I was crawling along the west wall of
   St. Grotesque of the Subway's basement
   My hands feeling for hidden panels
   Loose tiles for carefully-hidden keyholes
   A priest, flashlight wavering
   Knelt beside me, startling 
   My seeker heart
   "I've figured it out," I told him
   "There's a passageway here, somewhere
   It goes through God's orifice, and out
   His muzzle to streets of gold
   Pearly gates, platinum wings. 
   The carpenter's son was devious, but
   I've figured the code."
   He turned off the flashlight, sat down.
   "Go ahead," he said. "It might work.
   God knows, nothing else has."
   *
   How Can I Become Rich? [Lollie]
   Wealth is measured primarily
   (Pay attention, Lollie)
   Measured primarily by the size
   And softness of your bath towel
   Get a purple one that enfolds
   Your naked body completely
   (No, Lollie, men arrive, they
   Demand, they leave; a bath towel
   Is fresh after each wash)
   Do not buy one on sale; the towel must be
   Greatly overpriced. Such a towel
   Can never be overvalued.
   ****
   Chapter 20: What Do I Do With the Old Iron Scales I Found?
   "Good poems," Alf noted, when the reading was done. He was sipping slowly on his beer. He had a monkey on his back. Its name was Calvin.
   No one was quite sure why the bartender hadn't objected to the monkey, but he hadn't, and none of the poets wanted to ask.
   "Stuff it. Sideways." Blossom sat sideways in her chair, watching one of the working televisions and folding the poems into a small square. She was chewing gum. Her blonde hair was shorter than usual, something Lollie didn't believe she'd see. Somehow her skin was a shade darker, too.
   "You can't take a compliment?" Cal turned his dark eyes on her.
   Blossom refused to turn. The television screen showed a late-night talk show. There was no sound, of course, the room being filled with bad FM music, its volume turned down in deference to the poets. "I came to share my poem, not to have some jackass tell me whether it's good or bad."
   "But if no one evaluates a poem," Alf pointed out reasonably, "you'll never know whether you're getting your message across or getting better or whatever." The monkey had his tail wrapped around Alf's neck with the tip stuck up one of his nostrils.
   "Poems," said Blossom, "are meant to be experienced. Nothing. More."
   "You wrote a poem in grade four and nobody liked it." Cal yawned.
   Blossom tried to dump the last of her drink, mostly ice cubes, in his lap, but he was quicker than that. The monkey made a leap onto the table and grabbed an ice cube. Spitting it out, the animal flung it across the room. Nobody seemed to care.
   "If we start being judgmental," Lollie broke in, "someone might note that your poem seems to horn in on Alf's turf."
   "How so?"
   "Alf does mythic figures. John the Baptist, Ulysses. Now you've done a Don Quixote poem."
   "Imitation," Cal smiled, "is the sincerest form of flattery."
   "Once we get past national cliché week," Lollie observed, "we might try separating how good a poem is from how well it communicates."
   "Good friggin' luck," Alf said.
   "I think," said Blossom, "it's time to go home."
   "Your judgment is superb," Lollie said. "Wait up. These guys can spend the night trying to decide who wrote the best poem." 
   *
   What Do I Do With the Old Iron Scales I Found? [Lollie]
   In the dream, he was asleep, curled up
   On one pan of the scales, but slowly
   Sliding off
   Frantically, I threw things onto
   The opposite pan, tables and pies
   And a shopping bag full of bright clothes
   Nothing worked, not even Timbits.
   At last I crawled onto the rising pan myself
   But it made no difference
   I saw him slide, still sleeping
   Off the other side, waking up
   In time to call his own name
   Just before I began 
   That long, long fall.
   *
   What Do I Do With the Old Iron Scales I Found? [Alf]
   It took him almost forty years
   To get clearances
   Approvals
   Equipment, maps
   All that shit.
   He got to the top
   Of Mount Sinai 
   Just about dawn
   Hauled out the 
   Old iron scales
   Set them on a flat rock.
   At dawn, the next morning
   He left
   Time is money. and 
   He had a life to live.
   *
   What Do I Do With the Old Iron Scales I Found? [Blossom]
   old iron scales should be set with
   terra cotta pots and geraniums 
   there's nothing in my life I could weigh
   without breaking my heart.
   *
   What Do I Do With the Old Iron Scales I Found? [Calhoun]
   Drinking alone
   At the kitchen table
   3:14 a.m., the clock
   Inevitable as little rabbits
   Don Quixote strode in
   Armor clanking, legs trembling,
   Stuck his lance
   Against my chest
   "Here be monsters," he croaked
   Bracing himself against
   The fridge.
   "I've been expecting you!" I shouted
   Slamming the scales onto the table, and
   Waving my arms like a windmill,
   "Knight of my days, daze of my nights.
   You first!"
   Shedding rust, he wheezed himself out
   Taking a box of Shreddies for his horse.
   "Damn," he said.
   "Damn.
