Authors: Saul Williams
with knowing. It's more wish than fact more times than we like.
Anyway, Kate will write you a song, and you can crash
on her floor, and some time in the day she'll curl next to you,
and together from the bed you'll watch something bad, Nick Jr. or
some dopey movie you've both already seen.
And she doesn't seem to mind
if you suck up the smell from the crooks of her arms,
She doesn't seem to mind if you use her for finding:
some taciturn love in her unlaundered bed,
or infinite summer
in the daytime cartoons
and the big strokes of sunlight
breaking in
through the glass, or whatever it is
that you needed to see. For every moment, t
here is
a past tense
version, a place further up
with boring banjo music, with
a new brand
of cigarettes
(whatever's on sale),
an unboxed bag of wine, and talking in circles
about what happened before.
Like, I had a train-friend once who preached
the Word of God to his dog
vis-Ã -vis hunger by way of his own.
I met his folks once. They said “the Word
of God
”
more often than anyone
and condemned us to damnation or something.
My friend's folks, you might guess, were really fine people
as leads in a different morality play, but what I need for my spiel
is bit hypocrite parts. This is called story (what can you do?
We're still terrible messengers)
and aside from subsistence (the eggs and the toast; the sun
and the earth and the air),
it's the only thing a human
can really say he needs. What the fuck is a latte?
What's consumer reporting,
or what was it that morning, with the sun breaking in?
When the sacred, muted laps of small chores began again,
the way the place hums
with people like blood cells, the coffee beginning
to gurgle, the guy who can't stand you cutting the bread thick,
and the truce he'd called by passing you the
High Life bottle filled
with hot sauce before you'd even asked. The big rock candy
mountain of it all. And some guy in some room
probably at the same time,
was flipping his shit about the President's birth.
“Don't be that guy” is the advice we're always offering.
Don't be that guy, and definitely don't be his wife.
At all times, there is something better to do,
memories to be having
or makingâthe way, that small morning,
that everyone mostly just looked and didn't talk,
except every few minutes about what they might do,
what time the library opened and where the fish bite,
and the girl in the corner who only spoke to the dog
like a bona fide adult.
She asked him, “
What do you think
, Petey
?
” like she planned
to use the answer,
or like she really just honestly wanted to know.
The highway passes through town after town after dark,
populations under each name
announc
ing numb
e
rs
like 146, 217, 91, a mush of snow disappear
in
g
against black pavement, you switch your
high beams every
few minutes
to be polite to the headlights floating your way.
You're close enough to start watching for motels, you go
to a high school tomorrow
morning
, 8:05, to talk poetry
though you haven't been able to
put
a good metaphor
in motion in months. AM radio
fizzes
,
you catch some Oklahoma City, some Chicago station
for a few lines before it shifts
into
buzz
. FM rolls
on its own, the numbers keep moving, no place to stop.
The trains all move east t
on
ight, high beams b
l
aring, poetr
y
,
you will tell them, connec
t
s w
o
rlds,
show
s
how
one thing is so much like another
that we should be ashamed
we
ever missed it. You listen
to the tires squish and
crunch
and hum;
looking--
headlights
dingy with grime,
slush smearing
across the windshield--
for metaphors.
  i
Early morning air opens
like
old metaphors,
not cool or blue but the color of
raw
clay tiles;
their feeling as they wick away the
oil
and the sweat
from the palms of your hands.
Half-red and textured,
unripened sounds
cloud above
my forehead,
pressing
my ear drums, calling to life
eyelid
circuits
with shorted switches, tracing currents
in the half-dawned harbour.
Sailboats confound into
crescents
and men with oars
pull garbage speckled
water
into small spirals.
The barnacled iron ships,
soundless
, slit the
fog
and hover in like thrones.
Thick city streets fold back upon their
crooked
lines,
appearing in the flecked and
peeling
paint, a sign
or a broken shape in the
boundless pattern
that
marks the entire cityâ
ii
these are my delusionsâthe city soaked in
symbols
like rainwater pooling and drying on the
stone
;
the markets peopled to capacity with
emblems
that parse the universe.
That in a diffusion of rubble and gray
sand
,
hidden by the
peeling
wall of a whitewashed school,
God lies down,
talking
certainty with Heisenbergâ
the two stare at the
sky
.
Near dusk they'll rise and
walk
the streets to the harbour,
every night just as the half-
light
dims and dark settles
fifty or sixty men dressed in white
climb down the rocks
and race
across the
inlet.
The
water
heaves under the
shock
s
of ploughing arms,
a shallow valley dressed in
white
foam structures
the harbour. Fuming limbs,
God
and Heisenberg lost
to roaring, and the spray.
iii
At noon I
cross
a tourist beach, out from the shade
of a white
clay
hotel, the salt up to my chest,
sun reflecting
off prisms
in the waves, forming
bands of
light
on my neck.
