collab

Monday, August 29, 2022

The Blue Vineyard Of Voo Shining Stone: HIS MOUTH

The Blue Vineyard Of Voo Shining Stone: HIS MOUTH: His Mouth His mouth Fascinates my eyes Draws them there against their will, Captures them, taunts them, holds them ...

Don't Nobody Love Ya


 




Don’t Nobody Love Ya
.
.
.
Don’t nobody love ya
When you down and out
Don’t nobody want ya
When you can’t give ‘em nothin' back
Don’t nobody need ya
When all you got is an empty hand.
.
Nah, they don’t see ya, man
Hangin' back in the shadows, waitin’
Heck, they don’t even see ya standing in the sunshine
If you holdin’ a beggin’ bowl
You not even a man to them
All you is, is a bag o’bones in a dirty shirt.
.
All of ya’ll is invisible, you hear me?
A buncha homeless nobodies carrying ya home on your backs
Little bags of stuff nobody else want
Little bits of trash and treasure to decorate the alleyways
And you think you gots it made
‘Cause you got more trash than others.
.
They call ya homeless
And they jump back like they gonna catch somethin’
Sometimes they even cross the street to avoid ya
See how they look at you?
Look at that fear in their eyes
And can’t you just taste that bad taste in they mouths?
.
Ain’t they somethin’?
They, with their fancy shoes
And roofs over they heads?
Hurryin’, hurryin’ here and there
Like they got somewheres to go
And especially away from you.
.
What they don’t know, like you know, like I know
Is that tomorrow, in the blink of an eye
They could lose them pretty shoes
And those cozy little roofs
And be out here walking these here mean streets
No better off than you.
.
The man, he giveth and he taketh away
He smile in your face and make you promises like a holy man
And you run to his shelter and stick out your hands
And he backs off and looks at ya, puzzled
Like you s’post to know he was just lyin’
Like you s’post to know it all just a game.
.
But you know what?
All them rich folks, them high and mighty and shady and greedy
They know somethin’ you all don’t know
They know that the rich gonna keep getting richer
And the poor gonna keep gettin’ poorer
‘Cause they gonna take all you got and you gonna give ‘em the rest.
.
‘Cause ya’ll just sheep
And they is your shepherds
Not good shepherds, mind you
‘Cause they don’t give a damn about you all
They don’t care if you die or cry or live out in the rain
And they damn sure don’t feel your pain.
.
But you know what?
One of these days all their houses gonna all fall down
A big ole crash, a big ole ka-Boom
And it’ll all be gone, like that!
And where they all gonna be, then?
Out here on these streets, walkin’ like zombies.
.
Nah, I’ll tell you the truth if ya got a mind to hear it
One day all them people out around the fire barrels
All them homeless, hungry people
They gonna stand up, raise their fists and they gonna say:
We want our homes back! We want our country back! 

We want our freedom back!
And there’s gonna be a horde 

Of homeless angry people marching like an army.
.
I can’t wait to see that day, can you?
Say, man, ya got a little sumpin-sumpin left in that bottle?
Any more of that soup left over there?
It sure is cold out here tonight, ain’t it?
We all gotta stick together if we gonna survive
Yeah, don’t nobody love you if you down and out.
.
We down and out now
But you just wait
You just wait………………
I already hear them high rises fallin’
And those golden bulls crashin’
And them rich shepherds startin’ to scream.
Come on now boys, let’s sing us a little bit a
“We shall overcome……we shall overcome…. someday……
Lawd, have mercy, shore ’nuff we is
Someday, someday, someday…..we gonna be some overcomin’ fools……
Boy, I tell you what!!!!
.

.

   






©by Voo
Nov 24, 08
8:20 p.m.

Sunday, August 28, 2022

Space Weaver

 

put on full screen...oh my goodness!!!!

Astronauts And Ancient Dreams

 



                                               Valley of the Moon...Lisa Gerrard





 Astronauts And Ancient Dreams




On the dark side of the moon

We built a snowman out of dust

And watched dead rockets flying by

In waves of antiquated rust.


Travelling through the universe

We'd tired of outer space

And went to rest upon the rock

To touch the moon man's face.


We bounded down to craters

And jumped up to the stars

Spread our picnic on the ground

And made our plans for Mars.


