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.

Pieces

Which parts
of mine are
in these words?

Heart or gut, eyes
or ears.  How much
of my piece

is in this piece?
Ask instead
what parts of this piece

are my parts.  Ask
how I feel seeing
from blank holes

or poking at the skin
flush now from jawbone
to dome.  As for heart

and lungs, ask me
if I’m still alive.  See
if I spit blood when I speak.

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Negative Energy

She says,

I prefer not to surround myself
with negative people,
with negative energy

as she listens over earbuds to her eclectic
music archive:
Nirvana,
Beethoven,
Miles;

as she browses through the extensive
poetry collection on her Kindle:
Frost,
Sexton,
Plath;

doing this as she sits alone on the sofa
in the coffee house
under the reproduction
of

The Starry Night,

painted by Van Gogh
from a memory of the view
out the window of his sanitarium.

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The Archaeology Did Not Mean To Oppress

The archaeology
did not mean to oppress.

It did what it could
to be fair. When faced
with the buried walls of
palaces, temples obscured
by history, all it had to offer
was interpretation flawed
because it had a starting point
and endgame predetermined,

as did the arts, the nutrition,
the design — all
wrapped in innocence
of their status as
oppressors, they simply
operated. 

The racist
canon,
the sexist couture,
the elitist diet,
the reductive archaeology

did not mean to enslave,
did not intend to erase
truth in favor of
agreement, silenced
wisdom, stunt
voices.  What they were made to do
they did faithfully, dumbly,
and well. 
It was hard for anyone
to imagine
once they were done,
except for those who
slipped through
by chance,
by hard lesson,
or by listening
to the whispers
mortared into those original,
ancient walls.

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Immortals

Immortals
are easy to find:
ask around a local dive
and you’ll be pointed to them
seated with a mug
and a shot of ginger brandy
at a spot on the bar
grooved to match their perpetual
elbows.

Johnny, for instance,
one hundred and sixty if
he’s a day, recalls
how they cut the tree
that made the countertop
where the cash register sits.

Count the rings in the grain, he says,
and I’ll tell you a story for each band.
But before you start,
pour me another
beer and a bump.  Stories
are good but the now-buzz
is better, that’s how
I stay alive.

Maybe if you buy this round
and join him in it,
you’ll end up here too,
telling Johnny-stories
to seekers
a century from now.  Immortality
smells like an old drunk, sharp
with sweat and herbs
and the hoppy scent of sticking around
long after people forget you’re alive.

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Emptyville

Connecticut driving means
crossing many city lines,
passing many signs that say

“Welcome To The City Of (Your Name Here).”
Whatever line you cross,
always one view from the driver’s seat:

a lot of empty mills.
A lot of empty cubicles.
A lot of emptied mills

that were filled for a while with cubicles
and now all are empty again.
Without the signs to correct me

you’d think you were in
Emptyville for
three hours straight,

except for the roads not being empty,
ever.  The whole state
is going somewhere,

downhill, uphill,
rolling over lines and passing those signs
that say “Welcome To Fill In The Blank.”

There’s a networking event
for out of work professionals in every town.
All those “Hello My Name Is…” name tags

on smart blouses
and sharp lapels,
all those resumes that say,

“Seasoned financial services professional with experience
in all aspects of the industry. Driven by results,
solid leader and team player; versatile;

able to hit the ground running.” All those eyes
on the eyes of the people behind the tables,
taking those resumes under consideration.

Later, all those name tags crumpled
on the floors of all those
once-affordable cars

holding just enough expensive gas
for the drive back across
city lines, past city signs —

“Welcome To Once Upon A Time,
Welcome To Just Passing Through.”
Uphill, downhill, north, south,
driving through Connecticut,

past all those refurbished mills
and the echoing cubicle farms
with the department nameplates on the walls:

“Accounts Receivable, Accounts Payable,
Legal,
Human Resources.”

If you find yourself in Connecticut
in an empty office building, it’s perfectly OK
to switch those signs around

if you’re so inclined; it’s not like anyone
who comes here after you
is going to know the difference.

