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a journal of literature & art

The Literary Review

Issue 9         Page 89

Autobiography

An autobiography of a lizard should contain

lizard reflections: reminiscences, confessions

daydreams. One morning the lizard said,

“All right, Uncle Baxter, I’ll get my stuff.”

The next moment, perched on Uncle Baxter’s

shoulder, the lizard watched as Uncle Baxter

handled a crane; a big ball on a chain

crumbled a stone wall. Then there was the time

the lizard and Uncle Baxter relaxed at St. Kitts

in palm shade, a view of turquoise water,

Uncle Baxter in a lounge, tall green drink

in hand, lost in War and Peace; the lizard

slithered along motes of a sandcastle kids

had built then abandoned. An autobiography

of a lizard should contain the lizard’s preferred

bowling team, it’s preferred soup and rainforest.

Uncle Baxter had a German Shepherd, Lucky,

the lizard didn’t like; when the lizard, crossing

a room, made eye contact with the dog

it looked like it wanted to kill him. The lizard

lived across the street from Uncle Baxter.

When Lucky got old, Uncle Baxter helped

the dog up the stairs. That ended. Uncle

was sad but the lizard couldn’t share in that.

Uncle was alone in that dark hour, smoking

a cigarette, looking out a window. One day

Uncle Baxter took the lizard into the city of neon

lights, names on marquees, honking taxi cabs.

Messengers in long coats scuttled across

an avenue. The lizard wondered what they

were delivering, what was in the messages.

Another day Uncle Baxter took the lizard

to a place of rocks and shadows, and

shouted something only the lizard could hear.

There was no one around, no one for miles.

Heartless

I stand above the river and look down.

“Have you no heart?” Of course

it doesn’t. It’s not a nightingale.

“Ain’t you got no heart?” Frank Nitti,

flat on his back, said to Eliot Ness,

as Ness towered over him,

pistol in hand, in an Untouchables

on my Motorola’s screen. Back to the river.

I know it as well as any body of water

expert, though I’ve never been in it or on it.

Another river, in, yes, but not this river.

Were I the poet William Stafford,

I could say firmly “Ask the river.”

It sloshes. It has neither heart nor soul.

I live near it. Some neighbor

might claim it has a soul. Get real! 

This river, shaped something like an S,

a bit hourglass, bends, curves,

in line with the bank I’m on

and the bank on the other side.

Willows, sycamores, bushes, and grass

grow there, as they grow here. 

My “no heart talk” is talk to myself

and to anyone who wants to listen

or happens to hear. This bank’s mud,

blackish blue, gleams.

The river’s color, that of pea soup,

bears a five o’clock shadow. One willow

on the opposite bank is lovely. 

If it could talk, it would have the pitch

and timbre of the silver-tongued Johnny

Dollar, Bob Bailey of radio fame.

Sweet Seasons

Lizard asked Uncle Baxter about Marilyn

Kilroy.

She was born in Savannah, Georgia

in 1927 and died in New York City in 1969.

Who was she?

A torch singer, but one song of hers,

Laffin at Me, sounds like typical pop schlock

you’d hear from the late fifties.

How did she make her mark?

In ‘51 she appeared in The Big Night,

the one unflawed character in this film

about the corruption of life in America

as it was as opposed to how it is.

She was the one George, the protagonist

looked at and said to, you’re so beautiful

even though..his inference

was even though you are black. You saw

the change in her face, at first

pleased, suddenly revolted.

What did she look like?

She had brown eyes. The features in her

face perfectly proportioned,

she was lovely, but not uncommonly so.

What else about her do you know?

She sang in New York clubs. In November

1969 she and her twenty year old

stepdaughter were murdered in their

apartment because her husband Pat

Jackson, a car salesperson, had failed

to pay a debt he owed to drug dealers.

Did she herself do drugs?

I have no idea. She may have. I only know

she sang, and acted in a few films.

She sang in The Big Night moments before

George sidled up to her.

She was the impetus for racism as an

integral part of the corruption depicted

in this film, which, unlike Laffin at Me,

was not dollar-driven but had something

to say, and to show, the face of Terry

Angelus, played by Marilyn, aka Mauri

Leighton, who in real life was murdered,

either shot, stabbed, or beaten,

I don’t know how, there’s much I don’t know.

I saw her face change as she stood

outside the club in that movie, about

to go someplace else, shortly after midnight,

I don’t know where. You see

George leave in a cab with his pal

the professor, you don’t see Terry again.

You know she’s in The Big Night

not only for her singing.

Were drugs rampant in New York in ‘69?

I suspect so. Marilyn’s stage name

was Mauri Leighton. She was beautiful.

© Frank Murphy: Colin’s World 2:33p.m.

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