For we were growing lonely

For the sights and scenes of home

Though the planet was deserted

And all the ones we loved... long gone.


Just you and I, for centuries now

Survived to man the ship

To go where no one has gone before

On a thousand different trips.


But we are tired, so very tired

Of sailing through the black

And we are longing for red soil

And dream of going back.


The face there of your father's father

The fallen statue lain

It begs us to return and raise

It to it's feet again.


That Earth would know our story

Stare in silenced shock and gulp

To lay the myths at last to rest

When that ancient one stands up.


It will be our last great mission

To restore those ruins and soon

And we sigh in unison with a million stars

On the dark side of the moon.





©by Voo

July 26, 07

midnight



Saturday, August 27, 2022

Incident On A Thursday Afternoon

 


Incident On A Thursday Afternoon 

                      

                                                                                 

So this little punk walks in

To the Ivory Gardens Tea Room

Where myself and fifteen of my closest friends 

And monied members

Meet for tea and french pastries

Every Thursday afternoon since

The love of my life and youth had left me

Some nine years earlier

Due to death and not, I'm sure

Because he wanted to.


"Listen up, Grandmas!" he bellowed

And waved a wicked looking dagger

In the faces of my stunned and interrupted friends

"I want all your cash, your credit cards

Your life savings and family heirloom jewelry

And I want 'em put in this Royal Crown purple liquor bag

And I want 'em right now, right this minute 

Or there's gonna be hell to pay!"


Everything went dead silent and into slow motion

And my long and interesting life flashed before my eyes

In an odd fifteen seconds or so

As I thought about it later on, I'm pretty sure 

That everyone else's did, too

Even those with extremely boring lives.


One could surmise by observation that the man

(If he could be called that) was a junkie in need 

Of whatever they needed these days and did not care

About subsequent heart attacks or epileptic fits

Or fainting spells that used to be called "the vapors"

In the deep, deep South where I was born and raised

He wanted money and he thought us easy prey

The elderly rich with nothing else to do but sit around in our finery.


"Now, see here, young man," I started and stood to my feet

While my mortified group of widowed women friends gasped

And hid their thin and undefined mouths behind stained napkins

"How dare you come in here and accost the cream of society?

Fine upstanding people who have never spoken to you or done you harm?

Have you no shame? Where is the mother who raised you?

And the father who taught you manners in your youth?


Do not you know your Father in Heaven is watching you

And disapproving and ashamed of your behavior?"

"My father ain't in Heaven!" he sneered

"And if he was, it's only because he came in through

The basement window and knocked the angels unconscious!"


Momentarily at a loss, I stood there and cast about for ideas

The thirty or so attending patrons were already digging into designer bags

And brief cases looking for money and tugging on old and wrinkled fingers

To remove rings and unscrewing costly, time worn estate sale earrings

(Yes, they used to screw on!) from ears that could barely hear the demands.


Jewelry was flung at the scoundrel and chaos ensued as Elmina fainted

And fell at his feet in a graceful heap of lavender and lace and old money

I was used to Elmina fainting and was not so alarmed at that

As at the dagger now pointing at my ample chest and the rage

Of the twenty something thug directed at my person.


"Give me the cash, Blue Hair!" he snarled and lunged forward

As I stepped back and the females in the Tea Room oohed in unison

"No, I shall not! "I said defiantly and straightened my back as best I could

And met his reddened eyes

He looked shocked. Then frightened. Then amused.


"Got a death wish, do ya, Old Folks? I can help fulfill that for ya!

You rich old biddies with your holier-than-thou attitudes!

Who do you think you are? Give me that money, you senior citizen

I don't got all day! Give me that purse! Where are your diamonds?

Hell, write me a check for all I care! Give me the credit cards! Hurry up!"


As Chairman of the Ladies Club and President and Founder 

Of the Society to Protect and Preserve the Old Ways 

I felt the need to show myself strong in the eyes of this effrontery

Now before me and to stand as a beacon in the face of the dissolution

Of those old and cherished ways.


I was after all, held in high esteem by my friends and community

And I had never backed down (just ask my late husband)

From a confrontation or disagreement (especially about money)

Or the terrible handling of it and the wasting of it on gambling or such

And I would not do so now in the presence of my peers.


