Playing On The Edge Of The Grave Jesus hangs around in the hallway at the foot of the stairs weeping, maybe, weeping, yes for all the lambs, the children, who lost their innocence on their way to the adult-hood. Jesus last seen in the bedroom where goodnight prayers are nightly made before the descent into the cool night begins before the call of Third Street drifts into windows disguised as Buddha’s breath So sweet and innocently it calls: “Come out and play con mi hijo Come out and join our merry band of Angels and play.” Jesus loves the children in the Buddha-hood, growing up on the edge while their parents are distracted by a thirst for possession and the hunger for status - always in the name of the children - Jesus knows their sorrow their longing for the love-actions not just the love-words. Jesus hears their tiny voices in the night and wants to carry them away to heaven’s eternal safety But Jesus must wait patiently for a mother’s distraction to blind protective eyes - for a fraction of a second, just a short breath - the careless child will come the careless child always miss a step while playing at the edge of the grave, and Jesus will be there with the hand of guidence and redemption ready to catch them as they flutter like fallen angels like leaves dropping from the tree of life dropping into his waiting arms waiting to lead them to their new homies “En la vida loca”. In the town where I live like your town and towns everywhere there are graves. Not ordinary graves with little markers and flowers and the other commemorations that loving families place on them to mark the passage of time, the memory of their lost one’s going. Lord there are plenty enough of those graves! But these graves are empty! They wait like pot-holes on the road of life wait for someone to fall, for someone to slip out of line -- they are little traps for the innocent and the naive. They are the neighborhoods that are written off whose inhabitants have been pronounced dead, though they still walk and talk laugh and cry The City Council does not care The Police do not care The Church does not care No one cares They serve no purpose except as justifications & rationalizations for why nothing can be done why there must be more money more police more laws more excuses more votes more fear more bullshit more of everything for some and more of nothing for those on the edge of the grave.
Too Soon So much depends on the grinning of a lone child laughing on the run like Neruda’s Brown & agile child at loose ends with seaweed hair floating free unadorned a simple grace too soon too soon the weight of anguish a carpet of lilies on fields of Flanders Belfast, Soweto, Compton, Sarajevo, Beruit too soon the tolling of the bell too soon the world is at once, bigger and yet somehow smaller too soon the long night like a blanket covers us all.
Travelin’ Man He brought into focus the road those byways and highways that link us together. He traversed the north American continent so often that he knew the best places to be in just the right season at just the right moment to see the best sunset or catch the first bird in flight or celebrate the wildflowers blooming for the first time ever. In chapter and verse he brought the land and the people alive and each Sunday, he brought the world to us the world and his America of roads and people with good hearts and good dreams for the future. He brought us tales of hardship and hard work of the rewards of perseverance and of that damnable Yankee ingenuity. He brought to our attention the nobility of the American Ideal of freedom and truth through the eyes and words of American artists and writers, of factory workers and civil servants, of farmers and jazz pianists, of musicians and dancers and most importantly he reminded us of the glory of our oft-forgotten gift of life by bringing the land to us in all its stark, unadorned, and un-enhanced beauty. Willie n’ Jack may have written about it, but he lived it -- on the road. Charles Kuralt (1934 - 1997)