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.

30,000 Mako Shark Teeth

The size of how much I hate
is measurable only by
using shark teeth for the base unit:

I hate you five shark teeth, which is to say
not much.  I hate that fifty shark teeth,
a pretty fair amount.  Over a hundred
shark teeth and growing, that’s
a healthy hate indeed.

What size shark,
you ask.
I lessen my hate for you
by one tooth.

Good question,
I say.  Mako.
And why not great white you ask?
I don’t want the base unit
to be that big.  I hate something
one shark tooth it’s really
not much.  Inconsequential,
really.

I didn’t ask,
you say.

Then you ask,
How do you measure love?
Is that just no shark teeth?

Ah,
I say,
that fifth shark tooth
back in my head,
no.  I don’t think
you can catch love in a nautical
metaphor.  It’s
more atmospheric.
Maybe it’s clouds or breezes.

I haven’t thought much about it,
I say.  I should.
But it’s not just no shark teeth,
I say — I promise.

A mako shark must have just lost
all the 30,000 teeth
allotted for his lifetime
all at once,

for here they are
in my hands,
piled high in my arms,
and I am bleeding.


Worcester By The Sea

The places 
that call most to me
I imagine as oceanographic treasures:

Moscow, undersea mountain,
pressed by the weight and cold
of the dim abyss;

Venice,  tangled in kelp
at the surface, its pieces joined
with sodden ribbons;

London, barnacled anchor,
its crust hiding
secrets, history, and good lies;

New York, that great sponge,
porous, soaking in the flowthrough
from all the world’s currents; 

Tikal, Angkor Wat,
Tiahuanaco, Rapa Nui; out there
in the misunderstood margins,

waiting for the time to be ripe
so they can rise and erase 
“Here Be Monsters” from the old charts.

Worcester, at first, didn’t seem like much to this old salt.
Arid, stoic, sticking up in the inland air.
At first glance, not even a bit of interesting flotsam.

It’s instead like visiting
a landlubber older brother
who pushes me roughly into the big chair

when I come through the door from a journey,
teaches me rudely but not without care
how quickly I can lose my sea-legs

once I sit for a while. “This is what it feels like
to be home,” he says. And it is that.  
A good place from which to watch the sea. Home.

 


The Crazy

For the remainder
of this well-lit day 
the night-light in a little girl’s room
will be whispering:
soon will come our time.

Black tire marks on the streets
will settle in, bake to gray,
resting assured that come the night
they’ll be invisible — no evidence
of near-disaster to be seen.

The child who was almost taken
by the Crazy will be safe inside her head
from moment to moment. She’ll almost forget
what happened, how the Crazy skidded up
to the sidewalk and then left as swiftly

when she began to scream.
Tonight in her pastel room
the nightlight will do its ambiguous work
of dispelling some shadow and amplifying
the rest, and she will not sleep.

As for the Crazy, dark and light
are of no matter to one who sees
the rainbow in his drink,
the wet red sickle beside his plate,
her hair in his knotted hand.

Light and dark are at play
for him, and he goes through the dark
to find sick light which leads him back again
to insomnia and the thought of the child
and her fair hair and face

just before she screamed,
just before he turned away
and did not do what he’d planned.
No matter; day follows night follows day.
It will happen — another girl, another way.


Faith

A patron saint of good circumstance
and found money
slipped off the earth into a ravine 
and was lost.

A patron saint of lost causes
went missing. 

A patron saint of pastry chefs,
coated in flour, stopped breathing.

Are you hungry? Are you broke?
Are you forever lamenting your luck?
A patron saint of the pure voice
pushed his earplugs deep into his head
the minute you started complaining.

God doesn’t love you.
God doesn’t see you, in fact.
God reserves holy oversight
for the largest:  play of planets
and stars, winds and climate
and sustainability.  You’re the mote
carried through the grand scale.

All right then:

are you ready now
to save yourself?  Isn’t this
bracing —

the cold 
we find ourselves out in
and how we have no choice
but to stay awake?


Green Bell Peppers

green bell pepper smell 
all through the house
and not a pepper to be found here

maybe my grandmother’s come
and is ready to roast them
on the plates of her old gas stove

her gone these ten years
and the stove’s been ripped out
and junked almost as long

but the house smells like bell peppers
turning black on the iron plates
almost ready to be peeled

my fingers are itching
to set to work under her cataract eyes
I see them not seeing me

it’s been a while
she always knew what I was doing
I don’t know what I’m doing

smelling bell peppers that aren’t here
peeling bell peppers that aren’t here
pleasing my grandmother who’s not here

 


Entity

Mistaken for a bird at the window. Caused a blood chill.
Appeared to the children from the closet.

