For Jack to the memory of my dear friend Jack Micheline (1929-1998) Jack, you were an ornery cuss I watched you piss off more people than I could count say you yell at even gutsy Ron Kovic when he stole your audience by reading his own stuff on the sidewalk outside your reading you didn't take shit from no one Jack and yet you were full of love too yoy loved even those who hated you but loved most the poor, the lost, the ones for whom no one else cared the "fat girls on the bus" you used to talk of-- "they need love more than anyone," you said and of course the feminists hated you for saying it, you were sexist, chauvinist, anti-business on the wrong side of everybody's tracks the most politically incorrect person this side of Rush Limbaugh but I swear I hardly ever knew anyone with a bigger heart or anyone who felt more the pain and beauty of this strange experience we call life I watched you blow countless audiences away even the rough young punks on Broadway who came to ridicule and walked away amazed and wondering at your power to speak the world they lived in many decades after you came into it I watched you win literary prizes like Kesey awarding you "best performance" at Naropa in 1982 when you made all those superstars like Burroughs, Waldman, Hoffman, and Ginsberg pale beside your booming cuss at America and everybody who when thru life with their eyes shut Jack you taught me so much how to see, how to listen, how to learn from the street like a garden of rare, beautiful flowers no one too small, too poor, too insignificant for your golden attention Jack, I can't do you justice in this poem I had the honor of having walked with you and listened to your wisdom and felt the touch of your tender eyes on mine your eyes so special, so full of hurt and understanding when they weren't aflame with rage at the injustices of society capitalism, and the publishing biz Like Whitman you sang the joy of the body, of "spade kicks" sex and food and booze and pretty girls you understood Kerouac's daffiness and wandered the same lonely path of misunderstood genius you game me some paintings I'll always cherish and fifteen pounds of xeroxed manuscripts that no one would publish I gave you a ride home from a lonely party in Berkeley one rainy night when on one else would take you you told me it was a "mitzvah" a blessing that would come for helping you the "mitzvah" was your friendship, Jack a million memories of one totally unique being named Harvey Martin Silver Jack Micheline ragged lion of the streets and giant of kindness whose ear was a perennial post office box that no one will ever be able to replace. 3/1/98