Skywriting
By Word Of Mouth...
An Alphabet
A is for Parrot which we can plainly see
B is for glasses which we can plainly see
C is for plastic which we can plainly see
D is for Doris
E is for binoculars I’ll get in five
F is for Ethel who lives next door
G is for orange because we love to eat when we can get them
because they come from abroad
H is for England and (Heather)
I is for monkey we see in the tree
J is for parrot which we can plainly see
K is for shoetop we wear to the ball
L is for Land because brown
K is for Venezula where the oranges come from
N is for Brazil near Venezuela (very near)
O is for football which we kick about a bit
T is for Tommy who won the war
Q is a garden which we can plainly see
R is for intestines which hurt when we dance
S is for pancake or whole-wheat bread
U is for Ethel who lives on the hill
P is arab and her sister will
V is for me
W is for lighter which never lights
X is for easter—have one yourself
Y is a crooked letter and you can’t straighten it
Z is for Apple which we can plainly see
This is my story both humble and true
Take it to pieces and mend it with glue
A Reason for Breathing
I pictured myself on a boat on a river with tangerine trees
and nervous dysplasia. This was to be the final chapter in my
life savings. I pulled the plug and boarded an Amtrak to nowhere.
I had suffered insomnia all my life, but, like Issac Newton,
had put it down to apples. It was hereditary (so was my forehead).
I wished to remain anonymous in a world of Philadelphians. I
ticked myself off and put myself in my place, a two-bedroomed
brownstone of ill repute. I was convinced I’d been here
before. Call it what you will, I call it daft. Had I walked
these same dusty springfields before? Or was I just a victim
of circumnavigation? Yea, tho’ I walk thru Rudy Valle,
I will fear no Evel Knievel. Junk food made me silly; fast food
slowed me down; I had to get off at the next stop. I alighted
to the sound of a military bandit.
”Do you take this woman anywhere in particular?”
the voice rang out. I panicked slowly and continued to exercise
my discretion.
Subtitled “Lucy in the Scarf With Diabetics”
...it has come to our atissue (bless you), that war is only
profitable to those left behind; to wit, and if and when the
Third World War (most aptly titled) breaks out, who will know
who won? We at RANDUM have a lot of machines. WHO WILL RUN THEM?
The late President Exxon was himself heard to mumble “Hurt
me! hurt me!” but his democracy was never taped. His Matron
was seen to test his cocoa for signs of the times, such as Communist
footballs or deliberate nutshells on the White House lawn. (One
such was found in the Garden of Unaccountably Dead Plants, but
it was never proven.) Soon to become a household worm, hi name
went down throughly in history. His library will contain the
ashes of every one he knew and the Howard HUGE Memorial Hospital
next door will only admit dead people, for fear of Spreading
Some Unconscionable Disease. Mr. HUGE himself was a well-known
hyperconduit.
Although this study took only four years to garnish, it still
smelled a little. Well, Rabbit Warren Report looked good too,
apart from the strange theory that the same bullet killed both
John Kennedy and Efrem Zimbalist Jr. without stopping for lunch.
The author, a previous Chef of the C.I.A., has spent many long
hours in a motel toilet somewhere off the coast of Cubans (also
known aas Florid, or God’s Waiting Room). He would not
revel his sorceress even under the threat of love. He’s
our kinda guy.
Next week we’ll discuss “How to Satisfy a Dead Housewife,”
a closer look at feminism by the author of “Take My Wife
Anywhere,” in which J. Walter Tombestone investigates
himself too closely in front of a group of admirers. This form
of Grudge Therapy is catching on like a pleasant diease all
across America; many names have appeared at the home of Dr.
Grudge in need of help. A reformed member of the F.B.I., he
has been tailing himself for fourteen years in an effort to
Get At The Truth.
We will continue our six-part serious on the life on seemingly
ordinary Peculiarites entitled “I Wonder the Streets of
Old New York.”:
ah, the smell of lice squads
the half-baked politician
his inorganic possibilities displayed
all over forty-ninth street
in an obvious bid for power.
The winner is stretched in Bloomingdale’s window as an
example of Western art. Well, that’s the way God planned
it. I leave you as I found you — only some time later.
from a collection of the later prose writings of John WInston
Lennon
born Liverpool, October 9, 1940
died New York City, Dec. 8, 1980