are exclusively mine now
and if
i am ever lucky enough to become
a dictator
i shall not hesitate
to crush tarzan and
give really long speeches
in
another language.

Sunday, December 28, 2014

Brian Gilmore's billy bathgate (for Chico)

I have just recently gotten familiar with Brian Gilmore's poetry. Brian's poetry abandons nothing, brings everything with him as he goes. Brian's DC childhood is a big part of where he came from, and, as he moves on with his life, a big part of who he still is. This poem is a new favorite of mine. And it reminds me of Marge Piercy's "Joy Road and Livernois." In that poem, Piercy also brings everyone with her.

It is the first poem in his new book, We Didn't Know Any Gangsters

billy bathgate (for chico)

            all I’ve got is this picture.

it could have been van der zee
gordon parks,
oggi ogburn fresh from
a chancellor Williams
shoot.

we are capable boys;
innocent,

up some small mountain
in summertime
from that swamp of a city.

we couldn’t juggle balls
didn’t know any gangsters,

all we had was ice cold michelob
and red juicy melon
holy like water.

we didn’t know about rattlesnakes
that i’ve now been told are
all over that mountain.

all i’ve got is this picture.

i could call up the crew,

though some of them are
gone away now
like wisps of smoke.
others are here,

just floating on skyline
like kite
without string.

we were capable boys,
looking into the future as if we
would live like frederick douglass
or c.l.r. james.

did I mention the michelob?
red juicy melon
holy like water?

and how about those rattlesnakes?
all around us, now that we know
they are there.

all I’ve got is this picture.
unbreakable smiles.
lean frames.
polo shirts gripping young boys,
soon to be walking tightropes
without poles.

            it’s there, all of it.

            ice cold michelob
.
            melon holy like water.

            rattlesnakes.

            we couldn’t juggle balls.

didn’t know any gangsters.

            we were capable boys,

            all i’ve got is this picture.