Saturday, 3 December 2011

4 a.m.: Charles Deemer

.

Image, Source: digital file from intermediary roll film

Sign, late summer 1941



Waking up to pee
at 4 a.m.

it occurs to me that
my weekend has begun

but I don't celebrate
everyone I know

who would go out for coffee
who would go out for breakfast

at 4 a.m.
is dead



Image, Source: digital file from intermediary roll film

Small town main street, late summer 1941


Photos by John Vachon from Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information Collection, Library of Congress

4 a.m.: Charles Deemer, from In My Old Age, Round Bend Press, 2011

12 comments:

  1. In case anyone wondered, yes, Charles is the brother of Bill.

    Poetry must run in the family.

    One of the things I like most in the poems I like most is the disguising of exquisite technical expertise within the rough cloak of common and universal experience.

    The subtlety of the internal rhyming and off-rhyming here -- "pee"/"me"//"know"/"go"//"m."/"dead" -- brings it all back home for me.

    It's almost 4 a.m., I'm up, everybody in the world is dead, and Charles... I'm tipping this cup of terrible Safeway coffee to you, my brother.

    And the next lonesome cup (the chaser) I will tip to my all time favourite photographer, John Vachon.

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  2. Very Zen, very pure in its artistic grace and simplicity,

    but my mind sadly wandered over to Cain
    texting at 4-something in the morning . . .

    Apologies for the reference!

    So sad how the news fills the brain with garbage.

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  3. Nin,

    Without even bothering to check, I would bet that by the time you read this comment, Cain will have been Disabled.

    But I did hear last night that his Georgia campaign director reported he's feeling "upbeat".

    By the by, have you heard the rumour that he was caught late last night in a parking lot in Massachusetts with Emily Dickinson concealed in his glove compartment?

    The "astoundingly upbeat" present mood of the entire 1%, as of the va-va-voom Wall Street week, has restored a lot of faith in a lot of hearts, so I suppose Herman is never going to have to worry about being alone.

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  4. in this 4 am
    I have just read-through posts of yours
    that cover the period between those poppies
    (Nov 27) and today's

    &
    am struck
    by
    your 'straight arrow'

    flying into the the
    Bull's Eye (of the Target):
    do check out (actually his entire book)

    chapter 6 ( A RETURN TO THE LUMINOUS CAVE OF THE UPPER PALEOLITHIC)

    which opens w an Eliot quote::

    We shell not cease from exploration
    And the end of all our exploring
    Will be to arrive where we started
    And know the place for the first time


    am REALLY REALLY enjoying reading so many of your posts (for the first time) all of a once't !

    as Geist (you quote) said/wrote:
    it is "an intercourse with nature"

    it s a damn shame we "moderns" have contaminated everything ...

    what we need right now is that necked girl dancing
    in her red dress
    14,000 B.C. and yet

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  5. This is very fine and I agree with Nin's description. Herman Cain's undoubted shortcomings notwithstanding, I have been disturbed -- a lot -- by the way the media has pursued and reported this story and Cain really has been convicted in the court of public opinion in ways that seem (at the very least) disproportionate to his proven offenses. I think a shorthand way of saying this is that I cannot ever imagine a black Democratic politician being treated this way, but it's an ugly world, certainly. The Vachon photos are marvelous. As for the "astoundingly upbeat" present mood of the "entire 1%," I must say that if this is/was true (i.e., I mean as of yesterday or the day before), it has probably shifted already and will shift back-and-forth and back-and-forth again every single day. The Volatility Index remains volatile and the Misery Index at, I believe, an all-time high. I think only our members of Congress, the Supreme Court and the Executive Branch and their close friends at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have reason for any sort of permanent optimism. That's why they make their addresses so close to the Treasury. Curtis

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  6. Tom,

    The poems and great photos ... wonderful. You even get a get-out- jail-free pass for that Cain Dis-Abled pun.

    Careful with that Safeway coffee ...

    Smiling,
    Don

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  7. I forgot to name the book.

    Robert Ryan's The Strong Eye of Shamanism

    here:
    http://www.rsiss.net/bkryan.html

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  8. Ahh! Beautiful.

    Reading every poem out loud is in itself a joy. I really like the lines-



    who would go out for coffee
    who would go out for breakfast



    Don't they look (and when read out loud sound) like they were an Aram Saroyan creation?

    PS-

    It's 4:30 in the morning, it's always 4:30 in the morning.

    C. Bukowski

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  9. Don,

    Lovely, and I'm afraid that I'm probably going to need it.

    Aditya,

    Bukowski was certainly right about that, and perhaps about everything else as well.

    And now I must run
    As it's four-thirty-one

    Ed,

    As Citizen Cain, the Pizza Prince of the Neo-Paleolithic, once might have said, You can blindfold me and my little pocket heat-seeker will always find the Target. (He's a Discount Shopper).

    Curtis,

    In my humble view, the only proven offense on Cain's slate lies in the magnitudinous chutzpah of thinking that because you can sell cruddy food, you should qualify to be the President of the United States.

    I don't care about his harems. He really gave the game away when he was asked whether he approved US policy toward Libya. Er, uh... and during that long blackout moment it was fully apparent that a. he didn't know what the policy is, and b. he didn't, for that matter, know where Libya is. Let's see... is that the one next to Myanmar? Or wait, that's a kind of kitty cat, isn't it or...

    I mean puh-leeze.

    If that sort of candidacy does not offend an American with an IQ higher that 2.6, there is simply no hope left in the bin.

    Dragging race into this no-contest argument is a non-starter.

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  10. Tom,

    Yes to all of this -- the poem (which when I was reading it I thought was yours -- but a bit grim, perhaps, happily -- another night awake over in Berkeley), the photos, the close reading of poem, "Cain . . . Disabled" (caught with Emily Dickinson concealed in his glove compartment, talk of "the 'Astoundingly Upbeat' mood of the entire 1%" (oh goodness), the Volatility and Misery Indices which, according to Curtis, "has probably shifted already and will shift back-and-forth and back-and-forth again every single day." Where is Libya, who can tell?

    12.3

    light coming into sky above black plane
    of ridge, jet passing above pine branch
    in foreground, wave sounding in channel

    another aspect of that when,
    objects in space and

    figures, against which such
    as become, that from

    cloudless blue sky to the left of point,
    shadowed canyon of ridge across channel

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  11. Well (summing things up ahead of East Coast evening), Cain's gone but this poem is still ticking. As for Libya policy, Cain's response to the question notwithstanding, I'm still a little confused on the subject. I suppose one can always raise eyebrows, shrug shoulders, mutter "realpolitik" or "fog of war" and shuffle on. That seems to be how the game is played in the big leagues. Curtis

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  12. Where is good in our parts, Tom, for a 4 a.m. breakfast & coffee?

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