The Blue Buick

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by B. H. Fairchild


  I failed to draw a crowd. I might even be their weird

  little saint, though God knows I’ve wanted everything

  they’ve wanted, and more, of course. When we toured Texas,

  west from San Antonio, those tiny cow towns flung

  like pearls from the broken necklace of the Rio Grande,

  I looked out on a near-infinity of rangeland

  and far blue mountains, avatars of emptiness,

  minor gods of that vast and impossibly pure nothing

  to whom I spoke my little stillborn, ritual prayer.

  I’m not on those posters they paste all over town,

  those silent orgies of secondary colors—jade,

  burnt orange, purple—each one a shrieking anthem

  to the exotic: Bengal tigers, ubiquitous

  as alley cats, raw with not inhuman but

  superhuman beauty, demonic spider monkeys,

  absurdly buxom dancers clad in gossamer,

  and spiritual gray elephants, trunks raised like arms

  to Allah. Franciscan murals of plenitude,

  brute vitality ripe with the fruit of eros,

  the faint blush of sin, and I am not there. Rather,

  my role is the unadvertised, secret, wholly

  unexpected thrill you find within. A discovery.

  Irresistible, like sex.

  So here I am. The crowd

  leaks in—halting, unsure, a bit like mourners

  at a funeral but without the grief. And there is

  always something damp, interior, and, well,

  sticky about them, cotton-candy souls that smear

  the bad air, funky, bleak. All, quite forgettable,

  except for three. A woman, middle-aged, plain

  and unwrinkled as her Salvation Army uniform,

  bland as oatmeal but with this heavy, leaden sorrow

  pulling at her eyelids and the corners of her mouth.

  Front row four times, weeping, weeping constantly,

  then looking up, lips moving in a silent prayer,

  I think, and blotting tears with a kind of practiced,

  automatic movement somehow suggesting that

  the sorrow is her own and I’m her mirror now,

  the little well of suffering from which she drinks.

  A minister once told me to embrace my sorrow.

  To hell with that, I said, embrace your own. And then

  there was that nice young woman, Arbus, who came and talked,

  talked brilliantly, took hours setting up the shot,

  then said, I’m very sorry, and just walked away.

  The way the sunlight plunges through the opening

  at the top around the center tent pole like a spotlight

  cutting through the smutty air, and it fell on him,

  the third, a boy of maybe sixteen, hardly grown,

  sitting in the fourth row, not too far but not too close,

  red hair flaring numinous, ears big as hands,

  gray eyes that nailed themselves to mine. My mother,

  I remember, looked at me that way. And a smile

  not quite a smile. He came twice. And that second time,

  just before I thanked the crowd, I’m so glad you could

  drop by, please tell your friends, his hand rose—floated,

  really—to his chest. It was a wave. The slightest,

  shyest wave good-bye, hello (and what’s the difference,

  anyway) as if he knew me, truly knew me, as if,

  someday, he might return. His eyes. His hair, as vivid

  as the howdahs on those elephants. In the posters

  where I’m not. That day the crowd seemed to slither out,

  to ooze, I thought, like reptiles—sluggish, sleek, gut-hungry

  for the pleasures of the world, the prize, the magic number,

  the winning shot, the doll from the rifle booth, the girl

  he gives it to, the snow cone dripping, the popcorn dyed

  with all the colors of the rainbow, the rainbow, the sky

  it crowns, and whatever lies beyond, the One, perhaps,

  we’re told, enthroned there who in love or rage or spasm

  of inscrutable desire made that teeming, oozing,

  devouring throng borne now into the midway’s sunlight,

  that vanished, forever silent God to whom I say

  again my little prayer: let me be one of them.

