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Revolution on Canvas, Volume 1

Page 7

by Rich Balling


  sitting in some heaven ness sky,

  I proclaimed,

  Oh Ginsberg you made me weep

  and weep the teariest tears

  for all my years, although

  only twenty, I aged with you

  and sat in my skin

  rocking and creaking

  like nana’s old rocking chair.

  And a soft chuckle,

  short gasps of breath

  that otherwise would have

  been the screams of

  beauty like some lonely

  streetlight that begs

  to be stood under,

  orange skinned

  and orange tinged …

  And to hear you sacrifice

  yourself time and time again

  and splattered your bloody

  ink and your invisible

  soul to me and to others

  and I wiped my eyes once

  again…

  I proclaim oh Ginsberg,

  you made me wish for a soft body,

  and soft hair,

  naked touches,

  and the power of the nail

  that scratches and marks

  the skin and be handled

  and and and and,

  for the cool soft sweat

  and shivers under the covers…

  You made me want to

  jump off balconies and

  out of windows testing the limits

  of constructed worlds

  and falsehoods that look

  like movie sets,

  and find the rubber air bags

  to catch me,

  and say ha! I knew it!

  Ginsberg,

  I apologize for stealing

  your style,

  I promise I’m not

  making a dime…

  Ginsberg,

  how I am supposed to

  write what you have already

  written? How will I see

  everything anew,

  and fresh,

  will they come to me?

  Or will I have to dig

  under the graves of dead

  plants, dead water

  to see a reflection,

  a simile,

  a verse?

  No wait,

  Ginsberg,

  don’t tell,

  don’t kiss,

  don’t, kiss and tell,

  stay silent,

  I don’t want to know,

  I want to know,

  but I want to know…

  I’ll know

  when I see it,

  when I feel it,

  when I smell it,

  and when I do, I’ll weep

  for me,

  weep for you,

  weep for the world,

  weep for everything imaginable,

  weep for dusty roads,

  and highways,

  weep for new clouds,

  and new adventures,

  weep for weep,

  weep for weep’s sake.

  for this I will sleep and wake.

  Dear Ginsberg, thank you.

  SCOTT GROSS

  From Autumn to Ashes

  Male Hooker in a Bathtub

  Ok, so it’s a blind chemical machine I’m dealing with here in the frontal temporal lobes of grades 1-4. Your parents thought you were ok until they found you hanging from the doorknob. You’re only four feet tall and that’s a long enough dick to slip into the holes in the palms of my hands. Have faith in nothing or you’ll believe in everything. I believe the receptor when we fuck. We fuck to songs that have no rhythm and that’s why I’m so in love with you. I’m so in love that if you turned your back I’d claw your fucking spine away. I’ll never sleep with medical junkie book reading whores. You’re the perfect whore. I’m losing my ability to do the only thing I know how to do and as the nights are longer I know I must take myself as easily as possible, and I’m not taking you with me. So the stairs are my up and I crawl and I crawl and I sit in the bathtub because the acoustics are better. I hope my mom and my dad are proud. I hope they understand how much I hurt. No water. That copper hit the linoleum and I released before it all fell to my shoulder. Maybe someone cared.

  JARED DRAUGHON

  Classic Case

  Down and Out

  My time spent yesterday,

  trying to control the way that life would lead me in has

  somehow failed.

  Now all I do is try to find my way out of endless possibilities of

  doubt.

  My time spent today,

  fighting to remedy all my mistakes has brought more problems

  then before.

  Still I try to find my way out of endless possibilities of doubt.

  I’ve been down and I’ve been out from time to time and in

  between.

  I’ve been sure that I’ve had doubts of all the truths that seem

  to be.

  My time spent tomorrow,

  will be uselessly hoping to eliminate the inevitable.

  I’m sure I’ll be trying to find my way out of endless possibilities

  of doubt.

  I’ve been down and I’ve been out from time to time and in

  between.

  I’ve been with; I’ve been without all of the things I seem to

  need.

  If I keep this pace then I risk everything.

  Now this overview of solitude has been reviewed.

  I’ve been down and I’ve been out.

  I’ve been sure that I’ve had doubts.

  I’ve been with; I’ve been without.

  I’ve been down and out.

  JARED DRAUGHON

  Classic Case

  Saturated

  I will sail until the ocean brings me closer to a land that

  welcomes me.

  Soon the tide will rise and wash away the island where I’ll die

  a castaway.

