CORE cyberspace magazine

 ____________________________________________________________________

CORE2.01

                        Flavors of the month:

                        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



           MARK SCHORR  .................. A POINT OF ORIGIN

                        .................. COBOL ODE



           FIONA WEBSTER  ................ INTRODUCING MAMA LANSDALE'S

                                           YOUNGEST BOY



_____________________________________________________________________

CORE2.02

                    Little Teapots, Short and Stout:

                    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



        Weirdest of the WELL      ..........        Bryan Higgins

                                  ..........        David R. Smith

                                  ..........        Flash Gordon, MD


        Autumn and Spring         ..........        Alexander Blue


        Woolworth Parakeets       ..........        William Dubie


        Being with Beetoven       ..........        Aviott John

  

___________________________________________________________________

CORE2.03

                            ~~~````''''~~~


                              LITTLE DUCKS

                         ALL LINED UP IN A ROW



                 Randy Money  . . . . Mourn the Dead


                 Kenneth Wolman . . . Wolma, Poland


                 Kyle Cassidy . . . . Badmetafiction




        QQQQQQQQQQQQQ] QQQQQQQQQQ] QQQQQQQQQQ]  QQQQQQQQQQQQQ]

        QQQQQQQQQQQQQ] QQQQQQQQQQ] QQQQQQQQQQ]  QQQQQQQQQQQQQ]

        QQQQ]          QQ]     QQ] QQQ]   QQQ]  QQQ]

        QQQQ]          QQ]     QQ] QQQQQQQQQQ]  QQQQQQQQQ]

        QQQQ]          QQ]     QQ] QQQ]  \QQ\   QQQQQQQQQ]

        QQQQ]          QQQQQQQQQQ] QQQ]   \QQ\  QQQ]

        QQQQ]          QQQQQQQQQQ] QQQ]    \QQ\ QQQ]

        QQQQ]          QQQQQQQQQQ] QQQ]     \QQ\QQQ]

        QQQQQQQQQQQQQ]                          QQQQQQQQQQQQQ]

        QQQQQQQQQQQQQ]                          QQQQQQQQQQQQQ]




                              Volume II


                              Issue III



                           ISSN:  1062-6697




                            ~~~````''''~~~

        CORE is  an electronic journal of poetry, fiction, essays,

        and  criticsm.  Back issues  are  available via  anonymous

        ftp from  ftp.eff.org from  the  /pub/journals  directory.


        Please  feel free  to reproduce  CORE in  its entirety only

        throughout Cyberspace.  To reproduce articles individually,

        please contact the author.


        Questions, submissions, and subscription requests should be

        sent to core-journal@eff.org.




                            ~~~````''''~~~


                              LITTLE DUCKS

                         ALL LINED UP IN A ROW



                 Randy Money  . . . . Mourn the Dead


                 Kenneth Wolman . . . Wolma, Poland


                 Kyle Cassidy . . . . Badmetafiction


________________________________________________________________________

Randy Money                                      LIBRBM@suvm.acs.syr.EDU



                          MOURN FOR THE DEAD




Row on row of stones jut from the ground through the snow,

landmarks of memories fading as generations rise and recline.

Trudging through ice-lined, snow-filled ruts worn into the earth by

a century of wagon wheels, carriage wheels and tires, past the

plots of other people's memories and dreams, past snuffling poodles

and straining shepherds dragging their whispering owners in solemn

prancing procession, we at last reach our destination.  There my

sister lays flowers on two graves and I recall my father squatting,

a position I associate with him, either pulling weeds as he pulled

on his pipe or combing our dog or steadying a small me in a

photograph.  He was felled by three strokes.  She remembers our

mother ice skating; I remember our mother dancing a polka.  Our

mother, rotted, carved and hollowed by cancer, did not die but

disappeared in whittlings, hair by hair, pound by pound.  A few

grave sites away, my sister lays no flowers but stands, trying to

recall some good, but only remembering her father howling, howling,

howling at the pain of brain cancer chewing, chewing, chewing until

the doctors performed a lobotomy, not to ease the pain but to

destroy his awareness of it.  Silence follows like a consequence of

orphanhood, and in shared sadness we mourn for the dead.


