STEVEN
W. BAKER
SUMMER OF LOVE
(1967, Haight-Ashbury, San Francisco)
It was a perfect
day in the Summer of Love
A cool Pacific
breeze blowing into the park
Off the Bay,
restive in the near distance
The Haight full of
people for the weekend
Sun smiling from a
washed blue sky.
Where else would
anyone want to live?
What time in all
of history could be better?
Why not live where
fate focuses to a point?
Those were my
thoughts as I walked
Through the ropes
and knots of compatriots.
I was headed for
the famous "Yellow House"
Just across the
park and up a little street
Currents of music
and smoke blew through
The California air
in the very midst of now
And I knew I was
part of something historic.
The park was
always crowded on Saturdays
Full of hippies,
runaways, shysters, clowns
In those days,
life seemed to flow freely
From the grass,
the trees, from the rooftops
Making the city's
grime and sleaze disappear.
Darkness was
invisible, under a layer of gold
Sparkling in the
sun of young emotion
I couldn't even
smell it under the rich aromas
Of hot dogs and
tacos and marijuana
As far from my
mind as a long lost love.
Some of the park's
denizens waved to me
Or asked,
"How's it goin', man?" if I was near
It made the city
feel like home to be known
Made it feel like
the Indiana I'd left behind
Even though it
couldn't have been more different.
Which is what
endeared the Haight to me
This connection
and love for all its failures
As well as the
evolution forward I could feel
That seemed to
express itself in every smile
What if this were
where I'd make my stand?
The "Yellow
House" had once been grand
But it hadn't been
painted for many years
And had been
abandoned almost as long
It's three floors
housed quite a few runaways
Though the big
first floor was almost empty.
The band I'd been
gigging with for a month
Played every
Saturday night until early morn
I banged on an old
upright piano left there
From saloon days
sometime after the Quake
I had tuned it up
and fallen in love with it.
My bandmates
brought their guitars and amps
Our drummer set up
his kit and we would play
The rock songs we
mainly wrote ourselves
I often made-up
the words as I sang them
Into the old mic
somebody's girlfriend owned.
That Saturday
afternoon I walked through
The front doorway
missing its long-stolen door
Eager to start
practice for that night's set
And instantly
received a very big shock --
"My"
piano had been completely destroyed!
It looked like
someone must have used an ax
Or maybe a sledge
hammer the night before
They obviously had
made some serious noise
For no reason but
to obliterate a treasure
My anger mounted,
but sadness prevailed.
I would certainly
not be playing piano that night
Or any time in the
foreseeable future, thank you
The show must go
on, so we limped through practice
And the set that
night, though it ended early --
Used to a sound,
without it, things seemed sad.
I never played in
the big, old Yellow House again
Not long after
that, they found a runaway girl
Up on the third
floor, stabbed ten times, dead
I started thinking
about moving on, maybe LA
Where, unknown to
me, Ardee waited with love.
The Haight became
just another, strange then
Because none of it
lasted or became the norm
Except for pockets
of hippies here and there
They largely disappeared,
along with peace,
Along with the
feeling that all men are brothers.
©2016 Steven W. Baker
CAMPFIRE
I'm happy to
gather grass, sticks, and logs
For the campfire
we are about to build
Trying to avoid
chopping my leg like I once did
The evening before
my first Mt. Katahdin climb.
I like to have a
circle of rocks, but not always
And then, inside,
the teepee of tinder and sticks
An ancient design
etched into our memories
From long ago and
far away fires of survival.
Building the fire
makes me think of that past
The sun sinking
behind a big black mountain
The day breeze
dissolving into night stillness
Darkness and quiet
spreading like a quilt.
Calls of the night
animals are not like the day's
They have a
somber, lost sort of tone to them
A sadness that
they are forced to live in the dark
Because the light
is even more dangerous.
The match strikes,
the small, hungry blaze begins
We sit on a larger
circle of rocks or logs
Huddling close as
we feed the growing flames
And cold descends
rapidly down the mountain.
It's the time of
tiredness and peace and hunger
But it will be a
while before we can cook
Before the coals
or rocks or pans of food
Will be ready to
prepare the meal awaited.
Now, for a while,
and after cooking and eating
For a longer while,
is the time to sit and spin tales
Such as man has
always done around the warmth
Watching the
flames play and the coals glow.
We talk first of
our day and days from the past
While I imagine
entering the now roaring fire
Fantasizing some
heat-resistant pinpoint presence
That could fly
through the caves of burning embers.
It's a lovely
ancient thing, the fire, a reminder
Of a beautiful if
hard and hungry past for man
When to sit and
eat and talk and watch the fire
Were enough, were
all we had and all we wanted.
©2016 Steven W. Baker
FLAT EARTH
I don't know why,
but I often come across
Things passing
strange.
The other day I
met a young man
Who was absolutely
convinced
The world is flat,
not round.
"We are fed
lies," he said,
Part of a vast
conspiracy
To keep mankind
from the truth
Though the motive
seemed
To have escaped
him.
"There is
scientific proof," he said.
"Other men
know the truth --
A spinning globe
is impossible!"
I couldn't help
but speak up
For the poor,
maligned roundness.
I spoke of the
green flashes I'd seen
The disappearing
and appearing masts
Of distant ships
I'd watched at sea
With my own eyes
and with binoculars
As they climbed up
and down
The distant blue
horizon of my view.
How storms and
whirlpools rotate
In different
directions north and south
Of the equator no
flat earth could have.
I spoke of the
great circles airliners fly
That save them
fuel covering the globe
Shunning the
straight lines a flat earth
Would invariably
require for efficiency,
The eclipses
grand, the never setting sun.
He said,
"Antarctica circles the world."
I said, "No,
it has been circumnavigated."
Simple night and
day are impossible
If this silent
planet is simply flat.
The sun would
never disappear from view
If it circled
above a poor flat earth.
But nothing made a
dent
In his blind
convictions, because
They were drawn
from something
He'd read in some
faultless book
That could never
be called a lie.
The superstition
that we are duped
By mysterious,
powerful, anonymous men
Including those
who never even went
To the cold,
lonely moon and returned,
By Copernicus and
gallant Galileo Galilei
And every
astronomer and scientist since.
An idea
"Foolish and absurd in philosophy,
And formally
heretical since it explicitly
Contradicts in
many places the sense of
Holy
Scripture."
A lie told over
and over for thousands of years
Does not so easily
die.
©2016
Steven W. Baker
STEVEN
W. BAKER has essentially lived two lives as a poet — as a college student and
shortly after, when he published a lot of work in underground newspapers and
obscure journals, most of which are probably now defunct. His second life as a
poet began a quarter century later, after he started traveling and living
around the world. He has now gathered a large body of unpublished work from
this period that was written for himself and his close friends, which he is now
publishing. His poems have appeared, among many others publications, in Eat
Sleep Write, Silver Birch Press, The Rain, Party, & Disaster Society,
Ty(po-e:tic)us, Pilcrow & Dagger, Spirit Caller Magazine, and Flink.to,
where his poem, “Picture of Marigot Bay” won the 2014 Poetry Contest.
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