Authors: Bell Gale Chevigny
I am dazed and shaken by this vision. I sit for a moment gripping the chair bottom with white-knuckled horror. Then I push the chair back gently, like a woman preparing to excuse herself from the dinner table and say softly, “May I leave, sir?”
“Certainly,” replies the captain, ever the gracious host. He smiles at me. I do not return the smile.
With the grace and ironclad composure that have saved me from humiliation since early childhood, I hold my head high as I walk through the outer office past the inquisitive stare of the duty sergeant. I close the big door quietly, and slip unnoticed around the corner of the building.
I lean against the sun-baked wall and struggle with a host of emotions I cannot put name to. I feel the wall burning my shoulders through my blue workshirt. My knees become suddenly and utterly incapable of supporting me. They fold up and I slide bonelessly down the wall, heedless of the way its pebbled surface scrapes at my back. My teeth are clenched, but my lips part and turn downward. From them comes an awful keening sound I do not recognize. My eyes sting with the threat of unwelcome tears, I beg them silently not to betray me. But they do, traitorous things, and a great wash of tears pours unchecked down my cheeks, off my chin, into my lap, a flood of them, pent up all those years when to cry was a sign of weakness and to be weak was to be a victim. I lay my forehead on my knees and drop my hands loosely to the blistering cement beside me, like useless weapons that would not fire when so much was at stake. I am dimly aware that I am crying in the brokenhearted way of a small child, a sort of hitching and breathless uh-uh-uh-uh-uh, complete with snot running down into my mouth. I feel naked and wounded, unmanned by grief and hopelessness.
Finally I can no longer hear the sounds of my own weeping. I turn my head to one side and feel the sun begin to evaporate the tears, leaving my face tight and dry. I spit on the fingertips of my hands and scrub away the trails they left, wipe my nose on my sleeve, and pull a small black comb from my back pocket. I take my sunglasses from the top of my head and run the comb briskly through the matted and dampened strands and stand up. Straight, Tall, Shoulders back. Chin up, I put the dark glasses on my face and the mantle of hard-ass prisoner on my soul.
I saunter nonchalantly around the corner, past the door marked CAPTAIN, onto the yard. An acquaintance approaches me and asks in an excited whisper, “So, what happened in there? “What's up?”
She is immediately joined by a second and a third and a fourth, all eager, questioning. I am comfortable now. This is my milieu, this is where I know exactly what is expected of me, precisely how to behave, what to do and say. I shove both hands jauntily into the hip pockets of my Levi's and allow a disdainful grin to own my face.
“Fuck him,” I say with contempt. “He can't touch this.”
We all laugh.
1991, Arizona State Prison Complex-Phoenix
Phoenix, Arizona
Behind the circus clowns, puffs of cotton candy, and taffy
sprinkled with saltwater and served with lopsided grins,
I spot you, the doe-eyed girl, in pigtails and overalls.
There is no mistaking you.
You are my eye's mirror,
my reflection in dark rooms,
my shadow in candlelight.
Two tigers pass, one resembles the other;
I think of you again:
young and full of mystery,
full of light and oceans
and gardens of roses and morning orchids.
I know you, little one, my trait is dominant, but to you
I am a grain of salt, a small spark lost in a blaze.
If I kneel and ask you to stare into my eyes,
what would you say? Would Father slip through your thin
lips?
Would your arms circle my neck? Would you kiss my cheek?
In dreams you smile at me
and ask me to recite old poems
that mean little to some
but the world to you. You
clap your hands to clouds and laugh at dawn's snowflakes.
Have I told you no flake is the same?
Have I told you no life is the same?
Have I told you no pain is the same?
There you go, slipping by the monkey cage and clowns.
I watch you go the way you never saw me arrive, face flush
and full of confusion. I may have given you life, may have been
that small angel who breathes life into puppets, but now I am
only a stranger, lost in his strange world of words and woes.
1996, Otisville Correctional Facility
Otisville, New York
among the everyday
pieces lost
a bright pink Indian cotton shirt
worn through months of
nursing, quickly unbuttoned
to bring the rooting baby to my breast
her head in its
soft, filmy folds
set adrift among the debris
of police searches, overturned lives
tossed into a pile of orphaned clothes
and taken to a tag sale
where my friend,
recognizing it,
bought it
to keep me close
and wore it one day
to bring my daughter for a visit,
greeting me cheerfully,
“Remember this?”
and I laughed,
scooping up my baby
to carry her into the
toy-filled playroom
where she rode me, her horsey
among the oversized stuffed animals
until visiting hours were over
when I stood at that great divide,
the visitor's exit gate,
and watched my shirt and my child
leave
with my friend
1996, Bedford Hills Correctional Facility
Bedford Hills, New York
History
has been unkind to you
Mayakovsky
making fools
or lunatics of
us
who chased the rainbow
blinded by its shimmering radiance
fading
like dreams disappearing
into morning
Your life a warning:
poets who would be prophets
may lose their lyrics
their lives
History's stern judgments:
he sold his soul to dictators
his craft to technocrats
he loved too much he loved too little
he gave in
he gave up
Today
the New World you championed
the dreams I fought for
are consigned to history books
written
in black and white
bereft of poems
A middle school teacher
in America
wraps it up neatly, to his pupils
in one simple sentence:
Communism was bad
from start to finish
bad and it lost.
A child
stands
hands on hips
chin out in challenge:
“That's your opinion
and too simple
My grandparents were Communists
It was an idea a dream
People tried
but they made mistakes
It's not so simple as good and bad.”
In the prison visiting room
the child looks her mother
in the eye. She says,
“Your intentions were good
but you went about them
wrongly.”