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Gratitude

Thanks for the shrimp
and the butter on my chin.
Thanks for the way they pop
going in.

Thanks for the momentary,
the transient, the true
for a moment.  Thanks for
sharing my ineptitude.

Thanks for the level gaze,
the fingers tip-tapping on my wrist.
Thanks for the falling, the landing,
soft focus, pulse, resist.

No knee to take, no head to bow.
Thanks for the upright posture, your stand
in favor of receiving my difficult offer.
Thanks for open ears, open hand.

Gratitude’s a piece of charred wood
with a core still sound and deep grained.
Thanks for your willingness to burn
when you lifted it from my flame.

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Adam’s Joy (draft)

They were the People. 
The People Who Defined. 
Who took to heart the dictum
that good fences make good neighbors.
Who wanted to be seen as Good Neighbors
and had to reconcile that
with the need to own completely
both what was inside
and what was outside
The Fences. 

So they were The People,
and the others were The Others.  Easy at first
when all that was required was to say
this is a House and that is Not, this
is Our Side Of The Fence and that is Yours
(also defined as Theirs For Now). 

That’s a Rabbit
than can jump freely over, and a Fox
that can follow.  That’s a Stream
which cuts through.  (They call it a Creek
over the Fence.)  That Stone
is the defining Stone.  Any other stone
is measured against that Stone, is found
Wanting.  Easy, easy,
easy…Adam’s Joy,
they called it.

The People ran into trouble
when it came to the abstract: what is Freedom, for instance,
when there’s that Fence plainly creating an exception
to however Freedom would come to be defined?
Take this Poetry, they said,
or this Painting, or this Rhetoric;
this Music.  How to define those things
when there’s another definition over the Fence
and we need to include both if we are to own it all?

Perhaps, said the Wisest Of The People,
we could define by negation to begin? 
So the Others have no Poetry, no Art,
and we can say that what we have Is,
and theirs is Not That, and What We Have is
Not Theirs?

But what if we want That Which They Have,
said some of the People.  And what if we consider
that they may have their own definitions?  Perhaps
Adam’s Joy is cumulative and not exclusive.
Perhaps we may find more Joy over the Fence.

Then we shall redefine enough to hold them
in our Paddocks and Pastures, said the Wisest.
We shall move the Fence, and call their definitions
into question for being Lesser, or Stolen.
Or perhaps,

you are not of the People?
Perhaps we missed something when we fenced you in
with us? 

Whatever, said a painter
and a sculptor and a poet.  Whatever,
said the Free. 
We just do.  We
are the source of definition,
and the Fence is nothing to those
who have no idea of neighborhoods.
Who look over the top
and never look down.

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The Fan

There you are,
resplendent
and undeniably
on the slab, perhaps
prematurely but
still certain of
the oncoming
outpouring of grief
and accolades —
how much did you have to spend
to get this deep into the luxury
of wallowing in your own mortality?

If the ring on your finger
falls off when you decay,
can I have it?  Is it
a poison ring
with a compartment
full of rationale? Or
instead is it a charm,
scarab as saturated
with your obsession
as any Egyptian artifact?
Seems a shame
not to perpetuate
your masterpiece of suffering,
not to allow someone else
the chance to extend
the metaphor
for a few years yet;

let me try it on at least;
let me see what I can do
with what you’ve started.

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Vintage

In pursuit of
an indescribable
quality, hipsters
search for vintage

as if past
holds spice
not easily found
in present.

Without pretending
to be ancient, still
obsessed with
their own youth,

they adorn firm wrists
with patina-dull watches
they will overwind
and deck taut throats

with cameos
as if those permanent
faces could mask
how their own

will soon droop
and vanish
into that same past
they revere

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Retort

this is just to say
I read
your note

if you think
poetry excuses theft
you’re wrong

however

I am prepared
to drop the charges if

you’ll replace
the plums

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Settling The Guitar

into the lap.
hand on the gloss —
quick rubout of the spot
on the bass side.  first note
a B fretted high on the first string.
always, the same note to begin —

all art a recovery
from first stroke.  first stroke
always awkward, always the same.

settling the guitar into the lap —
angle its face up, music up
and out in ascent.
tough on the left wrist, though.
tough on the hands that have to work
the column of sound.

the wood’s too bright
to make this dark a song
this Sunday.

into the wood, settling
the guitar, the axe
on the leg.  chop at it —
and a beer would taste good
if only convention kept me
from opening one this early.
and I would have to stand up
and I’ve just settled the guitar,
the axe, the music into place.

settling the guitar into place
for playing.  chop wood, carry
a tune.  woodshedding a new song.
settling into place.