   ****
   Chapter 21: What Must We Never Let The World Forget?
   When I was younger… O, God! Is this going to be one of those 'old lady talks about her youth things'? Anyway, I don't know why I'm telling you this; I mean, we're here for our damn poems aren't we?
   So I guess I've been feeling a little down lately. Hell, for a couple of months anyway. This city'll do it to you, especially at this time of the year. Look at those two in the corner. Why don't they just ship out everyone over sixty to someplace like Peterborough or something. You ever been there? My aunt lives there. The whole town's full of old people driving along at ten miles an hour hunched over the steering wheels of their K-cars.
   This is a young person's town. God, when did that happen? That I suddenly wasn't a 'young person' any more? I guess it happens to everybody. I just thought it would take a little longer than it did.
   The hardest part is that I can't remember what he looked like. You don't have a smoke do you? No, forget that, I stopped three years ago and sure don't want to start again.
   Thanks for staying. I'll be better in a few minutes or maybe a couple of weeks. I've been through this before. Been a lot worse sometimes. Do you want another beer? 
   I wonder if he remembers what I look like. We stayed in a cheap motel on the beach outside Panama city in Florida. The sand was white as snow, and there were white crabs on the beach. They called them ghost crabs. You'd see one move, and suddenly it would be gone. He chased a couple, and we laughed when he caught one and got pinched. I think men's love is like those crabs. I've always thought so.
   I don't give my love to any one man. Not any more. A bit here and a bit there and some for myself in between. I've seen too many women be hurt by men, even when they pretend they aren't. Men don't understand love; it's just not in them.
   Sometimes I dream about that beach. This is my first poem about it. I wis
h I could remember him better. Hell, I remember the pelicans flying just above the water, and the way the stingrays would swim in the muddy water at night, the tips of their fins just above the water.
   When I dream that dream, I walk down to the beach at sunset and he's there. But he's always looking out to sea, like he's lost his soul and he's waiting for it to come flying back in like a pelican. 
   The beaches there are full of old people. Bad as Peterborough. But we were young then, and I was young. I figured he was married. You can always tell, if you really want to. The old couples used to watch us out of the corners of their eyes as they shuffled down the beach. Like they'd steal our youth if they could.
   I don't know, Christ, we'd sit on the dock and drink tequila and I'd watch the old couples, hand in hand waiting for the sun to go down forever, and Charlie would look out across the Gulf of Mexico like he belonged on the other side of it, and he'd tell a joke and I'd laugh, and when we couldn't see straight anymore, we'd go back to the motel. I don't know if he ever made it across the Gulf or if his dream came sailing in.
   Men think that, you know. Their dreams will come sailing up to their doors if they wish hard enough, and in the meanwhile you're handy while they're waiting. But men can be fun, if you don't take them seriously and are careful not to actually fall in love with one.
   They have souls like crabs, you know. Did I tell you that? They skitter sideways and disappear when you try to look at them. I keep away from that. All I want from a man is his time and a bit of attention. They'll give both, if you don't try to take too much at once.
   But you're lying to yourself if you think it's going to last. This town is good for young people, you know. Young women think they're in love and young men follow them around. 
   I don't even remember if he had blue eyes. I think so. It's been years now. I wonder if he's getting old, if he drives a K-car. I don't think they make them anymore. Maybe they all drive Buicks now, all those old couples. Buy a small house in Peterborough and drive to Florida in the winter, and watch the young people and wonder where all the years went.
   *
   What Must We Never Let The World Forget? [Lollie]
   “I could bring over some cookies,” I said
   “Go to hell,” she said.
   “It might be better than the silence, you know,” I said
   “Go to hell,” she said.
   “Chocolate cookies,” I answered.
   “Go to hell,” she said.
   So I did as she said, and we ate twenty-two cookies that afternoon.
   *
   What Must We Never Let The World Forget? [Alf]
   After five years away, Andrew 
   Returned to his wife, and the small hut
   By the Sea of Galilee.
   "I've told everyone who will listen,"
   He said to his wife
   "And many, many more."
   Occasionally, just before dawn
   She would hear him get up
   Take his wool coat
   And slip out the door.
   From the window she watched him
   Walk to the shore
   Step carefully onto the water
   When it got to his knees
   He'd look up to the stars a moment
   Then walk
   Slowly
   Back to his house.
   *
   What Must We Never Let The World Forget? [Blossom]
   he took my hand
   we walked through the darkness
   past the palm trees
   to the beach
   when the moon began to rise
   I remember the cold feel of night sand
   on my bare feet
   the warmth of his arms around me
   not much else
   *
   What Must We Never Let The World Forget? [Calhoun]
   They call it natural
   that I should die
   the cold, the silence
   and not to be
   A cry in the gray
   a shadow at three
   is that what you say?
   Last summer’s waves
   on last summer’s shores
   is that what I am?
   Am I to join the legion dead
   with not a word on the following day?
   I cry to the stars!
   A cry in the gray
   a shadow at three
   is that what you say?