And I
her mother
who grew up
dancing
to your rhythms and rhymes
Mayakovsky
then plunged
from poetry
to war
find my way back
to you
Reading your rebellious lyrics
I contemplate your end
Mayakovsky
caught
in the iron jaws of history
and your own intimate demons
This I know:
despite my failures and defeats
my sorry solitude
the burden of guilt
and the death of dreams
despite the cold of a winter morning
waking to cinderblock walls and
rows of barbed wire
robbed
of every warm blanket
of illusion
Still
I crave life
Mayakovsky
child
poems
dreams
1993, Bedford Hills Correctional Facility
Bedford Hills, New York
for my son on turning 18
I.
The day approaches
when I begin
my yearly pilgrimage
back in time,
the present no longer important,
only the exact hour and minutes on a clock.
They will bring me to that moment
when you began
the longest journey
man ever makes,
out of the sea that
rocked you and bathed you,
out of the darkness and warmth
that caressed you,
out of the space
that you stretched like the skin of a drum
until it could no longer hold you
and you journeyed through my tunnel
with its twists and turns,
propelling yourself
on and on until
your two feet danced into brightness
and you taught me
the meaning
of miracles.
II.
Somewhere in the middle of the country
you are driving a car,
sitting straight, seat belt tight across your well-exercised chest,
looking into the horizon,
the hum of the engine dwarfed by the
laughter of your companions.
You are driving toward 18.
Two sets of parents
on each side of the continent
await your arrival,
anxiously,
And you leave them astounded
by that drive,
always part of you,
to grow up as soon as possible.
You move toward the point
that as parents we both celebrate and dread,
foreshadowed by leavings that take place
over and over again.
That leaving for kindergarten,
that leaving for camp,
that leaving parents home on a Saturday night.
Until that time when you really leave,
which is the point of it all,
And the sweet sadness.
III.
My atlas sits
on a makeshift desk,
a drawing board
between two lock-boxes.
It was a hard-fought-for item,
always suspect in the prison environment
as if I couid slide into its multicolored shapes
and take a journey.
In front of me is the United States
spread across two pages.
I search for Route 80,
a thin red line
and imagine you,
a dot moving along it.
You, an explorer now.
Davenport, Iowa; Cheyenne, Wyoming; then Utah; Nevada;
until you reach
the Sierras, looking down on the golden land.
Roads once traveled by your father and me.
As I struggle within myself to let you go,
and it is only within,
for you
will
go,
I am lifted out of the limits
of this jail cell,
and on the road
with you, my son,
who more than any map or dream
extends my world.
My freedom may be limited,
but I am your passenger.
Â
1998, Bedford Hills Correctional Facility
Bedford Hills, New York
“The real world” some prisoners call it ironically. Some say, as our soldiers did in Vietnam, “back in the world.” Extracted from it, prisoners have a unique perspective on “the world.”
In Paul St. John's 1994 story “Behind the Mirror's Face” (Reading and Writing), the narrator asserts that prison marks most inmate writing, and for the worse. “A con may write fiction, but everybody will know where it comes from. His fiction wears the stink of prison for a belt. Her fiction is pregnant with loss disguised as possibility. His outlaws always get the better of a wicked status quo. Her heroines grope through a jungle of shame for their stolen womanhood, and perhaps a piece of heaven.” Certainly a portion of PEN contest entries support this charge. Every year men send pieces about the perfect crime, the foiled execution, the superhero's ultimately satisfying revenge; and the “stink of prison” is inescapable in the uncen-sored wet dreams and virulent misogynist fantasies (sometimes merged} sent to the contest. Some of the writing by women is freighted with longing; some return relentlessly to scenes of loss and betrayal.
With a passion born of desperation, St. John's narrator cries, “Take this goddamned place out of your art is what I am trying to tell you all.” The best writing about “the world” is neither stuck in the groove of crime-guilt-loss-revenge nor wheeling free in the fantasy of might-have-been. Not imprisoned, it yet bears the mark of the journey the prisoner has taken. Writers who have come to terms with who and where they are effect a triumph over those conditions. They use insight gained in “that goddamned place” to engage and illuminate the so-called real world outside â neither in an exculpatory nor an accusatory way, but by naming the human bonds that link us all. Thus, in “Prisons of Our World,” Allison Blake's bid in prison gives her piercing insight into the social and psychological captivity her “free” neighbors cannot see. Robert Moriarty's “Pilots in the War on Drugs” draws us into the romantic cockpit of perilous entrepreneur-ship and goes on to show how everything in our disingenuous war on drugs has driven pilots first to the air and, if they survive, to prison, scapegoats for a problem he can see, but the general public can't or won't.
The world seen through the prism of incarceration is cleansed of illusions and often startlingly unconventional. The hiphop poem by J. L. Wise Jr., “No Brownstones, Just Alleyways 5c Corner Pockets Full,” renders the cauldron of a St. Louis ghetto summer night, where lurking disaster coexists with resilient vitality. In “Americans,” Jon Schillaci celebrates our polyglot, postmodern society for its very confusions. In “For Sam Manzie,” his empathy becomes an ethical challenge to media-dulled citizens; it is the poet's searing response to a
Newsweek
article about boy-killer Sam Manzie, who had himself been seduced over the Internet. “Diner at Midnight,” an Edward Hopper-like sketch by David Taber, limns a moment of failed empathy. In a retake of the diner scene in “The Film,” the protagonist willfully wipes out feeling for both waitress and himself, as he fashions himself, in a sinisterly all-American way, the hero in a typical thriller. And the late Henry Johnson, a saxophone player, offers a thrilling riff on a real murder (of jazz musician Lee Morgan by his ex-wife in Slug's Saloon), set in a glamorized “5-Spot Cafe.”