January 10, 2019

Jack Grapes

THE RIME OF THE ANCIENT MINOTAUR

I haven’t written anything in months.
Sunshine, sunshine everywhere.
I hate the sun, its constancy, its persistence in the face of misery.
I need rain, that hard, dark, pounding-on-the-windows rain.
I want it filling the gutters, splashing knee-high off the sidewalks.
How the hell am I supposed to write anything in all this sunshine.
Driving back from the airport, I take La Cienega through the Baldwin Hills.
Above the horizon, storm clouds belly over the setting sun.
I reach the top of the hill. In the distance, through a gray, misting rain,
I see the Emerald City, looking now like the tarnished pieces of an erector set.
By the time I get home, the rain’s making noise on the roof of the car.
Lori and Josh and I drive over to Borders.
Lori takes Josh off to the kids’ books, I decide to write a poem.
I go upstairs and get a bowl of soup and a book of poetry.
I set my journal to the side and read until something hooks me,
plucks some chord inside my body. A poem by Amazawa Taijirô that begins:

A man walking along the dawn highway
realizes suddenly
the back of his skull’s transparent
like a river of black lead.
In that instant unhesitating
he starts to walk backwards to the harbor.

Then I open the journal to a blank page and write a line.

Here comes the rain …

This is it, I can feel it. I’m gonna get that poem I’ve been waiting months for.
Suddenly, Josh comes running up and drops a book on the table,
almost knocking over the bowl of soup. “Hey, Dad. Look what I got.”
It’s a book called Monster Mazes, and he wants me to do one.
I don’t want to lose the poem I’m about to write.
I think to tell him I’ll be with him in a minute, but look into his face and decide against it.
We negotiate the hardest maze in the book, which takes nearly twenty minutes,
then he decides to go look for another book.
When he’s gone, I open the journal again. But the maze has exhausted me. There’s nothing left.
I look at the line I wrote—“Here comes the rain”—but the poem I had inside my throat is gone.
I see Josh over by the bookcase, his face luminous and open.
I begin to write a different poem, instead. Afterwards, I title it “Monster Maze.”

 

MONSTER MAZE

Here comes the rain (I write),
and my son Josh comes running up and plops a book on the table,
Monster Maze in bold letters on the cover.
He’s got me trying one on the first level of difficulty, where you can perish
if you stumble into a chamber of fire, or fall into a pit of snakes.
Other dangers lurk if you take the wrong path: I could become a welcome feast for rats,
“If you run into them,” he says.
Giant spiders might drink my “last drop of blood,”
and pit vipers will strike with poison fangs the moment I enter their lair.
Every path I take leads to a horrible death.
Josh assures me. “These are really complicated mazes Dad, but you can back up and try again.”
He takes my pen and shows me. “Oh, I get it,” I say, and persevere.
But it’s no use. He watches me, anticipating every wrong turn,
whistling his little whistle when I seem to be on the right path.
But it’s tiring. I just want to go home and watch the Barrera-Morales fight on TV.
“You’re doing good, Dad,” Josh says. He can tell I’m faltering.
The lines of the maze begin to blur. I’ll never get to the finish.
I decide to cheat.
I move the pencil just enough to make it look like I’m concentrating on the path.
With my other eye, I focus on the finish line
and begin to trace the path backward toward the start.
Josh is watching like a hawk now, hunched over the table, his head down just above the page.
He warns me about the Kraken, a terrible monster of the deep seas trapped eons ago
when an earthquake split the ocean floor.
Now the Kraken feeds on stray goblins and other hapless creatures.
That’s me, a hapless creature with bad eyesight and a shaky hand.
The lines blur even more. I feel a sense of despair, some great tugging at my heart.
What am I doing in this maze? Where’s the poem I was going to write about the rain?
It’s gone, and here I am in this stupid maze with nothing but the rapid pounding of the feet
of the terrible Minotaur who detests humans because they remind him
that he was once human, too. But it’s hopeless.
I decide to cheat again. I cross one of the lines and go directly to the path
I know will take me to the finish, but Josh is right there and catches me.
“Hey, you can’t cross the lines,” he says.
“Oh, yeah,” I say, feigning surprise, “ I didn’t notice.”
“That’s okay,” he says, helpful, optimistic, riding the back of my pencil toward certain victory.
It’s taking so long. I plod along, past The Giant Worm, and The Pit of Doom,
until suddenly I’ve reached the level where only the bravest dare go.
“You’re in Level Four,” Josh shouts.
“I can’t finish this,” I tell him.
I’m tired of the whole preposterous journey.
I look at him, hoping for permission to quit.
He tilts his head to one side and gives me that look, his blue eyes full of confidence in me.
“You’re almost there,” he whispers, soothing my frustration and despair,
his face luminous and mysterious.
I have no idea who he is.
He’s a light in the distance toward which I move, every day, closer and closer.
When I finally get there, he’ll be gone, I know.
“You’re almost there,” he croons.
So we’re in this together, my son and I.
I decide to trust in blind luck.
In a final chamber rests the fire-breathing dragon. He is old and his hide is thick.
His only comfort is to rest on the huge treasure he collected in his younger years.
If we defeat this dragon, the book says, the gods will transport us by magic
to the land of mortals, all our treasures in hand.
I look outside for a second and watch the cars on La Ciénega creep forward in the rain,
the rain coming down now even harder.
A hard, heavy, dark rain.