   Last summer’s waves
   on last summer’s shores
   Is that all I am?
   ****
   Chapter 22: What Should We Throw Away?
   "There's something about that bartender," Blossom observed. "Do you think he's a couplet or two short of a sonnet?"
   Cal swiveled his head to look. "We're coming up to our second year here, and he's still working the midnight shift in this dump." 
   Lollie privately agreed with both of them. It was a Saturday night, and there were exactly ten people in the place, counting the bartender. The owners had obviously given up on trying to add live music to the place, and the way the few regulars were nursing their draft beer, the place wasn't going to be making much money. Probably not enough to pay to keep it open.
   "I'm going up for beer," Alf said. The bartender no longer brought beer to the tables. In fact, he seldom even looked towards the tables, his eyes fixed on a place somewhere under the television in the corner of the room.
   "I'll get one, too," Lollie said, pushing the wobbly chair back. Cal pushed a five dollar bill towards her. She knew he wanted a draft Labatts. And change.
   As they crossed the room, Alf whispered to her, "Watch those two. They're starting to like each other."
   "I'll believe that when I see it." Lollie was unconvinced.
   While the bartender was pouring drinks, Alf asked him, "What should people throw away?" The bartender looked up, unsmiling. "I mean, in general," Alf added. "What sort of things?"
   The bartender put one too-foamy glass in front of Lollie. "People should put everything but their memories out with the trash. You don't even need a pocket for memories, and you can edit them if necessary." He poured a second glass, just as foamy. "Prisoners should keep only their chains, and actors only their costumes." 
   He poured the last glass. "Taverns should throw out poets; they think too much and it ruins the atmosphere." He squinted at them. "God should throw away any plans that haven't worked out after a couple of thousand years." He rang up the bill.
   "Er…." said Alf, "What about bad French fries?"
   "They haven't worked yet," the bartender said, "but I keep hoping."
   Twenty minutes later, just as the poems were read, he brought a large plate of the fries to the poets' table. "Compliments of the house," he said.
   *
   What Should We Throw Away? [Blossom]
   one day we passed a field
   and paused to hear the cattle lowing
   as the thunder approached.
   I was not afraid, he whispered my name
   maybe twice
   and from far away I heard music
   if there were anything I could wish, it would be
   not to remember that.
   *
   What Should We Throw Away? [Calhoun]
   I am the wild pig
   Skulking among lilacs
   Rooting in the memories
   You thought you'd forgotten
   I am the angel of the
   Strange heart
   Sitting in mud
   Covering myself with yellow leaves
   I am Adam's son in high leather boots
   Waltzing alone on a moonless night
   Under wringing clouds
   Wondering if anyone will ever
   Speak my true name
   Aieee! Aieee! Aieee! 
   I am that I am!
   It will take me days, perhaps weeks
   Just to haul all the costumes
   Down to the Sally Ann.
   *
   What Should We Throw Away? [Lollie]
>   Throw away your memories
   If you can
   Surely, if you can
   So she told me, and
   She seemed to know.
   She said
   You save them like fading wallpaper on
   The darkening walls of your soul.
   Squint in the gloom; you’ll find
   The faded flowers are not quite true
   The pears cannot be eaten
   The love letters were written by strangers
   Even if the world outside is ochre waste
   Papering the windows with yesterdays laughter
   Costs you
   Tomorrow’s light
   *
   What Should We Throw Away? [Alf]
   At the last supper Jesus left a few crumbs
   On the table
   That those who couldn’t believe
   Might be porters
   It was his joke, although Paul
   Never understood.
   “I guess you had to be there,”
   Peter would mutter in his
   Later days
   Leave behind Frito wrappers or
   Apple cores on the way
   To your own Golgotha
   In case you return. Just in case.
   You may use them to remember the few
   Who washed your feet
   Or shared the burden of leaning
   Against the grain.
   ****
   Chapter 23: Why is the Church Silent?
   Lollie arrived, as usual, a few minutes ahead of the others. The place was empty, except for the bartender, who was reading a comic book. When Lollie stepped up to the bar, he looked at her carefully, then poured her a pint, instead of the usual half. 
   As he set it in front of her, he asked, "What's tonight's topic?"
   "We're doing 'why is the church silent?'" Lollie told him. She waited for a response, but he just said, "ah."
   But by the time she got to her table, he'd turned the background music totally, instead of just muting it as usual. Then he turned off each of the televisions, and most of the lights.
   Lollie sat at her table, amused, as he got out a marker pen and some white cardboard. On each table, including hers, he put a sign that read, "Reserved for Silence." She watched as he put another on the bar, and went to tack one up to the outside of the door.
   Three more people came in, were whispered to, and sat silently at the two tables closest to Lollie. 
   When the other three poets arrived, they found a totally silent room, dim except for lights over a couple of tables. Lollie put her fingers to her lips to prevent any talking as the others got their drinks, then took their places. 
   
 
 In the Tavern of Lost Souls Page 6