January 2024
Update 1/25 Janus would be proud –
In Memory of Vincent James Quatroche the 1st
Born 2/28/1901 Died 1/2/1939
Vincent Quatroche (my grandfather) on Drums circa 1935. Was killed in the backseat of a car asleep while the band was driving back from a gig in 1938 on New Years by a drunk driver who hit them head on the South Fork of Long Island He lingered briefly in the hospital into the new year of 1939. Vincent was 38 years old.

V.J.Q. the 1st
Back from a gig-
Small house. Good check.
Got to have that money up front.
Six hours in the car out of nine.
It rained and the road was twisted
in glistening black ribbons
that bound your back up in knots.
Now I’m safe and sound lit pumpkin content
looking at the orange glow of the marigold
blossoms from my garden cut and assembled in pickle jars.
And I’m thinking of you.
You were the musician. The drummer. The back beat.
A member in the SUFFOLK SERENADES.
You, asleep in the back seat of the car on the way
home from an engagement just after Christmas
that year. A drunk in the other lane crossed
the double line and ran the band’s car off the road.
You never regained consciousness.
You lingered in the hospital
until the afternoon of New Year’s day of 1939.
You died and left a widow called Dottie
who smoked Camels, who knew you screwed around
on the side and five kids, all under the age of
sixteen for her to raise by herself.
Your oldest son became and Artist.
His son a Poet.
Your son has told me stories about you.
The first Vincent James.
You were the grandfather I never met.
It is difficult to imagine you as I’m
older now than you ever grew.
Sometimes on nights like these when I’ve escaped your fate I think about it.
I think that the trio of us could have been
something in a room; I wonder if we’ll get the chance to find out in eternity.
Hey Vince,
the beer is cold tonight at my house.
White foam in a golden glow.
Maybe a little like it might have been in another glass in Southampton in 1923.
And on nights like this, at this hour, I can almost see
him smiling, saying with cool, hard shiny dark eyes,
“Yeah you’re bullshit, all right, a lot like your dad,
but in a different way, and if I had the chance and was
with you there tonight, I’d smack you in the side of your
head, with the back of my hand.
Another Rubber Eden V.J.Q. 3rd 11/1/91–97-2021
Year End
What fades in this so quickly
the moment of softness
a succession of muted lights
winking from brutal everyday corners
into the uncertain blackness of the future.
Tell me different, then
show me the hope that eludes
that promise of reconciliation
the purpose for these days that could provide
vibrancy and glory
The flip of the pages to a good passage
chapter and verse.
The voice that invites
the beckoning eyes that calls you
by name. Your way illuminated
by light that shows a path
between the awful dead ends of dull routine.
Where is my seat?
My tasks? My charges?
Who looks for me?
How will I recognize them?
Terrible Now is the time.
Terrible Now can only be the time.
The time for release.
–Another Rubber Eden 1998/Retread Reissue 2020
NEXT !
(For R.B)

The wonderful life Christmas is over
One tries not to be depressed.
Maybe re-read Brautigan’s piece
From 1963
Where he and his friend were
so depressed over Kennedy’s public execution
that they took pictures
of discarded Christmas trees
abandoned in the gutter
and then proceeded to get drunk
while watching a slide show of them later.
I get that.

All those rolls of left over wrapping paper
all about the place.
The lights that need to be taken down
before the neighbors start with
the “white trash” wisecracks
One thing you can say about Christmas
in this post modern area,
Once it’s over.
It’s dead.
A lot of build up.
A product orgy climax
And the day after ?
Forget about you

The day after Christmas
is like nailing a wood screw
into the back of an old friend
Who shows up once a year for a visit.
And as he walks out the door.
You slam and lock it on his heels
Hissing, “and don’t come back till next year,
You pain-in the-ass bastard.”
Thankful ?
Sure.
This year I was thankful I didn’t end up
in the paraplegic chair
in a nursing home in Baldwin
after that nasty fall
down the Cold War stairs
back in your hometown
that ended up with you
kissing some concrete.
Instead I made it back here on Christmas Eve.

Just in time to have a good cry
With Alastair Sims.
Greeting from Gridville 12/03














Yep. And I was offered a jet pack app the illusion of going places fast. ✌️❤️☕
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January 2, 2024 at 10:35 pm