from Rattle #15, Summer 2001
Tribute to the Underground Press

__________

Jack Grapes: “I moved to Los Angeles from New Orleans in the winter of 1969, looking out of my unfurnished apartment at the rain that lasted for weeks. Welcome to sunny California, I thought. I came west because my comedy partner and I were selected to star in a Saturday morning TV series, but familiar story … it didn’t pan out. But I stayed, working as an actor. For about three years, I was still a New Orleans poet. The humidity was in my bones, and I had trouble writing during the day. Too much sunshine. But gradually the city took me over. I fell in love with the freeways. Ask me how to get anywhere, I knew the route. My friends called me Freeway Man. I drove everywhere. Loved the sense of freedom, the feeling I could be everywhere at once, and nowhere. That’s Elay. I’ve been an Elay boy for over 45 years. From Pico and Sepulveda to Western and Olympic. Don’t fence me in.” (web)

Rattle Logo

July 29, 2016

Jack Grapes

ANY STYLE

Lord, I’m 500 miles from home,
you can hear the whistle blow a hundred miles.
—Peter, Paul, and Mary

Driving west out of El Paso,
the sun coming up behind me,
I look for a diner or roadside café
off the main highway.
Maybe I’ll just follow those dust clouds
that cars coming the other way
leave in their wake.
Maybe it’ll be
just a scratched Formica counter
and a waitress wearing
jeans and a T-shirt.
“Eggs any style,” I tell her,
waiting to see if she gets it—
the joke, I mean—but she doesn’t.
“Anything on the side?” she asks.
“Yeah,” I say, studying
the menu as if it were
that calculus final I barely passed.
“Yeah, gimme the bacon,
the hash browns,
… you got grits?”
I look up from the menu
and admire her frontage.
After seven hours driving
in the dark, then heaving away
from the sun, the mouth waters
for the old breakfast roadside
standbys: toast, butter,
greasy bacon and eggs.
And frontage.
The urge rises from my toes,
through my stomach and into my chest,
the urge to reach out and touch them,
those well-fed breasts
inside that hefty bra
inside that white T-shirt.
“Yeah,” she says, moving the eraser
of the pencil back and forth
behind her ear, “we got grits.”
“I’m up for grits,” I say,
making the word grits sound
like I’d already eaten a mouthful.
She shifts her weight from one leg
to the other, writes on the pad,
then says it
—what I came in here for
in the first place,
not the food,
but to hear her say the words:
“Three eggs,
any style,
side a bacon,
side a hash browns,
side a grits.”
I almost swoon,
almost lean
across the counter
and place my head
between her breasts,
almost blurt out that I love her,
that I’ve been loving her
all night long—
loving her as I drove through the darkness
on this two lane highway
filled with nothing
but tractor trailers
and 18-wheelers
and tank trucks and boom trucks
and freight liners and box vans,
two-ton stake trucks
and Scammell ballast tractors,
not to mention the flatbeds
and the pick-ups,
all heading west,
just like me.
I want to tell her
that I love her
right now, here in this diner,
thirty miles west of El Paso,
and will always love her,
love her to my dying day,
love her any style,
side a bacon,
side a hash browns,
side a grits.
But I don’t.
The sun’s already breaking
the water glasses on the counter,
rousting the silverware,
dashing the flies to the floor
where they languish in the heat.
Five-hundred miles to go
before I hit L.A.,
before I take the big curve
where the I-10 turns north
under the overpass,
and heads up the Pacific Coast Highway,
white beaches to my left,
brown cliffs to my right.
Five-hundred miles to go.
“Yeah,” I say, “that should do it,
and gimme an order
of wheat toast, butter, jelly,
jam, marmalade with those
little pieces of citrus fruit
and rind, and coffee,
thick black coffee,
coffee that’s been sitting
in the pot for days,
just bring the whole pot,
and sugar, lots of sugar,
and cream, lots of cream.”
Then she sticks the pencil
in her hair behind her ear
and looks at me, finally.
“Mr. Poet,” she says,
smiling as the sun
begins to creep up
across her face.
“Yep,” I say, relaxing
onto the stool
and putting both elbows
on the counter,
“I’m Mr. Poet,
and I got
lots of poems,
any style you want,
side a bacon,
side a hash browns,
side a grits.”

