When I read of poets & their lives, son of a milkman & seamstress, raised in a whistle-stop town or village, a child who spent his after-school hours deep in the pages of a library book, I want to go back to my childhood, back to the war, rescue that boy under the bed, listening to what bullets can do to a man, take him out of the homeland, enroll him in school, his class-size ten, unfold the fables of the sea, a Spanish galleon slamming up & down the high waters. This is why I write poems, why I prefer solitude when I listen to your lazy sound of brass on the phonograph. You give language to black roosters & fossil bones, break down phrases between the LA River & the yellow taxi cabs of New York. I picture you in Watts, the 240-pound wrath of a bass player building up steam, woodshedding for the strictly segregated hood, those who seek a tiny shot of God, digging through hard pan, the hammer’s grunt & blow. I need a gutbucket of gospel, the flat land of cotton to catch all those Chinese acrobats bubbling inside your head. When I think of the day I will no longer hold a pencil within my hand or glance upon the spines of my books, I hear Picasso’s Guernica in your half-choked cries, a gray workhorse lost in a fire’s spiraling notes, a shrieking tenor sax for the woman falling out of a burning house. I want to tell you if I wrote like you pick & pat in Blues and Roots, I would understand the caravel of my childhood, loose without oars or sails, rolling on the swells of a distant sea. That’s all I got, Mr. Mingus. I give you the archaeology of my words, every painstaking sound I utter when I come to the end of a line, especially the stressed beats of a tiny country I lost long ago.
Copyright © 2015 William Archila. Used with permission of the author. “Three Minutes with Mingus” appears in The Gravedigger’s Archaeology (Red Hen Press, 2015).