  Usher

  1954, Nathan Gold, a student at Union Theological Seminary, working part-time at the Loews 83rd Street Theater, Manhattan

  Dear Sollie,

  Master of Kaballah, each cryptic point

  of David’s star, now casting I Ching hexagrams

  in hipster Berkeley. So this one’s in hexameters,

  an undercurrent, roughly six feet under—no,

  not death, but bad news, fear and failure, everywhere:

  Robert Moses, goddamned Cross Bronx Expressway,

  the parting of the Red Sea is what that fascist bastard

  thinks, I’m betting, though the Golds were never Reds

  except for Uncle Mike, and now where do they go,

  exiled from their homeland and beloved Yankees.

  And Sivan in her condition. And their turncoat son

  leading goyim and Manhattan’s great unwashed

  down dark aisles to pray before the gleaming gods

  of Hollywood, returning each day to the classrooms

  of German theologians for whom God is a puzzle,

  a conundrum made darker yet by that Danish Rabbi,

  Kierkegaard. So here I wait, lean on gilded,

  faux-Moroccan walls, and stare worshipfully

  at plaster masks of tragedy and big-mouthed

  comedy hung overhead, blue-green bulbs

  for eyes that blindly gaze not at but over us,

  lost in their abstractions and detached as always

  from the laity, their stench and squalor, floors pocked

  with Dubble Bubble and the stale, mingled smells

  of soda, buttered popcorn, licorice, and ammonia.

  Mr. Hinkle, our gin-head manager, has passed out

  in the upstairs office once again, and Brownie,

  the homunculus projectionist, is no doubt reading

  fuck books and sucking Jujubes and Milk Duds

  while I wait, armed with flashlight and Kierkegaard,

  that monster, Either/Or, because my paper’s overdue

  (though useless, really, after yesterday’s debacle).

  Are those made happy by A Star Is Born, warmed

  by love’s ruin and resurrection in The Country Girl

  really in despair? Churchyard, that joy killer,

  thinks so. I say, let them wallow in the shallows

  of the silver screen, the smart-assed repartee of Tracy

  and brainy Hepburn, the lurid Technicolor charms

  of Vista Vision, Gene Kelly dancing in the rain,

  Gary Cooper’s quick-draw Jesus in High Noon.

  Tillich just won’t stop with his ultimate concern,

  ground of being, courage of despair, his God

  above God, and in between, illusions: movies, yes,

  but more, the life that copies them. Crossing Eighth,

  I saw a woman, hair swept across one eye

  like Rita Hayworth, walk into a bus-stop bench.

  Blind humanity. Niebuhr would have loved it,

  Tillich, too, the grandeur and the misery, New York,

  the world, everything’s a metaphor to them.

  But misery like Sivan’s, glioblastoma multiforme,

  do they know that, those Graeco-Latin syllables

  baroque and swollen as the thing itself, fat tumor

  feeding on the brain, burning from the center

  out, and those prick doctors without the balls to give

  one cc more Dilaudid than the law allows.

  So there I am, just another
addict trafficking

  in horse among the freaks of Hubert’s Dime Museum

  and scoring D from the trembling future surgeon

  who uses it to pay tuition. God, the crap

  we do to make a life. Sin? The world is sin.

  We go down, oh, I mean down, into that basement:

  Jesus, those little stages dim with burnt-out bulbs,

  the curtains jerk back, lo, and there is lovely Olga

  and her beard, Sealo the Seal Boy, The Armless Wonder,

  Albert-Alberta in his/her hermaphroditic glory.

  Baudelaire’s “floating lives,” or as Sivan said,

  “Disneyland in hell.” But, of course, they’re us,

  we’re them, and we pay the price, cheap as it is, to see

  ourselves.

  Ah, New York when she was well: Al Flosso’s

  magic shop on 34th, my God, late Saturday

  one afternoon strolling down from Central Park,

  bronze leaves spilled like coins along Eighth Avenue,

  and there’s Al himself pulling quarters from the ears

  of little kids who spend them all on props, Zombies,

  Imp Bottles, Crazy Cubes, tricks for turning water

  into wine, if happiness is wine made holy,

  and I think it is, or was. Later, fine dining

  at the Automat to save a buck, Eucharist

  at Smokey Mary’s, then all those jazz clubs lining

  52nd Street, and that’s the night at Birdland

  the great Eddie “Lockjaw” Davis went toe-to-toe

  with Sonny Stitt. Pure heaven. Jimmy Ryan’s, Five Spot,

  The Famous Door, Three Deuces, Sivan’s long auburn

  hair now gone but brilliant then, bathed in neon,

  big riffs streaming out of every door, a kind

  of aural exegesis of forbidden texts:

  “Love for Sale,” “Strange Fruit,” “Ornithology.”