  Meet me down by the water.

  Don’t believe in the calm before the storm.

  My mind is saturated by the rain that keeps leaking indoors.

  The flood will fill the atmosphere; I’ll stay onboard until the

  coast is clear.

  Meet me down in the water.

  Don’t believe in the calm before the storm.

  My mind is saturated by the rain that keeps leaking indoors.

  Hurricanes seem to stare me down while drowning me.

  Now the air evaporates into water everyday.

  All the clouds gather rain as they drift toward me insisting that

  they won’t quit till I’m washed away.

  Meet me down underwater.

  Don’t believe in the calm before the storm.

  My mind is saturated by the rain that keeps leaking indoors.

  ANDREW LOW

  The Jazz June

  I Love New York in February

  “There is a class that controls a country that is stupid

  and does not realize anything and never can.

  That is why we have this war.”

  -Ernest Hemingway A Farewell to Arms

  There’s a sting in the air

  like breathing too much aerosol

  The comrades are restless

  with blank stares they learned in boot camp

  Your eyes are loose teeth

  teething on insides

  Poorly drawn war paint

  runs in hot tears

  evaporating in the steam of the sewers

  Concession stands can’t keep up with crowds

  forming on 5th Ave.

  Stomping for a recount

  and a quick camera angle

  Acute like the bend of the arm

  The poetic nature of real life sprayed in gas clouds

  tossed by brick through windows

  The highly political nature of the length the underarms

  sits side stage

  as bomb threat sirens ring from the bus statio
n

  PS 101 is out of session this afternoon

  due to paper towel rolls disguised as pipe bombs

  Kids on lock-down pick gum off the bottom of their desks

  with fluorescent rulers

  that state Murphy’s Law of, “What ever can go wrong, will.”

  A game of Contra is on pause

  in the subways of 42nd street

  Grey snakes whip through concrete arches

  bringing white power donuts to the attention of train

  attendees

  “They shot down our space ship!” rang through the station

  this morning

  The mourners navigate through early morning congestion

  saluting our flag in an attempt at courage

  while outside ducking from crop planes slung low

  This wave of filth takes a deep breath, hiccups and coughs

  filling the sewers with Rats’ blood

  Tonight will be fair warning

  and oak tag banners

  hung loosely over shoulders

  “Let Freedom ring! Lord God all mighty let freedom ring!”

  In our ears as we sleep

  and digress

  Till the wave breaks and salts this bare sunrise

  ALEX HOVIS

  Paper Models

  I’m sorry I never hurt you more than this

  My door is shut and your lies will never make it out alive

  And I am sorry that I am disturbing

  I just find sorrow interesting

  I’m pining over you and I really don’t know why

  Because I could never look at you

  Without wanting to bruise your pretty face

  And watch you cry with mascara on my fist

  ALEX HOVIS

  Paper Models

  I will never forget the way you looked sitting next to me

  And how you smiled while we rolled around on the ground

  But soon we were alone and it was time to learn your taste

  And kiss your lips and grab your waist and feel your hips

  Late nights have never been the same

  And your words a week later could have killed

  But when your heart is gone it sinks into the skin

  JESSE KURVINK

  Hellogoodbye

  The Soundtrack to the Summer.

  so i guess that this is the soundtrack to the summer? you’ve been sick since april which is about how long i’ve known you. lately you’ve been staying over because you can’t bring yourself to go home and you say you don’t remember what it’s like to be more or less content with your life. well, here’s a little jogger for your memory if you can’t quite recall the countless nights we stayed awake trying to forget about the fall: we were sitting in my room, not getting tired after two a.m. we were listening to “the wild, the innocent, and the e street shuffle.” we were sitting up in bed and i was playing with your hair and you said “the summer isn’t over yet but i feel like the trees are already dead” and i said “maybe that’s just something inside of you that’s been blooming and dying for years,” and you left with my sweatshirt like you always did, loudly out my front door and quietly into your side one. and when i finally convinced you to come back out i took you for a walk and we talked about all the things i’d been afraid to say for the last six months. do you remember now? well, do you?

  JEFF DAVIS

  Boys Night Out

  The Longest Last Call

  It’s last call at the hospital.

  You slept through it all, and these four walls warn you that

  your surgery might not be the key to fix your memory of you

  and me.

  Last call at the Hospital, emergency room is drowning in

  alcohol.

  The empty halls, and empty chair means you’re all alone and

  no one cares.

