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Jimmy
Warner's Wild Moon Transit
January 2000
On this, the first
day of the last year of the millennium,
I wish to celebrate the passing century with glimpses of my
family.

Christmas Comet
UNTIL IT
THUNDERS
GETTING WELL BEFORE MARRIAGE
A toddler takes his first walk in saw grass
risking burrs, thorns or a horned beetle
and the rasping edges of a dark green grass,
salt to the heart of its stubborn stance.
This visitor after fifty years enjoys
the little hard luck dance and purses lips
around new breath and old native talk.
When the child returns with a cherry red bump
I tell him what my granddad always said,
"It'll get well before you get
married."
Granddad warned that compulsion is a teacher.
After asking why you'd do a thing like that,
he'd never accept a plea of ignorance
unless you leveled with him and said,
"I just HAD to."
"Well," he'd
say, "that explains it then."
Boys HAVE TO do things before
marriage;
have to kill small things, poke sticks in holes,
attach stuff to long strings and whirl them
til they hit something or themselves.
I have a small scar on my arm
made by glass on a string,
Granddad's words still hover there
every time I happen to notice it.
Boys HAVE TO break glass
even if they're trying not to;
that's what it's for.
They have to roll up as well as down hills,
aggravate bees, smush ants, scatter termites,
keep wounded birds, befriend dogs, any dog,
frighten cats, pester old ladies, steal plums,
ride bikes through flower beds, turn on a hose,
eat poisonous berries or feed them to the cat,
bury a brand new toy, dig up dead pets
just to see what they look like a month later,
invent new pesticides and rocket fuels,
cook things that weren't meant to eat,
burn things that are labeled fireproof,
find new uses for candle wax,
melt plastic figures into twisted horrors
and blow them up with fireworks,
make noises like heroes, cherish violence,
play with dead entrails,
terrify girls with insects, worms or animal
parts,
stage funerals for rats, executions for toads,
rave over a smelly, dead fish,
scoop up beached nettles with sticks
and sling them,
climb trees out onto rotten limbs,
snap branches into each other's face,
throw rocks, especially into bodies of water,
slip on banks, fall into creeks,
spit gum where one is bound to step in it,
arrange other accidents
and nasty things to be stepped in,
booby trap staircases,
pull pranks under a bathroom window,
surprise a girl in her bath,
harass her through a transom,
perpetuate epic hoaxes,
and boast of huge creatures lurking
only THEY have seen.
A boy must come in with burrs in his hair,
ripped jeans covered with dirt and grass stains,
carrying the rarest collection
ever contained in a cigar box, things
indescribable
and beyond all recognition,
whereupon I drop him in his tracks
like a jack-lighted deer
and scream at him for something he just HAD
to do.
"Kid... go to your
room."
I don't try to prevent him with
more do's and dont's
than he can ever remember.
After all, he's just trying to
get well before marriage;
it doesn't really matter
how.
Disallowed,
he could do far worse later on.
THE LONG SEASON IN MAY
She might still be
waiting for it to end, lying beside
my
Granddaddy
out there dead in Crater Road Cemetery,
their combined headstone divided into his and
hers,
where for the first time in forty years, they
sleep together.
My maternal
Grandmother, Marie Gertrude
was the first
ecologist in my life
who knew the local history of the Delta,
where pine cottage memory stretched out half a
mile or more
to the once pristine beaches and forgotten
sandbars.
She hoped to blame
their disappearance on global phenomena,
not sure if the perpetrator would be Man or God.
Each May we'd all
pack belongings into Granddad's
cherry-kept, port-holed Buick
and travel down narrow, country roads to the
cottage
where deep green with whitecaps
the bay greeted us through a slice of pine.
Opening the
car-door flooded the senses
with salt savory and sweet grass
that made the long trip seem worthwhile.
.
Into the musty, cool dark of knotty-pine
cottage,
the wonderful air followed as each window flew
unstuck
and French doors unstopped, let in the view.
At some point my Grandmother would begin
the gradual lament of her years, demonstrating
that any kind of neglect thereabouts was due to
the same
natural subtlety of age that all things undergo.
Out onto the screened porch came the creaky,
old,
canvas chairs, and there she'd sit for
awhile making
new epitaphs that no-one ever
questioned or asked her
what she meant when she
rattled off a statement like,
"We survived The Great Depression
by eating ends meat and backbone pie."
Somewhere behind
the scenes was a butcher who loved her,
saving
up those red columns of pork spine to give her
each day.
The weather always turned dismally gray
against the copper-green, rooster vane
atop the
pump house as one northeaster
followed another
during May's dreary progression
announced by
Grandmother's heralding cry,
"This is the long season in May."
Back beneath
deep recesses of kith and ken,
were collective concerns about a summer that
never came,
of an outpouring, upward soaring, venting of
Tambora,*
long before she was
ever born.
*rev'd
She tried and
retried her God of Mercy
whose sky of ashes blanked the sun
when the late snow fell in June of 1816
She scoured the back pages of
newspapers
for hidden reports of pyrotechnic billows in
God's activities abroad and spoke sternly
to
those who would listen as she accused
each
overcast day
of causing more,
bug riddled trunks of mimosa,
and more
shoals of sand to be washed away.
