Author Archives: Tony Brown

About Tony Brown

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A poet with a history in slam, lots of publications; my personal poetry and a little bit of daily life and opinions. Read the page called "About..." for the details.

Imminent Birthday

Looking for a gift?
This list
should give you
something to work from:

Favorite song:
an open tuned guitar,
randomly banged upon
unti it falls out of harmony
and stops sounding sweet.

Favorite book:
the burned one.

Favorite movie:
any set of credits.

Favorite food:
the fattiest, saltiest selection.

Favorite drug:
any of the Obliterati.

Favorite memory:
No real favorite, but
most persistent is of
the near death car accident,
seeing the boulder at the last minute
and swerving — senior prom night,
otherwise a good if dim memory.

Favorite photo:
me at 20,
peeking over the top
of a headstone
that bears my name.


The Insulted Clock

The insulted clock
sees couples kissing
and stews, ticking indignantly
as they stop time.

What, she says,
is the point of me
when it’s so easy
to forget me?

Come on, she says
to one pair — two short women
wrapped in each other,
hands in each other’s hair.

Come on, get it over with,
get back to being able to hear me.
You can’t get away with eternity
forever,

no matter how good it feels.
I want to get my own hands on you
and remind you that no moment
should be immortalized

above any other.  Love me
and my insistence on forward
and direction and beginning
and ending.  It’s the best advisor

we have, that knowledge
of short time.  You’re messing
that up with love, pleasure,
with your deafness to me. 

Keep this up too long
and when you do come around
I’ll hurt you more than I want to,
and it’s nothing you’ll get over soon. 


Leaning And Sweating

Sometimes,
I let myself believe
I matter,

then the wind comes.
I lean away from it
just a little,

and then the sun forces
a hat onto my head 
merely by shining,

so I resolve to be quiet
and insignificant,
just another part of the world

working my small practice.
If it matters, it will matter.
What I do, I do because

I was made to —
what work is mine to do
was given to me,

and the importance
of me to the work
is as incidental as the sweat

on my brow is to the sun:
something to be wiped off,
a distraction.


“Americanized”

Very pleased to say that “Americanized,” the 2008 album by my poetry and music duo “The Duende Project,” is now available on iTunes and Amazon.com for purchase…

Our first effort at a focused and coherent suite of pieces, the album is an extended meditation on the nature of what it means to be an American. Includes work focused on heritage, identity, and larger social issues.  My vocals backed by my performance partner Steven Lanning-Cafaro’s virtuoso electric bass and mylon string guitar.

You now have two album choices from us, including our most recent release “The Duende Project” — and other outlets will follow soon (eMusic, etc.) for both.

Please visit the iTunes store, search for “The Duende Project,” and give us a listen.  Consider making a purchase of one track or either whole album!  Thanks…


Farewell Prayer

Let your breathing go,
slack your grasp on day.

Turn your eyes inward
to the frame,
see ivy curling and clinging,
rooting the cracks,
tearing down its own ladder
as it climbs…

as ever intended,
as required;
and now, what you at last desire,
for this is all that’s left to do;
it will be easier soon for you.


Differentiation

yesterday
though it was daylight 
I saw myself as a night landscape
holding multitudes
embracing divisions

I made an effort
to represent myself as split
to others
looking for pity
or a blessed contradiction 

poor me
and me
and me
who cannot connect
and remain at war 

then last night
I saw birds
flying across
all our backyards
with the moon behind them

in daylight
I might have known the difference
(if they were indeed different species)
but last night they flew together 
and they seemed the same

whatever distance I imagine lies
between the voices I speak in by day
is only measurable in mythic units
that do not in fact exist
when I’m by myself in the dark


Within Reach

At the end of a tangled day
I want a house that lets me in
when I’m tired, cold,
and ready to rest.

I want someone to offer me
the sweetness of kinks straightened
and knots cut or unraveled.  

I want a meal that does not feed on me
for hours after I’ve eaten it.