  You see that flickering exit sign above the entrance to the

  morgue, and you can’t wheel your stretcher fast enough. I see

  the flickering behind your eyes and your bloody beacons are

  begging for pulled plugs and empty sockets.

  I traded arteries for batteries to keep you living through the

  winter, drained your blood and pulled out splinters, sat back

  and watched the curtain close and screamed applause to an

  empty crematorium.

  DANNY SMITH

  The City Drive

  Hadley

  Gertrude Stein was good to me,

  paintings, cakes and l’eau-de-vie

  She understood

  the bad from the good

  A good cafe and a false spring

  Ezra Pound knows everything

  Ford M. Ford

  never gets bored

  Hadley’s beautiful, isn’t she?

  I wish that she thought the same of me

  Jimmy James Joyce in a bookshop

  Don’t start him up ’cause he won’t stop

  Sylvia Beach

  Odéon Street

  I went out and wrote today

  They put Hemingway in my Café au Lait

  Old F. Scott

  doesn’t feel hot

  when he’s burning

  Hadley’s beautiful, isn’t she?

  I wish that she thought the same of me

  DANNY SMITH

  The City Drive

  All the Westmount Girls

  Call the cops

  The rain has finally become bored

  and left

  Leaving the storybook sun to sneak through the clouds

  And this tree

  Hitting the brown green grass like

  400 flashlights

  And there is a moment between buses and taxis

  And concrete and steel

  Where nature shows who’s boss

  The brown green grass belongs to a school

  in a city

  in a province

  in a country which is never taken seriously

  A little brother country

  A wide-eyed puppy country

  But the girls from this country

  This province

  This city

  This school

  Don’t care what the universe thinks today

  They gambol across the lawn

  They smooth the meticulously marcelled waves in their hair

  They sit on their throne and

  watch the rest of the world make mistakes

  Occupying space the size of mountains

  Their bodies can do whatever their minds can think

  (It’s amazing, really)

  And when the sun decides to visit someone else

  Tagging in the moon

  All the Westmount girls are reborn

  Hunting for a place to smoke

  And drink

  And swear

  And be

  Broken beds, forgotten names

  Fusty basements filled with boxes

  Of a show jumper’s past

  Marinating in this rotten johnnycake stench is inescapable

  But there is music on

  At least there is good music on

  And the ladybug light glows just enough

  To let you look into eyes looking back at you

  Vacant and focusing on someone else

  Morning

  Call the cops

  The rain is back

  The night has finally become bored

  And allowed winter’s water to fall

  on this city

  on this province

  on this country

  Where all the Westmount girls know who’s boss

  JOHN BOWERS

  Nurses

  We are destroying ourselves trying to find a purpose, a reason to live. We latch onto things easily, finding a temporary purpose in the clothes we wear, the car we drive, and who we associate with. We allow the allure of the media to shove a purpose down our throats, each commercial telling us to buy something ne
w to define who we are. Very easily we are tricked into believing that the size of our paycheck defines us as a person. What things we can afford then become the measurements of our worth. We give ourselves to these things because we were told they would give us meaning, and when we don’t find happiness in what we bought, we think it’s because we didn’t buy the right thing, or need to buy more and new things. We lose control and become dependent on others to tell us who we are and why we’re here. And it’s so easy to do it that way! Every waking minute we see reminders of what person we should try and be, and what we are lacking to make us that person. We are given a limited amount of options for our situation, and we are told by our society that we get to make our own choices. Any choice we make, we eventually find it doesn’t give us purpose. When we search for more choices, those too are controlled and force-fed to us, ensuring the sale of a thing to a person who feels they need it to tell them who they are, perpetuating the self-depreciation. We are constantly being told we aren’t good enough, that the individual is lacking and must belong to something bigger and outside itself in order to find purpose. We’re told that the individual is worthless unless it attaches itself to something.

  We need to step outside of it all, and see the system of failure we’ve set up for ourselves. We need to see that it is all a game we’ve tricked ourselves into playing, and we don’t need all of those things to find happiness. The individual is good enough, and we can be truly happy with ourselves. We have worth as individuals, and if we look past the choices being fed to us, we can see that we have the choice to explore our individual worth.

  CRAIG OWENS

  Chiodos

  Without a window light.

  at the touch of the lips was love.

  off of a blossom in mid air standing still.

  like stars in shapes as tall as trees.

  NICO PAOLO SY

  Auditory Aphasia

 

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