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Tuesday, October 24, 2023
Beyond The Blue Skies
Wednesday, September 13, 2023
Downtown
Thursday, August 10, 2023
A Brick...
Tuesday, April 25, 2023
A Bench
Friday, February 3, 2023
O Life, Where Art Thou?
In the Freedom
Sunday, May 23, 2021
The Muse | a collection of poems |
| Death speaking - from the poem The Muse |
Thursday, April 8, 2021
Rio de Janeiro - The Working Bees
The city of Rio is awakening,
And it awakens at the suburbs first,
From its edges to within:
Where the working bees live
before they leave to serve;
serve the ones fast asleep.
The sleeping ones,
Sleep tight,
Because in sleep
you mimic and conquer death.
At the noble areas within Rio
one can see the lights
sparkling from the slums
and the ones rising to face living.
I met a man from a noble area
that smoke cigars at 7am
and between puffs told me to wise up:
In Brazil, he told me, there is no art anymore;
it is the law of the jungle
and to make movies here, Gringo, you have to pay.
My native country grew up
and fell in love with the dollar
and in the New Rio-
which is how they named the bus station-
you pay "an arm and a leg" to wash your hands.
I met in Rio
a group of hippies, and adventurers,
and signed them up to make a film
because there are always dreamers around:
searching for meaning, searching for something more
something that stretches farther than the limits of a city,
the color of your skin, of your sexual preferences,
farther than Rio, bigger than a country-a film is-
and its earthbound limits.
A film is a Parasite that festers.
For the man puffing his cigar
nothing is bigger than his Rio
nothing is bigger than the dollar
and the parcel of land he resides
and even the car one drives symbolizes his importance.
I met men like this everywhere:
France, Spain, London
and the United States of America,
where the dollar is made,
where now everyone is also asleep.
Because it is late,
it is always too late for men with cigars...
While they sleep through the night
I covertly plot a film
because sleeping is so goddamn tiresome.
Monday, January 4, 2021
Friday, November 6, 2020
Now
Monday, September 7, 2020
The Muse
There is always a song to be sung
and I surround the one on the stage
crowding him, reminding him
to sing, to dance, to pretend...
There is always a road
not crossed by anyone:
speeding trucks, weaving cars
blocking the golden fortunes
that are only found on the other side.
I like the fearful,
the devotees...
I smile to them my Mona Lisa smile,
as they beg the Lord: for forgiveness,
for inspiration for clemency;
if he listens, if he cares,
if he inspires,
itʼs well beyond my care.
Clemency he has none to give,
for I am, forever inspiring and certain.
There is always a thing or two
that one can daily do to forget;
and as they do, religiously,
time takes them by the hand
and delivers them all to me.
The soulful,
I take away
in majestic strides,
as the courageous
I sit beside,
as they drive their cars
hundreds of miles an hour
over a cliff, against a tree.
The uninspired
I arrive late to collect,
in their forever muted state
they go peacefully,
in their sleep.
There will be people there,
crying.
I come, collect them and move on.
As I walk away with them
I see a building,
an unfinished fence, a nice garden
that reminds me of someone.
Step by step, in my lead shoes,
I tip toe on the others:
the passionate,
the inspired,
as they put the final touches
on their latest creations,
as they begin their opus.
We walk away together
and I hear their passionate tales
of their unfinished masterpieces:
a beautiful painting,
a beautiful score,
a perfect quilt,
the first typed pages
of a new novel
that would inspire millions.
A late afternoon,
an early morning stroll,
is always better
accompanied by someone
whose time has run out.
I watch them
passionately describing
how grandiose it would have been:
they are still focused,
strangely connected,
eternally unaware,
forever dreaming,
and I am the one destined
to exist only in their stories,
and the wondrous promises held
in their unfinished work.
On rare occasions,
I read over their shoulders
and find absolute beauty,
and I wait, teary eyed,
ignoring the clock,
until the lead marks the paper
one final time,
one final note:
the end.
They see me
and acquiesce;
I take them away
into the night
quietly,
I know I should feel betrayed
but genius is rare indeed
and mediocrity makes me forgotten.