With
words of wonder and despair, she'd say,
"Perhaps there will be another Ice Age
after all, apres moi."
She
paced up and down the screened-in porch
pausing with binoculars, evidence in hand,
that
yet another tree had fallen this year, a
victim of the sea.
She
waded back and forth along the waterfront
poking and prodding the shore line rocks
with her custom, sawed-off crab net,
rejoicing
with every soft-shelled crab stuffed
in the
pockets
of a gray, stained, canvas bib,
assured that summer was safely on its way.
By June, the glib, telltale
signs of nature
were just enough to ease her great anxiety,
brought on by all those occasional, rubbed-raw
days
that unsettle with fog and drizzle
the sailor's nerve, the sea watching wife,
that turn the waking eye of spine chilling
concern
outward and skyward
as though a pastry of gray crust
overhead
might never be broken
til the end of the long season in May.
* April 5-April 12, 1815 - Mount
Tambora in the Dutch East Indies blows its top
during an eruption event. Upwards of 92,000 are
killed during this eruption. The event is the
cause of 1816 becoming known as the Year Without
a Summer.
These next two remember my
Grandmother Aleta from Ohio
OF MICE
AND ROSES
Looking down the avenue at the
monuments,
I can trace the love inside me back to the
eighteen eighties,
to grandmothers and grandfathers
whose thoughts still race through mine.
WHAT IS IT THAT
GOES DIRECTLY
FROM GRANDPARENT TO GRANDCHILD
AND SKIPS ALL OTHER GENERATIONS?
My grandmother, naked in her
bath,
would swing open the door to answer that
question.
Just like the bible stories she read me,
filled with naked people running around, fearing
God.
"THEY WERE
WICKED MEN AND WOMEN IN THOSE DAYS,"
she read.
Whenever she spoke of the wicked
I pictured my mother and father naked
and thought how stupid I was,
coerced by men in black robes to honor them.
Grandmother excelled as a
gardener planting honor
in my hard pan will. Lying beside her in her
huge bed
wide as nightfall, she inscribed words, numbers
and pictures
on my back for me to guess, her strong, sensual
message,
more forceful than a trembling hand.
She talked of honor, of roses
growing from the heart,
of dishonor lodging its thorn.
She showed me a dead mouse lying
in a trap
and entrusted to me its burial, but all I could
do was
fondle the soft fur of the mouse in my pocket
until finally with her help, resting it on a
powder puff
in a perfumed box, we entombed it by a tree
in a plot of urban dust.
THERE WAS WONDER
AND DESTRUCTION
AS RILKE ONCE SAID, NOT DEEPLY UNDERSTOOD
though demonstrated before my
unwavering eyes
by her cultivation of a rose and by my imitation
of a bud.
THE SKELETON VISITS GRAMMA
Night reaches out
of private space,
toys with her stars making up faces
promising little boys a tangible, sugary taste.
In my mask of life, unlike a
Halloween mask,
running before curfew in a skeleton suit,
I had the gut-instinct to visit Gramma.
I ran sweating in rubber clothes as the
afterthought arose
that Gramma might want to see my fall fashion.
Nurses and hovering friends received me
nervously,
ushered me through the acrid smell of sickness
to Gramma's chamber
whereupon she sang a note of pleasure and
surprise.
Unwittingly I pranced my specter of death before
her dying eyes.
We were all saints in bad taste,
stooping to keep her alive.
She recognized the suit, but with the mask
removed
she asked me who I was.
"It's your grandson," they all
chimed in.
I don't think she was aware that she had one.
"It's little Jimmy," they
added.
"Oh, Jimmy, my boy,"
said Gramma, for now I was her son.
"We'll go to the park again soon,"
she said with apology high in her voice,
"And you can spend the night when I'm
feeling better.
Don't be mad at me; can you promise that?"
And I promised. And I promised.
When she died shortly before my birthday
I was plenty angry
and I banged things about the house all day.
"I went to see her you know,"
I yelled to mom and dad,
"Why didn't you tell me she was dying?"
They gathered to stare at me, mouths
hung open.
"When?" they whispered.
"Halloween night," I replied.
"That's when she went into a coma,"
they said to each other
as though I had no medical savvy whatever.
"Hey, I watch Richard Boone, I study
health in school,
I know what leukemia is, and Gramma told me
about death
and its nothing to whisper about," I
exclaimed in a torrent.
"I showed her my costume and she liked it
and I'm glad
and she made me promise not to be mad at her,
but I am.
I'm mad at everyone for lying." I
shouted, heaving shoulders.
My parents were stunned, and
yet, I sensed respect.
Each Halloween I celebrate
victory over death.
I observed the ritual in my own spooky way,
running through moonlit streets and up to porch
lights,
ringing bells, announcing trick or treat.
One old lady asked me,
"Do you promise to be good?"
"No," I said, clenching fists,
"but I'm going to church tomorrow and pray
for my
gramma when they read her name from the
list."
© Jimmy Warner
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