I turn and
wade back
to the beach, my hair still dry.
Across town I
fall into
sleep, my bloated pack
rests against my bed. The wind leavens the
morning
and uncovers the harbour.
iv
Three years and I
wake
to the roar of a furnace,
the tired shudder of dry aluminum ducts,
the need for thermostats to control a house-sized
atmosphere in the
night
.
Some
mornings
, I take Mombasa and hold its weight
in my mind, I take and
divide
my creations
from the
metaphors
that go on and on with no
need of an observer.
When I
return God
and Heisenberg will be gone.
For Mombasa is not the metaphysical
centre of the universe I imagined where
God muses with good friends.
I may concede that plodding down to the harbour,
or swimming across the inlet, two
parables
exist. Wearing plain clothes at market,
unwilling
to reveal
their true names.
v
In Edmonton, in
the grit
-snowed suburbs at night
I imagine wha
t
happens in the pale houses
as I work out w
hat
my
childhood
was, between
the walls that
I knew best
.
A mauve SUV's meaty winter tires spit
gravel and slush back into the cold street, I watch
not understanding
my own
driveway. The symbols
retreat into the
dark
.
If I cannot tell which was a load bearing wall
in my family's
house
, what separates people,
what invisible,
pulsing
edicts continue
to cluster humans
at night
,
How can I tell what is a
truth
-bearing symbol
in Mombasa, what
explicates
the swimming men,
the worn red tiles near the harbour, what
meta
phors
begin before I
speak
The mouth of the city is tongued with tar
its glands
gutter
saliva, teeth chatter in rail
clatter, throat
echoes
car horns and tyre's
screech, forging new language: a brick city
smoke-speak of
stainless
steel consonants
and suffocated
vowels
. These are trees and
shrubbery, the clustered flora battling all
hours, staccato
staggered
through streets.
Meet Rich and Eleanor on Brabourn Grove
as he wrestles her
wheelbarrow
over cobble
stones to the traffic island by Kitto Road
where this night, coloured a turquoise grit,
cathedral-quiet and
saintly
, makes prayer
of their whispers and
ritual
of their work:
bent over, clear rubble,
cut weed and plant
.
But more than
seeds
are sown here. You
can tell by his
tender
pat on tended patch;
the soft cuff to a boy's head - first day to
school, by how they rest with parent pride
against stone walls, huff into winter's cold,
press faces together as though tulips might
stem from two
lips
, gather spades, forks,
weeds and go.
Rich
wheelbarrows back to
Eleanor's as vowels flower or flowers vowel
through smoke-speak
, soil softens, the city
drenched with new language, thrills and
the drains are
drunk with dreams
.
The sky sways on the safe side of tipsy
and it's all together an
alien
time of half
life and hope, an after-fight of gentle fog
and city smog, where the debris of dew drips
to this narrative of
progress
, this city tale;
this story is my story, this vista my song.
I cluster in the
quiet
, stack against steel
seek islands,
hope
, and a pen to sow with.
There is a house that only grows
headstones
in its tiny front yard,
surrounded by a feeble
fence
. Each window is cupped by steel grates
for shutters. There is little
light
inside
. Just across the street, high rises
recall staccato stratagems of raids puncturing walls and dimpling bricks
and blood can mimic rain puddles. The house of headstones admonishes
hurried mothers, the bop of cut & measure, buck wild youth, too tough
elders headed to work, the doctor, school, toward
open-mouthed
kisses
or sweet sink of sofa , or on the passing bus or getting coffee next door.
All of them still standing, warm and breathing. Their
eyes
avoid blank
slabs eager to be etched with names. During the day, the door stands
ajar for whomever might come calling, in tears, in need, in absence.
I
As the story goes, man emerged from a void with an
incurable sensitivity to duration ticking inside his head.
With this internal antenna came a healthy curiosity
for the signals it would pick up, and alongside that
curiosity, a fear of the singular signal it sent:
I am now
.
His fear, not unfounded, had a reaso
n
to gr
ow
over time,
for whenever he pondered his signal, he was forced to face
himself, and his place, in the mirror of self-reflection:
If
I am
now,
when am I
not
?
And if I still am,
that when must be looming nearer.
Ah, sweet obsessions. His mind was nothing if not a portrait
of observations, a repository of all the evidence pointing
toward an unobservable moment when the ticking stops.
II
Just what is this ticking? What else but the gauge of how long,
of the time it takes to: make a fire, cook without burning,
watch a log become ash, touch without being burnt,
be touched without being burned, live
a
day in
the arms of a body that cares for nobody but you.