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.

Combatting Despair

I do not trust
what is called “joy”
longer
than a second or two
beyond its initial arrival

or the feeling called
“despair”
for any longer than that
either

preferring instead
to poke at each in turn
until they morph into something
called
“closely watched anxiety”

which lasts and is
genuine

because I call it so
and can understand it with my head

while joy and despair
(not unfamiliar to me
but never completely welcome)
being more emotions of the marrow

are too bone deep
and beyond thought
to be trusted
to endure

the joy may leak free and leave me in despair
the despair may freeze in there
and still me

thus leaving me either way
in despair
too deep to break apart

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Mythology (draft)

1.
always

in the beginning
a presupposed entity
sees
unity
that must be
broken:

light/dark, water/mud

then after comes
life-spark:  sometimes
all at once, plant/animal/human;
sometimes an ordinal hierarchy
develops

there must be a rebellion then

there must be some trickster
to lead rebellion

at some point
there must thus be a war
between the beings of the myth
and those who are not of the myth
and some great secret forbidden
or treasure withheld
and thus there must be
a journey to seek it

thus a hero also
who must lose in victory

there must be some conquest whole or partial
of death itself

this becomes central to the subsequent story

and eventual foretelling
of an end time
and rebirth

for the chosen
and not the others

2.
by sorting among the various
repetitions and themes
a clear eyed bigot
can justify any belief
secure in the knowledge
that it will resonate for at least
one other

thus recreating their simple world
under the shade of mythology

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For Lorena

Once, while speaking with me
of a recently deceased mutual friend,
Lorena said,

“I have never stopped speaking
to anyone who has died; that would be rude,
don’t you think?  I find the dead to be cordial
and content with their new lives
and indeed, seem to feel that
there has been no interruption worthy
of the name; who am I to mourn those
who feel no pain in their own passing?”

I looked at her, so
ordinary, so calm, sipping coffee
as if it were the most normal thing
in the world to talk this way
of communing with the afterlife,

and it all seemed possible,
even probable, at least on that morning
in June, a few months before she herself
died quite peacefully in her sleep,
before we laid her away in a floral dress
and went back to our own lives.

Shortly thereafter, over coffee (again),
the two of us sat in our customary seats
and spoke as if there had been
no intervening passage for one of us,
and I poured her cup after cup as always
while we looked out over the lake

and discussed the nature of light
and its persistence, how it would change
during a day,

how it can play and shift itself
through the laurels and over the granite ledges
and yet retain the same intangible quality
of being “light,”

how it keeps faith with us
and never completely leaves us,
even on a moonless, starless night.

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Rockdale

I gave a woman a baby once —
It was only a small one
but it felt tremendous

Didn’t foresee me turning into
Bobby Responsible
over that
but I did

For a while it worked well
Then that baby died
Left a baby shaped hole — a very small one
We leaked fast from that baby shaped hole
and dissipated

I came alone to Rockdale
to peel wallpaper
and beer labels

In a Rockdale apartment
down by the old mill
I think about that baby
who is somewhere babies go
when they’re not alive anymore
and about her
wherever she is now

I think she would not know me now
I don’t know what to call myself
Bobby Responsible may still work

but not the same way

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Everything Is A Mission

Again, for the second night,
stupendous winds in the dark.
I should take greater note of it —
after all,
everything is a mission —

but instead I sigh
and turn my face from the window.
It will wait, I say,

but will it?  What blows across the weeds
tonight?  Is there angel or demon
in that wailing?  Some lost spirit
looking for a translator?

The wind doesn’t care. 
It tells its stories
to anyone who will listen
and leaves it up to me
if I want to answer.

It will wait, I say again;
less certain, though, I fight sleep
and wonder if there is something
I should be doing now
that should not wait. 

Everything is a mission,
and who am I to decide
not to undertake it?

Knowing
that demand, I turn my face
to the wall anyway.
Sleep robs the wind of me
tonight, but the wind
will wait me out, knowing
I will have to respond
eventually.

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Grape Wine And Corn Beer

I’m the son
of grape wine
and corn beer.
Drunk on heritage,
can’t get sober.

The desert before me
is long, the mountains
hem it in so tightly,
and somewhere beyond,
the sea.  No hope of seeing that
blue in sunlight,
or its steely gray
shining needles under moonlight.
The murderous angel
of my history,
heavy in ink on my back,
wears wings too weak
to carry me there.

Always, the distance
to be traveled
remains the distance
I have traveled,
staggering, sotted
with the weight,

but I do so
knowing
to travel is the only way
to get clean.