  Long time passing. Then yesterday in systematics

  Tillich demolishing Parmenides by way

  of Plato’s Sophist: Any image is a blending:

  Nonbeing closed in Being (my loose translation).

  And so the movies, the technology of film:

  the image held before our flawed, half-blind gaze,

  black ribs separating every frame, that darkness

  never seen but always there: in On the Waterfront,

  Saint and Brando in the fulcrum of their fates,

  Manhattan floating in the thinning, pearl-gray light

  behind them, and that cinematic night surrounding

  every second of their ticking lives, unseen,

  ubiquitous: Nonbeing, nothingness, the ontic

  absence at the center, or between the frames,

  of the waking life. “I could have been a contender

  instead of . . . what I am,” pleads Brando to his brother:

  who he’s not held forever in the embrace of who he is.

  “Persistence of vision,” I tell Tillich, that’s what it’s called,

  the fantasy of life in motion while in fact

  a little death, NONBEING, separates each frame,

  each moment in the shadow play of happiness,

  and God in all His wisdom is the projectionist!

  THAT’S OUR METAPHOR! Wrong God, he says. The God

  that can be known cannot be God. Well, that finished it.

  I swear, the man’s a neo-Gnostic, a magician.

  Imagine, the greatest theologian in America,

  a Bronx Jew shouting at him: THEN WHO THE FUCK

  IS GOD? So, THE END. Alpha and Omega. Sivan

  said from the beginning it would end this way.

  I’m an usher, Sol. That’s all. Light in hand, I take

  them down, or up, the Heraclitean way, into

  that little night, into—no, not Plato’s cave, Lascaux,

  or Rheims—but the purest form of K’s aesthetic life,

  and there they sit with the passivity of angels,

  God’s children in their ontic moment, looking on,

  amused, uplifted, frightened, haunted, grieved, lost

  in the deceptions of the beautiful, the real unreal,

  and they are for those ninety stolen minutes saved:

  Pavlic, from the corner newsstand, shutting down

  for matinees—war films, westerns; Mrs. Kriegan,

  who cleans bathrooms at St. Bart’s and weeps through all

  the love scenes; Sivan, too—turbaned, thin—at every

  bargain twilight show for Singin’ in the Rain,

  she knew all the tunes and sang them sotto voce

  on the subway home; that sad, small man who wore

  Hawaiian ties, a Dodgers cap, and tennis shoes,

  saying, every time, the rosary on his way out.

  All of them, the drunks, bums, lovers, priests, housewives,

  cops, street punks shooting up, whores giving blowjobs

  in the balcony. I usher. I take them there.

  Remember Colmar, the Isenheim, when we were high

  on weed, big brass gong of the risen sun, His hands

  pushing outward from within, and you, my brother,

  in your reefer madness, cactus, and who knows what

  shouting “Fire” till I could bring you down? Today

  in Country Girl, Grace Kelly at the ironing board,

  and Brownie upstairs falls asleep at the projector, film

  sticking, flap, flap, then stuck, no one to turn the lamp off,

  small ghosts of smoke, a black hole starting in the center

  of the frame, (the Big Bang must have looked like that),

  flame eating outward at the curling edges, spreading,

  Grace swallowed slowly by the widening fire, then gone,

  the film snaps, bringing down an avalanche of light,

  the sun’s flood a billion years from now, earth sucked

  into the flames, lurid, omnivorous, the whole room

  stunned and silvered with it, shadows peeled away,

  each gray scarf, each shawl of darkness lifted, the audience

  revealed in all their nakedness, their uncoveredness

  and soiled humanity, among the candy wrappers,

  condoms, butts, crushed Dixie cups, as we wait for Grace

  to reappear, the iron to move, the mouth to speak,

  for love, Sol, the movie of our lives, and for Sivan.