from Rattle #52, Summer 2016
Tribute to Angelenos

__________

Jack Grapes: “I moved to Los Angeles from New Orleans in the winter of 1969, looking out of my unfurnished apartment at the rain that lasted for weeks. Welcome to sunny California, I thought. I came west because my comedy partner and I were selected to star in a Saturday morning TV series, but familiar story … it didn’t pan out. But I stayed, working as an actor. For about three years, I was still a New Orleans poet. The humidity was in my bones, and I had trouble writing during the day. Too much sunshine. But gradually the city took me over. I fell in love with the freeways. Ask me how to get anywhere, I knew the route. My friends called me Freeway Man. I drove everywhere. Loved the sense of freedom, the feeling I could be everywhere at once, and nowhere. That’s Elay. I’ve been an Elay boy for over 45 years. From Pico and Sepulveda to Western and Olympic. Don’t fence me in.” (website)

Rattle Logo

April 19, 2012

Jack Grapes

SUNDAY MORNING

Sunday morning. Spring. I wake to the sun lifting one leg over the top of the Ticor Building on Wilshire Boulevard. The new leaves on the tree outside my bedroom window are tinged with sunlight. If only I were a photographer or painter I’d freeze this moment and crawl into it.

Sunday morning. I have to get up but my body wants to drown right here in the bed. Spring ambles up the street waving its arms. A matinee today. I have to be at the theater by two. Yesterday, I find out from my agent that I didn’t get the part I was counting on.

Eat this, they say.
It’s good for you.
You’ve eaten it before.
The next one will be sweet.

I eat and concentrate on the window, on the tree, on the sun beginning to beat its chest as it comes over the top of the tallest building.

I drive down Beverly Boulevard, take the curve where it changes into 1st Street, turn on Grand and park right across from the museum. It’s just after ten, hardly any cars on the street. MOCA doesn’t open till eleven. The sun has followed me all the way, reflecting off the Security Pacific Bank Building, glass and steel going all the way up.

I get off on this urban sleekness, especially the unfinished building across the street, another skeleton of steel and concrete. Someone should stick a sign on it, make it part of MOCA, part of the Permanent Collection, and leave it just as it is, unfinished. No clear line where the museum ends and the rest of the city begins. One easy flow, stretching all the way back into our homes, into the very center of our lives.

I walk past the California Plaza sign, running my hand along the chrome and glass, then head downstairs for a cup of coffee and cinnamon roll at the “Il Panino.” There’s a girl two tables over, in the sun. We both drink our coffee in silence, checking our watches, writing something down in our journals.