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Cold (Political Discourse)

It’s cold
Aren’t you cold
Aren’t you surprised by how cold it is
In mid-Spring and it’s this cold
What about the global warming
I was looking forward to that
Wow
It’s cold
I saw a bear looking sleepy
There’s a snowplow still on a truck
Damn
The cold seems to be sticking
What about that oil in the ocean
We’re going to need that oil if it stays this cold
I saw a butterfly with a sweater
I saw a tree changing color and it barely had leaves
Cold
I think it might snow
I want it to be warmer
I demand it be warmer at once
Nature isn’t supposed to not conform to our expectations
When the calendar is this clear it ought to be obvious
I have a lot of calendars and they all have warm pictures on them
But it’s still cold
Cold as maybe March is cold
Not as cold as February of course
But cold
The world’s a couple of months behind
We are falling behind
What about cookouts and bathing suits
What about the top down and the beach
I blame the government
I blame fucking Obama
I blame someone
What about global warming anyway
Didn’t they promise us it was getting warmer
I’m going to stop recycling if this keeps up
It’s cold
Gotta be sixty out there and it’s supposed to be seventy
I’m afraid it’s going to stay this way
I’m afraid it’s going to go the other way
I’m afraid
Cold
Afraid
Cold
I’m going to start a fire

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The Mighty Hunters

Tentative
as my cat (also known
as “the mighty hunter” for his skill
at slaying centipedes) testing
a pile of books to see
how well it will hold him,
I approach each day
slow foot by slow foot,
not adding weight to any step
until I’m sure I will not fall.
In this way I have maintained
a perfect record
for many years,
remaining alive without
going too far. And much like
my cat (who lives vicariously
through the squirrels
under his window)
I’m fat, and neutered,
and restricted (yes,
I know it’s self-imposed
restraint but by now
it may as well be law)
to square visions of
an outside world, but
as long as my books
will hold me, I am mostly
at peace
with days such as these
and their remote dawns.

My cat, through long habit,
will not even attempt
a rush at an open door
any more;

while I still
sometimes will step out
and dare and risk
a second or two of new,
there are too often times
when things go mildly
off track and I am forced
to be more alive than I can
easily recall how to be — say,
having to address
an uncomfortable pause
in a conversation when I have blurted
more truth than I can reasonably
stand behind in further dialogue —
moments, in fact, much like this one —

as I’ve said, there are times
when I think my cat,
fat, old, and sedate though he may be
in his miniature explorations
of familiar ground,
has the right idea
and understands more clearly
the limits to growth
than I do.

So I too
more and more
test each step
for footing
as chatter and leaping
go on around me
at a safe distance
and pet the cat
with a book in my lap.
We pretend we’ve seen it all and done it all,
and play the mighty hunters
retired.

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Cigar Prayer

Thinking hard during
a night drive north
on an empty road,
the dark rolled tight around me
like a cigar wrapper.

This evening
a young girl with a strange name
asked me why so many of my poems
seem to include some reference
to being apart from my body,
inhabiting it as a foreign entity.

I know it’s true —
I am a passing voice.
Every moment a container,
a long tube awaiting flame.
I’m the filler made
to go up in smoke.

When she asked me if
I ever feel whole

I could feel the weight she was ready to hang
on the answer…

and said yes,
there are moments. 

And then I stopped,
unable or too shy
to explain.

We looked at each other.
She shook my hand and left…
and what I should have said
came to me on the road, here, now,
hot with the urgency of needing to get home
to my bed, to her…
should have said:

Don’t worry. 
It will happen,
It will be better.
Someone will set you on fire,
or you will find your own source
of spark,
and you will understand unity
as a curl of white in the air
that scents everything, that makes you
and the air and the breath and the fire
one.

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Affirmation For Small

no broad brushstrokes today

this is no day for sweeping
rationale

instead allow
only detail
through

pray that by bedtime
your eyes sting from having seen
what is directly before you

having concentrated
on tiny ants
sand between toes
fine blond arm full of hair
flaked lips
scent of garlic on sweet tongue
tomato flowers (yellow toothed bells)
finger whorls
may you then know that
there is no global only local
to be revered

and stop claiming you care for what you cannot hold in your own hands

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A note for Duende fans:

Due to concerns about the number of other bands out there called “Duende,”  Faro and I are changing the name of our collaboration to “The Duende Project.”

As we’re going to be seeking broader distribution of our work in the future, beginning with the next album, it seems a good time to do this and reduce any confusion or potential legal issues. 

Same lovable pair of cutups, different name…

Thanks.

