Aug '02 [Home] Terry Stokes Havana To describe the day lean into the wind a la playa buy your sunset with hard green dollars turn around in the street full of harbor sweat send out the moonlight like a simile yawn like a salty old dog with his tail curled & shake the dew from the newscasts Today I am writing a poem because I am in love with the dreary death in my life My mother gone crazy in my arms & me, also whispering death's second name I have no way to say: look out, here I come, I have the memories: sand under the toenails & the grit of life itself informing this poor excuse for a life while just down the block the new hospital blooms, blushes the millions of pesoes that illness breeds & me, well, I'd like to recline there for a while my ass in a sling again, & the auto accident so long ago coming back like a broken promise. Who am I to say & is it possible that language is the be-all, the end-all, after all? I have specific questions about technique & language itself, that ho-hum business which shivers over there in the dark as if it were coming down with something like the plague its teeth like fangs its green forehead just now breaking into a sweat its cock full, dragging along the beach like an old dog with two sawed-off legs, newsprint dripping from its jaws. ~ . These Cold Days For my friend, Pablo Armando These cold days, your country & mine, my friend, I look out over the harbor which I have the privilege to do & I wonder, my friend, are there restrictions? Who told us life would be a bloody mirage of power? Who said that everything that leaked out of our pens would be as strong as piss, as semen? & now I am in my funny country & you are in your peculiar country & when we spit across the stupid abyss, the blood words run off our chins like love juices, & it's all the same, after all. ~ . ~ [Also appearing in this issue are Terry Stokes's 1985 Havana journal (excerpts) and |