                            * * * * *


My sister sits back in her recliner, feet up, perplexed as she

reviews her life.  Mom, her oldest son says, we are worried about

you, and she recalls another voice with the same timber but

roughened by cigarettes and liquor over fifty years earlier: her

father saying Get us some beer, as, her mother not home, he and his

cronies played poker.  She recalls putting the last bottle on the

table, and that man's hand gripping her thigh and sliding up under

her skirt as her father watches and laughs then looks back at his

cards.  And it happened not once but several times through her

teens, and she always retreated to her room, where she buried

herself in books or dreamed of a time when she would have children

and a husband who would kill anyone who mistreated her children.

She endured those years; she endures her memories.  Mom, her oldest

son says, we are worried about you; we want your mind at rest; we

want you to rest easy.  And she recalls a second voice with a

different timber but the same tone almost fifty years earlier and

arrives, blessed be, to her husband who, saved by the grace of God

almighty, and so assured of heaven, hallelujah, says to her

stepfather, No, you stay out of my home; We don't need your help;

I'll care for my wife myself when she needs it, which she does not

now, for if she is ill, she is sick on her own corruption and

because she is a lazy woman.  And her stepfather says, Get the hell

out of my way or I'll kill you, slaps the door open, pushes her

husband aside and enters her bedroom, where she lay with a fever of

one hundred and three, her throat closing and her head spinning,

and picks her up and carries her to the hospital.  She moves from

hospital to hospital, reaching Florida in early summer in labor

with her first child and the nurse saying, Wait, you have to hold

it, the doctor won't be here for an hour; she remembers holding and

holding and holding, ignoring the pain of tissue tearing, the

conflagration in belly and womb, fighting the urge to push, her son

straining against her straining against him.  And now forty-five

years later, father, mother, step-father and husband are dead and

her oldest son says, Mom, we worry about you; We worry that you

will not rest easy; We worry that you are not repentant, that you

have not renounced your sins before the alter of God; We--including

his wife, but meaning him--want you to die assured of heaven.  And

she, tired, weak, beckons to him and coughs as he bends over her

and spits square in his right eye, which she says offends her.  And

as he leaves, she ponders why, now that she can travel to New York

or Boston or Toronto like she's always wanted, the doctor has said

cancer, the anti-cell, the devourer gnawing, gnawing, gnawing, and

why she is only comfortable in her recliner, traveling her life

over and over like penance for unknown sins, and she wonders if

there is redemption and grace and rest.  And we look on with some

pride, but mostly in grief and helplessness and we mourn for the

dead.


                            * * * * *


And the old lady calls and she says,

    Come see me.

My sister answers,

    No, I can't, Aunt Iantha.  I can't.

And Aunt Iantha's voice quivers like her hand as it picks up her

cigarette,

    Come see me; Puff; You have to see me; Puff; I need to talk to

    you; Puff.

And my sister squirms in her recliner and says,

    I can't; You have to understand, Aunt Iantha, I can't come to

    you.

And Aunt Iantha says,

    The tongue is the evilest organ in the human body; Puff; You

    lied to me; Puff; You said you'd always take care of me, and

    now you won't even come see me; Puff.

And my sister says,

    I'm sorry, I'm sorry.

And the old lady sits smoked and marinating in phlegm, the smell of

dead tobacco and moiling cigarette smoke, all compounded by the

reek of a house sealed for a generation day and night, winter and

summer.  She shifts in her withered skin, and sits her crooked,

arthritic back against the straight-backed kitchen chair and she

says,

    She lied to me; Puff; I have no friends left; Puff; I know she

    goes to the hair-dresser; How can she go out?  Puff; I had

    cancer once, too; Puff; They said I'd die, but they cured me;

    They'll cure her, too; Puff; So why can't she come see me?

    Puff.

And I don't say to her,

    You don't understand; You were childless and you and your

    husband took your money, had your good times; Now she has some

    time to enjoy herself as best she can and she shouldn't have

    to come here and face your nagging and groaning about your

    aches and pains, your constant complaints and irritations,

    your scoldings that none of us do what we do the way you'd do

    it, which, for you, is the only way anything should be done;

    But more, she can't accept your retreat, your dead run away

    from the world, not when she's struggling to survive.

