Poetry: Selections from Peter Mladinic
Corridor
Let’s not
be lazy, let’s say her name:
Gwendolyn.
Don’t be like calling a woman
Stacy when
her real’s name’s Anastasia
but you’re
too lazy to say the lovely name.
What wrong
with America? Americans
are
lazy? No, that’s not it, but call her
Gwendolyn,
her full name, Gwendolyn
from
Switzerland, sixteen, chestnut hair,
brown eyes
like jewels, skin caramel,
mouth of
haunting curves, her lithe frame,
in a long
off-white dress on a summer day,
supple,
alluring, but just a kid, a child.
A child
sitting on a bench against a wall
in a
corridor. Sun through glass doors.
What
Gwendolyn looks like naked is okay
for
another sixteen year old to dwell on,
but not
you, a man in America in 1999.
Dwell on
Gwendolyn wearing nothing
under her
long dress, they’ll take you away
in
handcuffs. There are laws. Don’t mess
with a
minor. And that’s your law for you.
She’s a
child, you don’t dwell on children.
If you
want to fixate, fixate on an adult,
but
respect their space. Do unto others,
mutual
consent. Adults being inappropriate
with kids,
there’s no excuse. Lock ‘em up!
But why
would someone be? Out of control.
Figure a
way to be in control. You can’t
trespass
another person’s space, much less
a
child’s. You were a child. A child touched
inappropriately?
You don’t want to say
sodomized,
or raped. Molested sounds like
animal
fur, the fur of, say, a possum. You’ve
never
touched, or skinned a possum.
What about
rage? Keep it in or let it out
in the
right place, the right time. Keep it,
hold on to
rage. But don’t go breaking glass
doors, or
tearing up that cushioned bench
Gwendolyn
sat on, her back to the tiled wall,
lovely as
a person could look. If you’re
going to
dwell on anything, dwell on beauty,
the beauty
of a cat, even a postage stamp.
There’s
plenty of ugliness. Remember
that time,
those times. Remember, too,
sitting
with others, seeing, hearing, feeling
rage a
woman was “acting out,” tears,
sobs, her
whole body beating a post with
some
phallic like object, hitting the post
over and
over in a frenzy, in Edina, 1977.
You wonder
did it help, letting the rage out.
You wonder
how an adult could dwell on
a child.
Never say never. Why not? I will
never be
inappropriate with a child. You
mean never
even look at a child in a way
to make
the child uncomfortable,
but
inappropriate is vague. But rage,
picture a
roiling, raging river, picture rage
in
you. I see a road I like being on, a long
road with
no traffic. I look down that road.
Door to the Past
The blade
in the musical
film Top
Hat,
“For the
woman the kiss,
for the
man the sword”
comes to a
point in a daguerreotype: you
bloused,
at your side a sheathed saber,
Years
later, a black fedora.
A silver
watch chain
arced
across a black vest, at the top of
stairs;
behind you, a door.
A pocket
watch your weapon,
mine
silence, I wanted to walk though
the door,
but not
badly enough to slay you.
Jehovah’s Witnesses
Bill, my
neighbor in Woodleaf Apartments,
and I,
were doing laundry in The Tub,
a mile
from Woodleaf, and two ladies came in
with
pamphlets, wanting to talk.
As I
folded whites at the counter,
she was at
my elbow, the pushier of the two,
short
brown hair,
(red tint,
little curls), that looked fried.
A French
accent. A petite sixty something.
“Go
away.”
She called
either Bill or I a rude young man.
Maybe he
was at the counter
and I
taking sheets from the dryer,
or we were
both at the counter.
She did
say “man,” not men.
We took it
as a compliment.
We had a
good chuckle.
It was the
biggest event that ever happened
to me in
The Tub.
Bill, an
airplane pilot, liked car races.
He was
tall, and grouchy.
That lady
made our day.
He lived
across from Linda.
I could
look out her door,
and across
the trees and walkway,
see Bill’s
door.
I don’t
know why Linda liked me but not him.
A nurse in
a hospital,
one day
she manicured my nails
better
than they’d ever been done before.
Engaged to
be married to a Rockefeller?
Todd, she
called him, Toddy.
She was
“pulling my leg” about that, I think.
She
wouldn’t have put up with Frenchie
for long.
Well, maybe longer than Bill and I.
I never
see her or the French lady,
but from
time to time I see Bill, Sundays
at
breakfast in The Iron Skillet.
I won’t
forget
the French
lady’s “rude young man,” or Linda.
Carousel Horses
Today is
carousel horses.
Today is
funeral home matchbooks.
I’m
thinking of the carousel horse Miriam,
Guy’s ex,
rides in Strangers on a Train
as she’s
stalked by Bruno,
and the
carousel at Palisades Park
in whose
shadow my friend John
one Sunday
night was knocked to one knee,
having
picked a fight with the wrong person.
Five years
later he overdosed
and was
dumped in a lot in the City.
Today is a
black matchbook
with a
gold palm tree from the Riptide Club
in
Atlantic City where palms don’t thrive,
a red
matchbook from Small’s Paradise,
a blue
from the Baby Grande,
(a 125th
St. bar), a Waffle House
matchbook
with a stack of waffles,
and a
heroin matchbook a junkie
left on a
table in a Burger King
with No
Smoking signs on walls.
I’m
thinking of Miriam,
the
dark-frame glasses
she’d
looked so great in, lying in grass.
after
Bruno strangled her.
I’m
thinking of John’s corpse
in a lot
between tall buildings;
maybe he
died in the car,
a Camaro,
a Mustang?, that dumped him
and drove
away.
I see the
blue matchbook on the bar
at the
Baby Grande and hear Sinatra’s
“Summer
Wind” on the juke.
At Small’s
brass rails gleam.
At
Palisades Amusement Park
in the
shadows of horses, and riders
going
‘round, I’m thinking of John,
down on
one knee, with a hand on his jaw,
a startled
look in his eyes, unable to see
the train wreck that would end him.
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