Was associated with the scent of lilacs in December.
Opened a window; said opening was dismissed as a forgotten action.

Married the sister of the local midwife when she was asleep.
Grew into the lungs of a goat and bleated along with Miles Davis played through headphones in the dark morning.

Invited to leave, and stayed,
stayed past my welcome time and wilted the flowers in the front room.

Scribbled a song in the folds of the husband’s frontal lobe
that rang in his workshop when he’d quit for the day:

I am mechanical,
you are flesh.
I am eternal,
you are fresh.
I am the retort,
you are the calm,
you are the sermon
rationalizing harm.

Went to the kitchen and left the cupboards open for the rats.  
Became a deity to rats and whispering centipedes.

Called a ghost and was exorcised.
Went on vacation in Buffalo and returned in two weeks.

Called a demon and was cast.
Went on vacation in the china closet, cracking the antique cordial glasses.

Called a delusion and was medicated.
Lived with that pretending to be dull brass banging.

When they moved away I stayed behind
but planted a postcard in their luggage that said: I win.

I won.  I won and opened windows and carried lilacs
and lay down before the rats and taught them to sing

like small trumpets in mean mean mouths
while we waited for the next intrusion.

 


What?

Long-nailed hand,
good for picking;
short nailed hand,
good for fretting.

The contrast between
is good for making people
used to symmetry uneasy.
I like that.

Double pierced ear
used to be good for
bothering people, now
means nothing.

Tattoos here and there,
all work-safe, all monochrome
and small:  see related reference
under “double pierced ear.”

What bothers people more maybe now
is my gut.  It bothers me.
It’s gonna kill me and
it gets in the way. Is it in the way

for you? How about
the gray in my beard or
head? Help me out here —
people call me now and then

to say we ought to get together
and talk. What gets in the way
that we never do?  Something
about me seems to…kill.

I won’t
hedge on that.  Friendship comes
to me to die and that’s before
I even speak. Is it the gut,

the hair, the ink, the rings,
the fingers, the finger nails,
the smoke, the face, the eyes,
the past, the future — what?

It was never this hard before.
We came, we spoke, we did
together well.  Not now.
I have to say it’s a little piece of hell.

 


Button

When the button mums —
one plant huge enough to fill the car trunk,
covered in dark orange and simmering yelllow —
go on sale for the price of the pot

we’re close, very close to winter
because it means there’s not time enough
to get them into the ground and have them thrive
and so they will bloom and then die aboveground.

And when the Brooklyn Bridge —
its towers reminiscent of towers now gone —
fills again with bodies that this time
do not flee but resist, and sit, and wait

for the lowering arm of power to gather them in
and grind them slowly through the system,
its price soars and it won’t be sold
cheaply — we’re close, very close

to spring.  

Two crowds full of tiny faces seen from above
may mean different things —
one heralds an end, and one may herald
a beginning, but who will deny that each is beautiful?


Slightly To One Side

Watching
it approach
from a distance
and slightly to one side.

Fire-wind ahead of it;
my hair
just won’t sit still
and clumps at last
slightly to one side.

Whatever is imminent
is not going to happen
face to face.  
No eye contact between us;
all skewed instead 
slightly to one side —

I know the probability is high 
that I won’t have seen it coming
when it finally does arrive,
will likely miss
the actual moment
during a glance 
slightly to one side
of where I think 
it will arrive
which is too bad

as I’m truly curious and not afraid,

so I turn my head 
slightly to one side,
out of the blowing ash,

and say,
welcome. 


O Beloved Activist!

You’re 
the best .50 caliber
megaphone ever to bark
a slogan

You’re the most fun
anyone ever had
at a Molotov cocktail party

You’ve forgotten more
about posterboard
than most will ever know

You adore Sisyphean tasks
the way a teenager
adores every orgasm

You come running for a riot
with a sharp sense of gas
and tears and when you slump
as they arrest you
it’s like the Pieta come alive

Oh you
pretty much define my cause
and straight up come correct
like a jaguar intent on the reason
you were made

If it’s wrong to love you
for the speed with which you rage
I guess I’m wrong
for the righteousness
and if it’s righteousness I’m wrong for
I’m wrong for you

for you are opinion
and reaction and knowing
and making a life out of decisions
and clearing a path
and if that’s not worth a look or two of love
then call me the blind
waiting for the blind
to lead