Instead I say,

    You don't understand; You were thirty, she's almost seventy,

    and it's a different cancer, in the blood, not settled in a

    spot where it can be carved away; As for the hairdressers,

    they've offered to come to her house but she won't let them,

    she'd rather struggle against the lungs that won't fill, the

    blood that won't carry enough oxygen, the tiredness that

    cramps her muscles and makes her stagger so she has to hold

    something, anything after a few steps so she won't fall down,

    so she can regain her breath; She walks and breathes now like

    you, twenty years her senior; This is her one self-indulgence,

    don't begrudge her that, don't make her feel guilty.

And the old lady says,

    No, you don't understand, you don't know what it's like to be

    old and widowed and childless; Puff; I've sat in this room

    twenty years and watched all I knew and all I cared for fade

    away and die as I sat here waiting and waiting for the ones I

    wanted to come and they didn't come; Puff; and those who did

    come weren't the ones I wanted to come, so I sent them all

    away and waited and waited; Puff; my family never comes to see

    me; Where are you?  Why won't you come?  Puff.

And I don't say,

    because I can't stand the smell and the bitterness and the

    reproaches.

And I say,

    We all have families, Aunt Iantha, we all have to tend to our

    own; We'll help as much as we can, but we can only help so

    much.

And as I leave wondering if my sister dying isn't more alive than

Aunt Iantha, in something like horror, I mourn for the dead.



________________________________________________________________________

Kenneth Wolman                                        Ken.Wolman@att.com



                          WOLMA, POLAND 


(Bogdan Chmielnicki was the leader of a Cossack revolt in the Ukraine 

 and Poland between approximately 1648 and 1658. It is estimated that 

 he was responsible for the deaths of between 100,000 and 300,000 Jews 

 in Poland during that period.)


                                                     For Melynda C. Reid


1. PRELUDE: WEDDING DANCE


Beyle married Kalman in the fourth year of Chmielnicki, went under

     the canopy,

defying danger and fate: stood with her bridegroom, thought only of

     him, this pale, graying man

with his scholar's soft hands and sad gentle eyes.  The wedding jester

     howled with laughter, perched like a crow

on the synagogue roof, shrieked out  Bride-to-be, bride-to-be, think but

     a little of what now awaits you!

and they laughed at the jest, even Beyle herself, solemn in thinking of

     her new estate.

Their families danced round them, pulled them apart: men with men,

     women with women, circling in the dark.


Beyle sought Kalman with her dreams, her spirit in the air, apart from

     the dancers and decorum of the Law:

and felt his spirit move toward hers in darkness, thinking indeed of

     what awaited them:

for Beyle, at sixteen, and Kalman, at thirty, saw in each other the

     meeting of souls beyond age,

and longed to cleave together, fire and air, according to their spirits:

     and then soared above themselves,

joined together in air and fire, one within the other, accepted first in

     fear, then in joy:

looked down on the lights below, saw not Chmielnicki but Heaven in

     the distant-nearing flames,

drifted in each others' arms, and laughed to themselves, laughed to

     each other, recalling the jesterUs

summons to think of what awaited: for they felt this night that what

     waited was their gift to be borne.

            

2. THE CHILDREN

            

Beyle married Kalman in the fourth year of Chmielnicki, soon fled

     with him from the village of Wolma

to Cracow: returned that winter, heard the nightmares: but because

     there was nothing to do for them,

she could not mourn: so Beyle went like a ghost into her husband's

     bed, dutifully,

as she had been instructed: but at the moment of Kalman's fulfillment,

     remembered the nightmares:

how the Hetman's Cossacks sewed a terrified cat in her pregnant

     sister's womb,

fed the baby she carried to an underfed sow; captured her 10-year-old

     brother Avruml,

poured raw vodka into his gullet, wrapped him like fish in a scroll of

     the Law, and live-buried him,

before their mother's disbelieving maddened eyes, in the synagogue

     cemetery,

laughing drunkenly at the quick-fading shrieks of  Mamala!  from

     beneath the lime:

and how their mother, reduced to a keening and babbling mad-

     woman who had forgotten her prayers,

was allowed at last to die: raped first, repeatedly, on her son's fresh

     grave, then beheaded;

and how a Cossack hurtled her severed head at an innkeeper in

     payment for vodka and food.