  Hart Crane in Havana

  April 26, 1932: They breakfasted on board before making their way into Havana, and after Hart had pointed out the café where they were to meet, . . . he slipped down a street in the white, gold, and azure Cuban capital and for one of the few times in his life disappeared entirely. He wrote postcards . . .

  —CLIVE FISHER, HART CRANE: A LIFE

  And saw thee dive to kiss that destiny Like one white meteor, sacrosanct and blent At last with all that’s consummate and free There, where the first and last gods keep thy tent.

  —THE BRIDGE

  Dear Wilbur,

  In Havana, Hotel Ambos Mundos,

  Orizaba docked six hours, and I’m drinking

  Sazeracs (absinthe and bourbon), sans ami

  though recall Ramón Novarro in L.A? Second

  only to the Hoover in the cupola Grace

  caught me with. No adventures here, home soon

  if I can face it—empty-handed, Guggenheim

  exhausted. View from absinthe-land: blue and gold

  like the Maxfield Parrish prints my father used

  to decorate his candy boxes.

  As ever, Hart

  Dear Sambo,

  Je ne suis pas Rimbaud! Though once I was.

  Her undinal vast belly moonward bends. Such lines

  extinct now. Prescription: iodine followed by

  a bottle of Mercurochrome, slashing Siqueiros’s

  portrait with a razor blade. When Lawrence talks of

  “going down
to the dark gods,” he means sex of course

  rather than its sister, death. Remember Hartley’s tale

  of Albert Ryder, standing just outside his hostess’s

  window watching Christmas dinner? Thank you so much

  for inviting me. A freak, Sam, is what I am. So praise

  to you and Otto Kahn,

  the uninvited heart

  Dear Bill,

  Hotel Ambos Mundos (Both Worlds): Art

  and Life? Hemingway, Room 511, just checked out

  (of which, art or life?) My third Sazerac, memories

  of Minsky’s, while legs awaken salads in the brain,

  and mine’s a Waldorf now, Ouspensky’s New Model

  where time’s a motion on some higher spatial plane

  (cinema, still photos moving in a dream of time),

  and time’s running out, compañero, a broken motion,

  Icarus in flight. Love to Susan and bambino,

  Hart

  Dear Lotte,

  Holed up in a hotel bar, I think

  Cleveland Charlotte knows me well as anyone,

  and when I wrote to you, “The true idea of God

  is the only road to happiness,” or something close

  to that, please tell me what I meant. One morning,

  drunk, Cathedral Santa Prisca, I climbed the tower,

  rang the bell-rope that gathers God at dawn, though

  no God, no waking pilgrims, just the local Law

  and, I confess, a music, triple-tongued, vowels

  inside of vowels, a kind of happiness. Love. Hart.

  Dear Allen,

  “Le Bateau ivre” is prophetic, so now

  why not The Bridge? Sometimes I fear it’s just some sort

  of spiritual boosterism for empire America.

  And then there’s Winters with his aesthetique morale:

  form, meter as the reins to hold in check the wild horse

  of the poem. But damn it, METER IS THE HORSE,

  the very heartbeat of the horse, so drop the reins—

  OK, I’m drunk, but word is more than word in that

  or any poem, Jesus, I stood there, 3 a.m.,

  on Roebling’s cabled god, its welded, sculpted iron

  embrace, staring at Manhattan, tears runneling

  my face, the magnitude, the awful holiness

  and pride of it, waves beating on the piers below,

  Dear Grace,

  borne back ceaselessly into the past,

  childhood poems you read to me each night and it

  was language, diving down into the language, fall

  through consonant and vowel, wash and wave of it,

  etymology’s dense, green growth, labyrinthine

 

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