I want a few fine things to comfort
my bruised hands.  I want to touch
the good work of similarly 
bruised hands.

I want to sleep,
dreamless, 
for a whole unbroken night.

I want, I want, I
want.

I’m done with denial. Denial
cut holes in my hands,
and these things have slipped through.
Soaked in fatigue though I am,
I want to rouse my deadfall body 
to reach for those things,

and I want them to be
within reach. 


Bullet Points

Been sitting here in the chamber
a while now, looking down the barrel so
while I saw this coming,

that does NOT make it easier,
trust me.

Him finally putting the barrel to his head —
fuck no. I was not meant for this, so

when he at last squeezes that trigger
and the pin hits me in the ass,
I flat out refuse to fly;
I stop when I kiss his temple.
I just sit there.

He turns the barrel to his eye
and stares at me.
Bursts into tears,
shakes me free.

I’m lying on the carpet
twenty, thirty minutes
when the sumbitch decides
to try again…and I’m thinking,

ah fuck,
Tommy’s next,
I bet he don’t give
a shit how this guy
ends up —

and he doesn’t.


Prose

Prose, he screams
Prose
It’s all prose
Maddening straighforward
dog after cat after mouse after crumbs
Love after lust after like after glance
Sitck a condor in there, he rages
Wrinkle the cloth of living
so it mountains and valleys its meaning
Dam up the slow erosion of simple streams
then let it loose in torrents
I want to be excited
I want no story in the way of direct apprehension
of how it feels and means to be RIGHT THERE NOW
and that condor better make me want to soar

Prose, I tell him
Prose
Is what we have now
There’s a music in this madness someone ought to play
I like a condor as much as the next guy
But there’s nothing soaring here as far as I can see
I want our easy rivers to cut as they desire
And the land here’s flat and it needs a story to rise
I want to be excited but I don’t need to try for that
These people speak in storms if you listen
And right here, right now feels like a chest cold
Stops the breathing and strangles the throat
If I choose a poetry made from our workaday wheezing
If I choose a poetry that smells like discount soap
If I choose a poetry that wants a paycheck and not a treasure chest
I think I’m closer to the condor’s flight than you
Because the condor doesn’t soar just to make you swell with art
That bird’s looking for food
And I imagine he’s too hungry to care
if you want him for a metaphor just now

 


The Fellowship Of Christian Drunks

There we are, all together with our thick hands swollen around our bottles, the knuckles purple and white and brown like the rutabagas we sometimes gather from the ShopRite dumpster for making the rotgut that we don’t prefer but will on occasion settle into when all else is out of reach and one of us has found a place to set up a still.

We call ourselves “The Fellowship Of Christian Drunks.”  It amuses us, as most of us have only a couple of uses for the Bible.

Our motto is “When Hell starts freezing over, we’ll be the ones gathered around that last flame.”

Our first use for the Bible:

We seek certain Bibles in old flophouses and churches, in thrift stores.  Not the new editions, and no Gideons, but the good old King James and Douay versions with those thin, thickly-inked leaves…Tear a section from a page, stuff it with tobacco. Spark it, inhale, exhale. I have always found the Old Testament burns more slowly than the New.

People love our windy pronouncements, our crusty prophetic faces, our beards full of crumbs…They keep their distance because of our rutabaga hands, potato noses.  No one likes their vegetables.

Our second use for the Bible:

Our name amuses us because it promises redemption, but the truth is, we don’t know from redemption…truth is, most of us like having that Bible close at hand for its potential.  If Hell ever does freeze over, we’ll tear the pages from the bindings and start that last fire from the last embers of the Inferno…what pages we have, that is.  Most of us burned through Leviticus long ago; some of us have only Revelation left because we groove on the metaphors.

The Fellowship Of Christian Drunks!  Is there any other kind?  We don’t trust a non-Christian drunk, never let one in; how can you sink into vice without a ballast of guilt to make yourself heavy?