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OSPREY

you call yourself a poet
which means you arrange words
into patterns for fun or
profit as do the professional
crossword puzzlers among us.  if you
call yourself a performance poet
it means that more people
than just you and your mom
like the sound of your voice when
you describe the patterns you have been arranging
for fun or profit which makes you much the same
as a crossword puzzler who goes on the radio
to speak of crosswords.  if you call yourself
a page poet you do crossword puzzles
in the privacy of your own home.  if you call
yourself a political poet you look for clues
in crossword puzzles and tell everyone
what you’ve found.  if you call yourself
a love poet you get a tingle down under
whenever you figure out 16 across.  if you
call yourself a slam poet you get a tingle
down under at the prospect of arithmetic
which makes you a sudoku puzzler.  if you
don’t call yourself a poet at all and prefer to say
just that you write poems now and then you might be
a person who when bored or thoughtful
picks up a discarded puzzle on the train
and fills in the empty blanks left by the last puzzler
while staring out the window wondering
what’s a six letter word for fish eagle
when the second letter is S and the last is Y.
you don’t figure out it is OSPREY until you’ve left
the train and the puzzle behind and you spend
the rest of the day with a photorealistic image
of an osprey in your head all though every meeting
and dull lunch break.  
see that? 
now you are just another
person obsessed with a word and its meaning
and how it might carry you through tough times
and how it fits into a pattern
and while that sounds like it might make you
at last
a poet worthy of the claim
really you will still be a casual gamer
unless and until you become
the osprey
and forgo the debate in favor of
the hunt.

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The Morning After

First, remembering
how cool her skin was under your fingers
when you first touched it,
though it did not stay that way…then,

hearing your mother’s angry heels
in the downstairs hallway as she starts in with,
“Are you up?  What time
did you get in? Did your idiot friend

bring you home? I didn’t hear
his muffler this time — did he get it fixed?
Get down here or you’ll be late for school.
We’ll talk about this tonight.”

Still wrapped in last night,
you rouse yourself from the shining inside you
to consider the answers
you’d like to give her: no, it was not

your idiot friend did not bring you home.
He hasn’t fixed his muffler. You don’t know
what time you got home, but there’s no way
you’ll be late for school today,

and no,
you will not talk with her
about any of this
tonight.

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The Storm

We aren’t about to address the storm
if to speak will change our voices.

We’ll watch it tear our sacred groves
into splinters.

We’ll stand in front of it
as it lifts us into the rubble.

We’ll whisper as we cower
under the eaves hoping it will pass.

But to offer a word against it,
spell out our power and force it back?

No.  Not that.
It’s not a good time.  It’s not

what we were made for.  We were built
to watch it kill us

and then blame someone
for not speaking.  We were made

to be silent and let the storm
carry our voices away.

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Clouds Over Reactors

Steam above reactors:
what might be in there?

How false or honest are the possible answers?
Frankly, I don’t care. 

I adore
this not being sure

because I can fill the vaccuum
with my own terror.

I’ve been looking for a place
to put it and keep it from pressing

on my recent joy and calm.  It’s not directly
relevant at all; I don’t have to stress

that I’ll be on fire soon or turn up dripping
skin, tending a body rife with tumors.

Those clouds billow and abstract into threat —
not my threat, though. These rumors

are just art to be savored. The reactors
are my gallery, my museum of doubt.

I sit a long time before the news.
When’s the end coming? I try to work that out.

Someone’s going to burn soon.
It won’t be me.  I can watch it and be glad

even as I sob and gasp at the thought
of lives ending, lives I never had.

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