Saturday, April 20, 2013

Fulano by Guy LeCharles Gonzalez

FULANO
Call me Fulano. 
I am a poet 
come armed with the gift of fire. 

I do not revel in memories of when we were kings 
taking pride in conquered lands 
my mixed blood on too many different hands 
to hate recklessly 

words of ancestors 
who have no home to remember 
no history to explore. 

History is the autobiography of the victor 
repeating again and again 
as borders cross people 
civilizations in ruins 
cultures resemble Rubik's cubes 
several squares missing . . . 
incomplete 
incomprehensible 
tossed aside like last year's forgotten Christmas gifts from relatives a thousand miles away 
wrong size 
wrong color 
no receipt 
no return. 

I look to the future so my children will not die with the past. 
These are the good old days 
my father's stories from another time 
his father's from another place. 

There is no beginning or end 
no rise or fall. 
It is now and then and later. 
It is other and none of the above. 

Our history is a nick in the canon. 
There is no Barnes & Noble category for it. 
They are not ready. 

They are not ready for the barriers to fall 
James Baldwin on shelves next to Stephen King 
across from Aloud and the collected works of Whitman and Neruda 
under a banner 
Native literature 

the artist once again known as Prince plays in the background 
the multi-hued masses relax 
sip thirty-five cent cups of espresso 
laugh at the melted pot 
an unidentifiable masshumanity . . . 

Call us Fulano. 
We are poetry 
the future written on walls of ivory 
towers sinking under their own weight 
flames shooting from our fingertips 
our name written in ash for all to see . . . 

At the base of the tower 
standing over the dying embers 
the word slammed into irrelevance 
I stare out at the crowd-- 
Romans scream for my blood 
dissatisfied with my soul-- 
the spent match falls from my hand . . . 

To have come so far for this seems such a waste.

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