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Open Poetry #26
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icebox
Member Elite
since 2003-05-03
Posts 4383
in the shadows

0 posted 2003-05-30 10:48 PM



Ride the wind,
don't ask me where it's going;
it's free
like dying
like paying taxes
like waiting for tomorrow.

I sat in a bar one night,
in Wyoming,
in a town called Gillette
like the razor,
bolted together
like the rest of the town
I was bolted together with whiskey,
like everyone else in the bar;

there was nothing to do
after renting Dolores,
big ugly broad,
said she came from Juarez
sounded more like Union City.
Even before I was born
those flat Island bones
had never worn pretty.

So I talked to a man who'd met Hope
in the real War,
who wanted more than anything else
to be called Sundance,
whose name I think was Ralph,
but he was buying,
he was an ex-roughneck from Fillmore Utah,
a town that should have died
with the guy it was named for.

We soon switched to drinking nips
like I learned on Staten Island,
when I was under age
in outlaw bars,
I don't know where he learned it
before I hit Gillette
but he knew
to do them three swallows at a time
bang them on the bar to get another,
then throw the empties
at the off-key band
whining to be famous.

Some blasters bought us rounds
because Sundance was the souper
who drove their nitro
to some weird place in the desert,
so some college kid
could look for natural gas
so some house wife back east
could cook some beans
for her hubby
and her screaming kids,
while watching strangers
killing friends on news TV;
so she'd never know it had been me,
but I was drinking beer for free,
and Sundance he said
swinging pipe
was for dirtbags,
boneheads and immigrants;
he was forty-eight
and old for his profession,
with a wife in Oklahoma
and a mortgage out of Tulsa
he swore he was gonna beat the odds.

I listened to him,
drunk and spent,
I was a shadow hero
with thirty days,
my tools and time
for rent,
the dirt was yellow dust
nothing green grew near,
that Sundance
he looked old
and tired of waiting
for the bang he'd never hear,
like he'd been staring at the wire,
like he'd been driving soup for twenty years,
instead of just a season,
he believed
somehow tomorrow could be just another day.

I'd come young to gritty food,
slimy mud,
jungle blood
the odds I'd learned
already said I would walk on water
before Sundance Ralph would live
to see his dreams come true,
but he and I did swap some lies
drink some beers
and share a women whose mind was uglier
than I'm comfortable remembering;

Gillette, Wyoming was a boomtown in 1969.

©2003 by icebox

[This message has been edited by icebox (05-30-2003 11:19 PM).]

© Copyright 2003 icebox - All Rights Reserved
ben_pelling
Member
since 2003-02-28
Posts 59
Isle of Wight UK.
1 posted 2003-05-30 10:54 PM


WOW! Thats all I can think of to say about this piece.
I read one line and want to read more.

I read it all from beginning to end and was dissapointed that it ended.

this write draw me closer and I could imagin I was actually there.

And like I said before very nice write.

Ben.


QjQ
Member Elite
since 2003-04-18
Posts 3756
U.S.A.
2 posted 2003-05-30 10:59 PM


this draws quite a picture, of past experience i enjoyed reading

It's the quality of the complement that i feel, not the quanity.

icebox
Member Elite
since 2003-05-03
Posts 4383
in the shadows
3 posted 2003-05-30 11:00 PM


Thank you for reading and for your comment.  I am glad you enjoyed it.
passing shadows
Member Empyrean
since 1999-08-26
Posts 45577
displaced
4 posted 2003-05-31 03:52 AM


wow, I was born in 69, how times have changed


Midnitesun
Deputy Moderator 1 Tour
Member Empyrean
since 2001-05-18
Posts 28647
Gaia
5 posted 2003-05-31 11:05 AM


Dang! such incredibly vivid imagery, I think I could actually SMELL that bar and hear that off-key band in the background.
I've passed through that town. And I agree with that Utah reference. It seems as if our paths criss crossed somewhere along the line. Your Juarez via Union City woman made me laugh, though she was a pitifull creature.
I'll keep this one in the poetic icebox, to read again later with a chilled glass of wine. Nope, I don't do whiskey.

serenity blaze
Member Empyrean
since 2000-02-02
Posts 27738

6 posted 2003-05-31 04:44 PM


Love this style m'friend--reminds me of another traveling poet here at Pip.

More of these, please sir, I down 'em like nips.

icebox
Member Elite
since 2003-05-03
Posts 4383
in the shadows
7 posted 2003-05-31 07:32 PM


passing shadows ~ *laugh*  How times have changed, how times have changed....  Life in many ways really was different "back then."  The only photo ID you needed to get on a plane was a picture of Ben Franklin.  War was deadly and sex was safe (the physical part not ever the emotional part).  Gasoline was twenty cents a gallon and the car I drove at that time would hit 160 on a good flat road; I know that because later that same year I ran it through the traps at Bonneville - and it was really just a highway car, a re-worked 1958 Impala with good suspension and tires and a great engine.  Yeah, times have changed.  Thank you for reading my poem and for your comment.

Midnitesun ~ *smile* I don't do whiskey anymore either (OK, almost never).  Hmmm...paths that cross in the wind.  I think perhaps you are better off that we did not meet back then.  
Thank you for reading this.  I am glad you enjoyed it.

serenity blaze ~ I am glad you enjoyed this.  You do know I am old and need a longer recovery time, right?   *grin*

passing shadows
Member Empyrean
since 1999-08-26
Posts 45577
displaced
8 posted 2003-05-31 09:31 PM



Chanson
Senior Member
since 2000-08-19
Posts 1559
Up Creek w/Out Paddle
9 posted 2003-05-31 09:36 PM


You tell a story like a good old-fashioned yarn. I could listen to more please.
22NICK22
Member
since 2003-05-29
Posts 54

10 posted 2003-05-31 09:42 PM


hey man, that is real poetry
icebox
Member Elite
since 2003-05-03
Posts 4383
in the shadows
11 posted 2003-05-31 10:40 PM


passing shadows ~ Thank you for reading my poem.

Chanson ~ *smile* There is no point in being an old Celt if I can't take time to tell stories.  Thank you for reading my poem. And for your comment.

22NICK22 ~ Yeah?  Ya think? *grin* Thank you for reading it, and for stopping to comment.
Welcome to PIP!

Duncan
Member Ascendant
since 2001-08-07
Posts 5455

12 posted 2003-05-31 11:03 PM


'I sat in a bar one night,
in Wyoming,
in a town called Gillette
like the razor,
bolted together
like the rest of the town
I was bolted together with whiskey,
like everyone else in the bar;'

You keep writing, I'll keep reading.  Nothing better than a good story.
(Yep Serenity...very much so.)  

bbent
Senior Member
since 2001-01-07
Posts 521
Alaska
13 posted 2003-06-01 01:45 AM


just couldn't leave without saying what a great write i thought this was.a been there done that thing but damn man go easy on them out of tune bar bands...really enjoyed even though it left me with a hangover.

Live like it's your last day...
Dance like nobody's watching...
Love like you've never been hurt...

icebox
Member Elite
since 2003-05-03
Posts 4383
in the shadows
14 posted 2003-06-01 12:54 PM


Duncan ~ Thank you for reading my poem and for stopping by to comment.

bbent ~ *smile* I hope you feel better, maybe a few aspirin, lots of water and some tomato juice.
Thank you for reading my poem and for your comment.

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