 


The Father Wound

“they have the father wound”
says the handsome minister
speaking of gangbanging boys
not yet out of their teens

“they have the father wound”
he says again to the interviewer
“fathers take off
or are in prison”

“the father wound”
he says it so gently
candles in soft focus 
behind his graying voice

the father
seemingly not wound tight
despite this knowledge
despite the war outside his church

“the father wound”
cut so deeply
that a sense of wonder
that the minister thinks he can suture it

rises in the listener
upon hearing the phrase 
as if he did not distrust
that collar already 

as if the gangbangers
off-camera were infants
waiting to be picked up
by their fathers’ hands

and cuddled into health
as if assisting them into a dream
would be enough
as if a dream itself would be enough

 


Bio

Born incorrect,
unexpected,
accident of timing
and of shame.
Made his name out of spite,
out of a steel memory
and a vineyard tongue.
As the name grew
he loved everything
less and less, little
by little, until brief recall
was all that remained.  Cut
and drank and smoked into
himself.  Farther and farther
behind he fell,
a remnant of the blaze
he saw in the mirror
once.  Someone said
they loved him, but
he licked his bones
clean of the words.   
He liked alone
more than together,
silent more than aloud,
and still he talked too much
and knew he talked too much
and made insane connections
among prosaic things.  Harder
and harder for others
to bear, he longed for
a stamp that said
“Worthy” and when 
he could no longer see
a reason for it, he tramped
away and in the forest
where he once had said
“I will be…this,” he knelt and 
carved, instead, “I was never”
on his last clean artery,
and so he pitifully 
passed into that truth
and was thus proven 
completely correct.


American

not a black day at all
but a red one
seeing through
my eyelids
as if into the sun
the hot wind in my bad hair
my fat over my belt
and every ignoble moment
of this filthy life
is a swollen sty burning
I’m keeping my eyes tight shut
and I see everything

God is the heavy ray on me
snake men the peeling skin
rat women the weeping blisters
I am burning as is the outside
and all I want to do is run
into the last wheatfield left in the world
and make famine complete
utterly perfect as it ends everything

hope is for the idiot
I have one idiotic hope
when all is ash
maybe something will crawl out
look around 
say

I can work with this


Methods

Guns smell too much like family and home
and the danger we know versus
the danger we don’t know.

Knives taste a little like
ionized air and the good ones
leave their taste in your mouth.

I can never recall how many
loops there are in an official
hangman’s noose, and that

has kept me alive as I
will not violate tradition
for speed in execution.

Pills are too unpredictable
for a man of my size.
How many is too many is therefore enough?

What I adore instead: the cigarette
alcohol drugs laziness fat fast food method.
Happy is the man who goes forward

in that pleasure. There is of course
stroke and slow decline as a possible
result, but I trust my impulsive body

to get the job done swiftly
when the time comes.  And I won’t
even know it’s coming.  I can pretend

it was inadvertent.  I can forego
stealing a gun from the folks.
I can just go with no immediate agency,

exactly as I have lived.


Icelandic Fiddle Music

Fiddling on the radio at 4 AM.  
Then a singer with an Icelandic accent, maybe.  
You’re lying in bed fully clothed.  
Tonight was a banquet you chose not to attend.
Hey everyone said community demands it but you weren’t buying.
You weren’t convinced there was value in community.

All these people coming through town.
They say they love you.
Not a one comes knocking for you.
You wanna see them you gotta get your butt up and see them.
Get to the banquet.  
The banquet you hate.

Icelandic fiddlers on a 5 AM radio show.
Kids these days.
Fully clothed and lying in bed.
Lying in beds without you.
Naked or clothed lying in bed liars.
That singer whose accent you can’t place.

You don’t want to tell anyone you’re dying do you?
You want them to figure it out for themselves.
You want to hear the words from their contrite mouths:

We missed you at the banquet and came to see you.
We didn’t know.
We’ll undress you now.
We’ll sit or lie with you all night.
We adore that old-time Icelandic fiddling and singing.
We adore you too.

You hate.
You fear.
You don’t go to banquets anymore.
Your teeth are disgusting.
Your teeth are falling out.
You are exactly as old as you feel:

as old as Iceland.
As old as a fiddle.
As old as a gaptoothed singer.
As old as the weird music of just before 6 AM.
Twice as old as some of these meddling kids.
As old as throwing them out into the street naked from the bed

where you are better off
fully clothed
and alone
listening
to this crap and

waiting for sleep.