Inspiration on Rye
“We must let go of the life we have planned, so as to
accept the one that’s actually waiting for us.”
--Joseph Campbell.
Yeah, it’s two a.m.
in Sin City, as the twin moons of March
hiss like licorice lawn sprinklers--
it’s all swamp gas & maple syrup sweetness
there in the cobblestone alley, where
the blasphemous bricks babble Beatles’ tunes
from their Caucasianist album & the red-velvet
cake dumpsters love to perform chest-bumps &
French-kisses, spilling
their left-over pizza crusts &
Chinese food that always tasted
like Syrian kerosene when you
touched them.
Bobalina’s Bistro-Club & Pub opens up just as
everyone else is closing their
joints down. The door marked
THE DAMNED is illuminated with sticky
sheets of firefly nipple-honey, slathered
on so thick that it sounds like a wet
weasel tail to the casual touch. It is 10’ wide & 3’ tall,
just off the alley, where the back
is the front, & easy to hear for all
the hippest trolls, those churlish
children of the night, appearing
still-born & anxious
out of spinning shadows that felt like warm ice-water when
someone passed through them,
where a hundred angry voices,
clenched like a cocaine fist, were
launched from three dozen pie-holes
baking up bombastic bacon-wrapped
ballads & herring-soaked hirsute hosannas
as smug hyenas in beaver top hats & cork
boots banged their long silver wallet chains
in the pious piss-puddles adjacent to the exit
where everyone entered.
I’ve heard through the juicy peach that the juke opened up in the
late 40’s, financed by Holocaust survivors, & rapidly became the
club of choice for a lot of the sad Beat Poets, who readily admit
that all their best poetics were first carved into the men’s
room stall doors with dull carrot stilettos, with many of their
wurst-words transcribed into hand-stitched burn marks on
the rough underbellies of laughing purple loaves of Russian
Rye, that still lurk crucified on bloody nails in the nameless
dark passage ways, unnoticed, unless some silly customer
wants to use a flashlight as a microphone, or lights up a fat
doobie with a WWII Zippo, always hearing that tell-tale click
that tastes like a chocolate carbuncle drenched in lighter fluid.
Bukowski had furious fistfights in the alley. Burroughs had sex
with Siamese twin typewriters while munching on black meat
muffins. Ginsberg ran naked, howling in pain, sporting a two
foot red dildo that was inserted in his butt. Kerouac constantly
recited bad haiku, that always tasted of rancid saki, & never
made any profit. Most of us young Turks hung out there all
night, every night, taking turns sitting in Picard’s swivel chair,
mumbling, “Make it so.”
Poets find their own
inspiration in the odd
corners of chaos.
glenn buttkus
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This was a very enjoyable
This was a very enjoyable read, Glenn. I like how you shifted mood shifted mood to match the narrative as it progressed, from a musical/jazz feel in the beginning, to more traditional alliterative verse in the middle, to beat-like poetry in the penultimate section, finally capping it with a haiku-like stanza at the end. Interesting stylistic development.
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