Lost in reflection, I had no time to grab my handbag from the chair

Before our ragged and red haired robber snatched it away and howled with glee

"Let's see." he said, pointing the dagger with one hand

And opening the purse with the other.


And all my little everyday treasures went spilling out

Onto the table among the broken teacups and cake crumbs

Pawing through my things with dirty fingers, he scowled

Thumbed through my membership cards and photo albums

And threw them over his shoulder.


"Alright, High Society, where's the money?" he screamed

And my empty wallet went flying as everyone stared in amazement

"Where are the cards? The checks? Your bank deposit slips?

C'mon, GrandMaMa, I don't have all day! I got people to see

Places to be! Aha!"

 And his face lit up with a demented kind of joy 

As he pulled the pale yellow piece of paper out of it's hidden compartment.


"What's this? A receipt? Hmm. Let's have a look. Oh, looky here, looky here!"

And my face fell and I began to tremble because he had uncovered my shame

And the proof that I was not all that I pretended to be

"Alberto's Pawn Shop," he read aloud, "Paid to Mrs. La-Di-Da-So-and So....

$250.00 for one eighteen carat wedding band and one matching engagement ring

With three big old diamonds! Mmm. Mmm. Mmm."


And the chaos in the Tea Room hushed and I heard the intake of breath

In fifteen elderly bosoms and felt the eyes of all those who had known me

For half my life turn and question me in puzzled judgmental silence

What did they know!


 I had played my part well of a wealthy and respected

Society matron, the wife of a beloved and respected physician

Who had secretly lost all his money at the casinos and had the gall

To pass away without telling me what to do

I had sacrificed, gone without, lived meagerly and in secret shame

Haunted the poorer side of town, even, dare I say it? Looking for....cans

To finance my Thursdays at the Ivory Gardens.


And now this humiliation, this sting, this exposure at the hands of a hoodlum

"Pawn Shop patron!" the delighted criminal sang. "You're poorer than me!

You ain't got nuthin but your d-i-g-n-i-t-y!! Ain't that something?

Sold your wedding rings, did ya? How you gonna get 'em back?

Won't me to loan you some money? Here, I got plenty!"


And he thrust a fistful of stolen cash into my reddened face

Threw back his head and laughed

"Here, here's a tip for the limo driver, I'll tell one of 'em to wait for you

When I leave here. He can drive you to the shelter!"

(And it was true, there were several limos parked outside

(None of which were mine.)


"Let me have that mink coat. What's a bag lady like you

Doing with a fur coat? You old hoity toity hypocrite!"

And he reached forward and speared my cherished mink coat

With the dagger, cut a big hole in it and threw it on the floor

"What now, Old Woman?" he sneered. "Ain't so brave now, are ya?"


Well, that was it. That was all. The final straw. The breaking point

The end of the matter. The I- didn't- care- anymore

I cleared my throat, wiped my moist eyes and reached down

Into the bodice of the last new dress I had bought

Some ten years before, pulled out the pearl handled 22 caliber

And shot him dead.


Then, before the stunned and silent congregation of former 

And never again friends and ex members of the now defunct

And disbanded Society For The Preservation of the Old Ways,

I picked up my tattered and soiled mink memento of days gone by,

Marched out through the door of the Ivory Gardens Tea Room,

Past the waiting limousines with their bored, uniformed drivers

Thumbing through PlayBoys with one eye on the mirror.


I nodded good day to the door man of the hotel next door,

Stepped off the curb and crossed the street toward home

As usual, on foot, but this time not looking furtively behind me

To see if anybody noticed.


Stopping to admire my wedding rings in the window of the pawn shop

I sighed a bit and then on impulse went inside

And bought them back with the money that had been flung at me earlier

Money I had gathered unto myself, almost without being aware of it.


Happily I slipped them on my naked fingers and kissed them hello

Tore up the pale yellow receipt and threw the bits to wind

A kind of revenge, if you will

Then I hurried down the street on aged but wiser feet

The events of the day already dimming in my memory.


No longer caring about my lost reputation but for what I had regained,

I walked on toward my lonely but well kept three story brownstone

Humming a quiet southern melody in a noisy northern city

And with my head held high.

 








                          







©by Voo

March 9, 07 

1 a.m.