Rutabaga hands, potato noses, and in our chests the last beets of hope.  The ruby flesh, the pure blood of what once was healthy and growing…When Hell finally freezes, we’ll be gathered ’round that barrel full of quick-burning visions, rapt in our ragged hymns, sucking down the dregs of the poisons we’ve lived by.

At the finale, you will at last love us, if only for the sound of our singing as we fade into the ruins of the only warm place we were ever permitted to live.


Diary

All morning, the Work,
interrupted by a talk with an old friend
about the weird weather.

More Work, then more talk with another friend
about him fearing the future.
I have a lot of that to say, too.

To the store for dinner.
An old man counting out his wallet
while the cashier waits.

Late-day coffee.
The woman in front of me
clutches keno tickets.

Homeward bound
with a few bags of food
and new music in the car stereo.

Warmer now
than I was at midday.
Broke, wired, but feeling lucky.

Good things ahead, I hope.
I get the oven ready and begin,
still humming.

I can’t wait to feed another.
I can’t wait to be fed.
I cannot wait to forget the diary

and leave the entry
till tomorrow, when I may choose
to say nothing about today at all. 


Old Time Religion

I know what you want.

You want paintings 
of recognizable things.
You want poems that rhyme.
You want movies chock full
of doomed bad guys
and predestined matches
made in heaven.

Most of all, 
you want
a certain kind of music — 

you want “The Way You Look Tonight,”
you want “La Vie En Rose,”  you want
chanteuse and lounge and cabaret.

You want the Oscars and Grammies
to call to you
and you alone…

You want everyone
to stop laughing
when you ask  them to
but most of all

you want everyone to pay attention
to your faith
and follow your sacraments 
the way they used to.


Work

you let yourself fall on rocks
even if yet-unknown hands
are not there
to catch you 

and when they do not

you honestly rise
and honestly fall again,
honestly expecting
to be caught 

and when you are not

you get up again
and do not lie about your fear
but fall again
this time expecting
to be caught

and when you are not
you do it again
and when you are not
you do it again
and when you are not

you get up again
and fall

eventually you break the rocks


Locally Owned Coffee Shop

Bored with the couch
and the desktop,
bored with this particular
slant of light
this particular
winter morning,
I decide to work today
from the locally owned
coffeehouse.

This morning,
reassuringly,
there is obscure
electronic
music
in the air here.
I don’t know dubstep
from dimbulb,
but I do know  

this means
I won’t need to
think past something
I will be compelled to analyze,
like a folk song’s picking pattern
or a well turned lyric,
just to get work done.

Instead
there’s a completely reasonable
amount of squealing and skronking
and screwy rhythms,  
stuff I don’t care enough about
to dissect and be distracted by.

Hustle myself to a table
past two poets,
five bloggers, a rare G+
user of undetermined utility,
and one old cat
surfing for info on bedbugs.

As is the tribe’s custom,
the badge of the white Apple
glows everywhere.

I crack open the laptop
and begin —
a perfunctory spreadsheet
for my perfunctory consulting business,
a half-done poem,
a training manual in progress —
all on the screen at once.

I plunge in
to all of it at once
(so really, I plunge all the way
into nothing at all)

but not before noting
(internally of course, 
as none of the staff here
will care)

how much I love my locally owned coffee shop
and its dedication to not being
a pleasant place to get work done.
It’s good for my work ethic.
It’s good for training my focus.
It’s good for not distracting me
with eclectic atmosphere
or customers:  here there are
nothing but the semi-employed 
hoping the furious typing and surfing
gets them somewhere
else.

It’s almost the same 
as having an actual office
to go to once again.


Dust Storm

distraught parents
don’t know what to do

their children
have fallen in love
with dust storms

they reach for a bible story
god
is coming soon
come in out of the grit

the kids are otherwise enthralled
they aren’t waiting for that late god

instead they start a faith
borne up by watching the wind
bore holes in rock

for their parents’ faith
has bred in them the need
for something to judge