Thursday, June 20, 2013

In a Corner of the Labyrinth of Fences




This is the marina house and marina in Deale, Maryland that Earthgirl and I lived in for two and a half years years from January 1988 through Summer 1990 at the beginning of our marriage. The family friend who owns the marina and rented us the house in 1988 thought we'd enjoy seeing the inside of the house in 2013 - he's between renters and he's made improvements on the interior since 1990, the last time we were inside the house - so yesterday Earthgirl and I and Planet and Ari drove down. Photos and paragraphs for the five or six of you who've been there though not for twenty-three years.

One Deale story: I went out for coffee one Sunday morning to the 7-11, crowded because it was the only place open for five miles in any direction, so I parked next to the dumpster. Come out with two coffees, set them on the roof of an off-gold Honda Civic hatchback (which was stolen from the street at the next house we lived in in Glen Echo), and I hear whimpering inside the dumpster. Eight week old puppy in a taped cardboard box. Katie.





Our family friend and former landlord also took us to his farm in Calvert County (the blueberries are five or six days from perfect, dang), then took us to lunch at a cafe back in Deale that served - and I shit you not - the best homemade crab-cakes and tartar sauce and cole slaw and fries I have ever eaten. I shit you not. Over lunch he treated us - kindly, gently, avuncularly, as if giving us advice he doesn't give to any but family - to his inner Rush Limbaugh on economic matters and inner Michael Savage on classifications of work habits of particular racial groups. No, I mean he cites with approval assertions Limbaugh and Savage make. Always has. He's a retired world class psychiatrist who has saved the lives of countless broken and hurting people, he is one of the kindest, most generous persons I've known in my lifetime. I nodded and ate.






  • He thinks of us as brainwashed liberals yet loves us anyway because of how we've lived our lives.
  • I think of him as brainwashed conservative but love him anyway for how he's lived his life.
  • He is not the problem. I am not the solution.
  • Here's how nuts I am (and by I I mean nobody but me): No, I don't think that Michael Hastings was wet-jobbed by Corporate, though such are the days we live in the possibility is certainly plausible, but then I thought, what if he was wet-jobbed in the sloppiest fashion at a moment when a majority of Americans are temporarily freaked at confirmation of what they imagined but never thought they'd hear spoken as incontrovertibly true re: the police state we live in in order to taunt the conspiracy nuts into paroxysms of paranoid claims that damages the nuts credibility when more sloppy wet-jobs start increasing in frequency? Work with me. Strange days we live in, that's plausible too.
  • Suggesting what might be plausible.
  • Reactions to suggesting what might be plausible.
  • UPDATE! On the above.
  • UPDATE! Hastings' last article - Why Democrats love to spy on Americans.
  • Strange days, everything is plausible. For the record, I don't think Snowden is a plant. My contention is that while Snowden's revelations temporarily (and wonderfully) inconvenience Power's panopticon upper management, operators, and technicians Snowden's revelations also advance the long-term interest of Power.
  • Domestic spying with drones! but only in very minimal way.
  • Hot XXX drone-on-drone action. Not that I'll see the movie.
  • Life under NYPD surveillance.
  • Another zombie lurch towards police state.
  • On bitcoin.












THE LIBRARIAN

Charles Olson

The landscape (the landscape!) again: Gloucester,
the shore one of me is (duplicates), and from which
(from offshore, I, Maximus) am removed, observe.
In this night I moved on the territory with combinations
(new mixtures) of old and known personages: the leader,
my father, in an old guise, here selling books and manuscripts.
My thought was, as I looked in the window of his shop,
there should be materials here for Maximus, when, then,
I saw he was the young musician has been there (been before me)
before. It turned out it wasn’t a shop, it was a loft (wharf-
house) in which, as he walked me around, a year ago
came back (I had been there before, with my wife and son,
I didn’t remember, he presented me insinuations via
himself and his girl) both of whom I had known for years.
But never in Gloucester. I had moved them in, to my country.
His previous appearance had been in my parents’ bedroom where I
found him intimate with my former wife: this boy
was now the Librarian of Gloucester, Massachusetts!
 


                         Black space,
                         old fish-house.
                         Motions
                         of ghosts.
                         I,
                         dogging
                         his steps.
                         He
                         (not my father,
                         by name himself
                         with his face
                         twisted
                         at birth)
                         possessed of knowledge
                         pretentious
                         giving me
                         what in the instant
                         I knew better of.
 
                         But the somber
                         place, the flooring
                         crude like a wharf’s
                         and a barn’s
                         space
I was struck by the fact I was in Gloucester, and that my daughter
was there—that I would see her! She was over the Cut. I
hadn’t even connected her with my being there, that she was
here. That she was there (in the Promised Land—the Cut!
But there was this business, of poets, that all my Jews
were in the fish-house too, that the Librarian had made a party
I was to read. They were. There were many of them, slumped
around. It was not for me. I was outside. It was the Fort.
The Fort was in East Gloucester—old Gorton’s Wharf, where the Library
was. It was a region of coal houses, bins. In one a gang
was beating someone to death, in a corner of the labyrinth
of fences. I could see their arms and shoulders whacking
down. But not the victim. I got out of there. But cops
tailed me along the Fort beach toward the Tavern
                         The places still
                         half-dark, mud,
                         coal dust.
                         There is no light
                         east
                         of the Bridge
                         Only on the headland
                         toward the harbor
                         from Cressy’s
                         have I seen it (once
                         when my daughter ran
                         out on a spit of sand
                         isn’t even there.) Where
                         is Bristow? when does I-A
                         get me home? I am caught
                         in Gloucester. (What’s buried
                         behind Lufkin’s
                         Diner? Who is

                         Frank Moore?  



8 comments:

  1. I got to see the inside of my childhood house that my parents moved out of in 1991 a few years ago when we were back in the neighborhood and it was such a surreal experience to remember exactly where everything was and all these early memories of growing up there. Also, how incredibly small it was. That looks like an amazing first home...

    ReplyDelete
  2. "Is Franz Kafka Overrated?

    Dunno. Doubtful. But maybe it'd be better to put the question to some of thousands of schmucks who ran out and bought copies of 1984 last week.

    ReplyDelete
  3. The climactic (at least psychologically) chapter of my still-unpublished-but-newly-edited-and-in-process-of-being-revised novel takes place when your Protagonist revisits the childhood parsonage in which he grew up and has a memory of an Oedipal primal scene which unlocks for him the mystery of why he rejected his Southern roots and his family and the community in which he grew up and why, after all is said and done, he feels no guilt for having euthanized his mother but, rather, a sense of liberation.

    Book it.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Batchellors Forest Road is a Cool Road- It was my escape route out of Rockpile to go to O's games. Of course MoCo wants to screw it up--that's what the do. I thought Clarksburg was already Hessiantown Light? I am a rube. I hope Landru et al are safe from G-Burg Bahrs.

    It was great to see a picture of Ms. Katie with EG and Planet. It has been a long time. I still go to Deale once or twice a year. I will keep the crab cakes in the back of my mind.

    ReplyDelete
  5. remember .. keep talking ..funnnny .., in all ou' r different ways of talking fun'y , and then not to worry (of what we all always knew of snow dening and others of telling .. .) in that .. because only a few good fol k s will know what you/we wee are talking about . . of it's funny and serious / i can hear byrne saying ..home

    ReplyDelete
  6. to planet, ear th girl, hampster,landru .. and others that have known j./blackd' for a long while , is someth. of the end of this one him - david thomas & the pedestrians ,the new atom mind .. ? .. " thank you for coming .. can i get you anyth." .. at the end of .. . i can hear him in that ..

    ReplyDelete