She’s an art student from Santa Barbara come to see the Jasper Johns. She asks what am I here to see. “Oh,” I say, “the art. Just the art. I don’t care. Just something.”

I AM FIVE YEARS OLD.
I don’t understand anything.
Hot and humid days;
nights, dark and mysterious.
They take me to school.
I stare at the blackboard.
The kid from around the corner beats me up at recess.
Some nights my father doesn’t come home.

My mother shrieks on the telephone.
My pet turtle dries up in the sun.
My uncle dies on the floor in the empty kitchen.
Who is the world?
Why is the moon where the sun is?
If the street goes nowhere, why is it in my bed?
What is the rain that rains just rain,
and why does it rain crows, or bats, or baseball gloves?
How is the pencil writing my name,
and why is my name the name for the thing that fixes tires,
the name for the flag on the pirate ship,
the name for the clown crushed in the box?
Outside, the kids continue to jump rope on the sidewalk,
singing, “A my name is Alice,”
seeing everything, but knowing nothing.

I AM SIX.
The class takes a bus with Miss Cook
to the Delgado Museum on Elysian Fields Avenue.
We’re going to see Vincent Van Gogh.
Later, when I tell my mother,
who was born in Antwerp,
she says to say it like this,
Vincent Van Gough,
and she coughs as she says it.
Van Gough! Van Gough!.
But Miss Cook says Van Go.
We are marched single-file from one room to another,
walking past each painting that hangs just above our heads.

I look up at the painting.
I can’t believe what I am seeing.
Everything mysterious and horrible about the world vanishes.
He paints like I paint!
Trees outlined in black.
All those wavy lines, all those colors.
And he piles the paint on.
He’s wasting all that paint,
just like I did before they told me not to waste all the paint.
He sees everything I see.
The moon is where the sun is.
The street that goes nowhere is in his bed.
It’s not just raining rain,
it’s raining crows and bats.
He sees the blood, he see the faces.
Everything so bright it’s on fire.
Everything so dark it swallows me up.
The man cuts his ear off.
The man leans against the table so sad.
The man dies on the floor of the empty kitchen.
I stop in front of the painting with crows above a cornfield.
The world I see is real.
I bring my hand up and touch the dried paint.
It’s real!
Mounds of paint,
swirls of paint,
rivers of paint!
But it’s not paint.
It’s real.
It’s the world.

“Don’t touch the painting!” Miss Cook yells.
She pulls my hand away.
She yanks my arm into the center of the room.
“Never ever touch a painting!”
She shoves me into a seat in the back of the bus.
It doesn’t matter.
The world is real.
I fold my hands in my lap.
I know what I will do.
                I will write about the real world.

11 o’clock. The girl heads off toward the Jasper Johns. I walk into the J. Paul Getty Trust Gallery and find the Geary cardboard chairs and cardboard houses. “Can I sit in them?” I ask the guard. “They can be sat in,” he says, “but you can’t sit in them.”

“Oh,” I say, and walk into the room with the huge pavilion shaped like a fish. I walk into the belly of the fish. The wood inside is so beautiful.

”Don’t touch the wood, please,” says the guard.

I wander over to the Nauman video. A clown is being tortured on simultaneous video screens. “Clown Torture,” it’s called. Later, in the Permanent Collection, I bump into the girl from Santa Barbara. In the center of the room, a metal sculpture of a man moves his motorized mouth up and down. A silent

YAK
                YAK
                                YAK

This, I understand. I stand as close to it as I can. The guard watches me suspiciously.

Over the in North Gallery there’s an empty spot in one corner. Something was there, but it’s been                 removed. I make a sign for myself and hang it around my neck. I stand in the corner of the Permanent Collection, North Gallery, as still as I can, one arm out in the gesture of an actor about to speak.

Eat this.
You’ve eaten it before.
The next one will be sweet.
The street that goes nowhere is in your bed.
You know nothing,
but you can see everything.

A woman and her little girl walk up to me. “What does the sign say?” the girl asks.

“Touch me,” her mother says. “The sign says touch me.”

So the child reaches out a hand and touches my own.

from Rattle #25, Summer 2006
Tribute to the Best of Rattle

Rattle Logo