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My Scar

The only true art I’ve ever made

is the C-shaped scar I bear
in the back of my left hand
where I once laid a cigarette down
to burn through a fifty dollar bill
in an old bar trick.  The trick
is that you challenge someone else
to do it and tell that person that
if they can hold their hand stiff
till the bill is burnt through,
they can have it.  You of course
say this knowing that the bill will not burn through
because the heat from the cigarette rises
and will only char it, but in my case
I knew this and used my own skin and cash
to demonstrate the folly of such an act,
and thanks to Jameson’s whiskey
was able to shock and horrify others
with the resultant minute long endurance
of the pain.

My hand swelled and a cavern opened
on its back, weeping pus
for two weeks after, and I never had it treated
because where would my point have been
if I had, if I’d acknowledged how much stupidity
it took to point out stupidity?  To make a fool
of myself to the point of anguish?

Now I touch that scar and proclaim

that everything I’ve done since that night
on a stage or a page, every word I’ve written
or placed in its round hole,
has been a fraud and a cheat, and only the single “C”
on the back of my left hand has been the truest Work
of making my point known,
and the only thing that mars its perfection
is that I did not put it on my writing hand,
my good hand, my false right hand
that now lays down
ersatz spectacles
of vulnerability and sacrifice for others’ pleasure,
and there is not enough whiskey in the world
to make me believe it does not hurt
worse than the fire on my left hand
ever did.

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The Pot

The matter at hand
is this boiling pot.

A first bubble rises and bursts
to herald the success
of heated metal
at causing the water
to roll. 

My own contribution
has been incidental —
I filled the pan
and turned the knob,
and this happened.

I’m trying to recall
why I did this.
All of tomorrow
sits before me
this late at night
and I don’t remember
the smallest thing
about what happened today
or why this was
necessary.

Seems a shame to let it go to waste —
what shall I cook and eat?
Let it be breakfast time!
No one ever made a law
that a day must start
at first light,

and even if I don’t know why
I started this,
I can put it to use,
certainly.

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The News Reporter

“In life sometimes
it’s not whether you win or lose,
it’s how you run the race.”  This
glittering insight
is provided by
yet another news reporter
doing voice over on a story
of a man running a marathon
with inoperable cancer. 

I wonder,
sometimes, what the news reporter
says to his children when he gets home
from his day.  “Don’t worry
about getting into college, Evan;
it’s always darkest before the dawn,” I imagine
him saying to his eldest son.  Assuring
his distraught daughter, “There are plenty
of fish in the sea, honey.  He didn’t deserve you
anyway, you’re young yet…”   And the youngest son,
still in Little League, gets “What’s important
is that you tried your best.  Let me tell you
a story about a man, a brave man
I met today…”

If that were I
facing my own children’s problems,
I’d probably be speaking in tongues,
leaping from frog to slick,
not trying to puzzle them
but succeeding in spite of myself.

I’d say to my eldest son,
“The sky is a blurred blanket,
a dingy parking lot of old dreams, and
you’ll be forever trying to unstain it.” 
To my daughter I’d say,  “Leap
into the market of sandalwood
and rejected shoes, and walk barefoot
among the stalls until you you are shod.”
And little Stevie would hear of alligators in flames
and the wings of ardent warrior kings shining
as they play catch with the hearts of clouds
among the fields of Vatican rubies.

One of them would say, “Dad, you’re so
weird,” and go back to listening
to Coheed and Cambria,

and then I’d nod
and tell myself,

“There is not enough cotton on earth
to block the impact
when the blocks of the broken Temple
fall from above.”

I see them lost,
seeking comfort in vain
from me, and
I tell myself,
as the blocks fall around me,
that this is why it is good
that I have no children:
I would likely just use them
as paving stones
on my way toward
the abstraction of living.
This is why it is good
that I have no children
in my core.  This is why
the news reporter exists:
so children can thrive
on a plane I can’t reach
through marathon
or long hours sailing
the deep seas
in the dark before dawn,
no matter how hard
I might try.

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23,000

We breathe on average
23,000 times a day

but our things each breathe
once
over the course
of their lifetimes

We do not notice
usually
that it is happening
their respiration
does not depend
on our noticing it
but
the guitars and horns
in their cases
and weapons in holsters
are in perpetual stir around us

We imagine the anima of the graphic crucifix
inhaling and exhaling
on the nail on the wall

but now contemplate the original wood
flavored with his blood

Did its breathing speed up and slow down
as he struggled upon it
or
did it remain
steady throughout

and do the remaining
possibly false remnants we revere
as relics of that moment today
breathe still?

The things we think of
as not alive
do not care what we think of them
do not care how we use them

23,000 self important breaths a day
Vibrations in the larger sacrament
Flavor and no more

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