She heard her brother's spectral sobbing in the draining cry of the

     man thrusting inside her,

and that night twice conceived: their firstborn child, and her knowl-

     edge that hearing the cry of the dead had doomed it.

She bore that summer, crying out  Mamala!  in her pain, as she forced

     it  downward, outward, cruelly,

feeling nothing for its unbegun unwanted life, ended as the midwife

     severed the  cord.

Kalman mourned, took solace from his books, sought and found

     answers that only smothered questions,

bound the mouth that would protest: and was taught to dull questioning

     God with his wife's body:

so came to Beyle again, to sow within her, this time in joyless silence,

     focused,

as the rabbis taught him, not on pleasure but the task of binding his

     wife to fertility.

So again she conceived, and bore again, but the child lived: and it was

     the color of moonrise

beneath the dark swatch of its hair: a ghostly spectre to take Avruml's

     name, Avruml himself

risen from the graveyard lime-pit, with no more life than he.  Beyle

     resigned herself:

and sensed this child would also die, victim of its name, a curse given

     in devotion.

            

But it did not, and Beyle mocked herself for a false prophetess: for she

     saw Death's Angel,

knew herself his priestess, dedicated to his will, even to renouncing

     her children:

but not Avruml but Kalman followed in the winter that came: not

     murdered, save by God's pity

and the blood-spattering cough that lived in his lungs, that made him

     weep from pain and shiver

through the hottest summer nights, and that finally came to take him.

     Still Beyle could not mourn:

for the sickly child, the changling-Avruml, clung to her breast,

     demanded all  her strength,

fought against her darkness, drank, sucked at her breast with the

     lover's passion its father could not show,

lived beyond its foretold days, an ancient soul and wonder to his

     mother, but would not grow.

            

3. THE INVADERS

            

The Swede has left his wife six months behind, her face by now a dim

     memory of resentment,

his children, two alive, four dead, all given to fill a parish register or

     country churchyard,

his wife's womb swelling again with the promise of a new chance that

     neither wishes nor believes,

living on a hillside farm that mocks his wife's fecundity in its

     barrenness: a farm of stones.

One morning, he looks without passion or anger at the wolf-mangled

     body of a sheep,

surveys his rain-withered crop that will be neither tithe nor bread to

     feed his family:

shivers and feels himself freeze dead inside, remembering the story

     in church of how Hagar,

cast into the desert by the Jewess Sarah, parted from Ishmael so not

     to see him  die:

does not bid farewell, but disappears from the farm, spends the day

     drinking in  an inn filled with men

whose every breath united is curses and despair; and flees to King

     Charles' army and the distant Polish wars.


Lost after battle, wandering to the village, he contemplates the

     woman in the yard,

sitting in the sunlight, a baby clamped to a breast, the nipple dark-

     swollen, visible,

a feminine vision to inspire not lust but memory: of his wife on the

     hillside farm,

perhaps alive, perhaps not (it is all one), the child in her womb now

     born, perhaps alive,

perhaps not (it is all one), her body beneath his in the night, a

     shredded memory of love

turned too soon to exhaustion: she, an old woman at 25, without the

     strength  even to dream.

He feels suddenly seized without reason, without experience, newborn 

     himself,  bereft of memory:

and the Jewess before him a strange, darkling creature with wolf-

     eyes, clutching her child to her teat like a beast.


She looks at him, the Jewess, quickly covers her breast, extends the

     child  before her like a shield,

shaking her head in odorous terror, a febrile quivering fright before

     a stranger:

and he walks slowly toward her, his boots sucking against the

     springtime mud like a polluted kiss.

What is she crying out at him, shaking her head?  He feels himself

     laugh soundlessly: what would she cry but

Don't! as he takes the child, carefully, out of her arms, sets it on the

     ground, turns and sees her gaping:

for he has kissed the child gently, then turned its back to what will

     take  place, quickly, behind the ruined house.

            

She knows the sure signs that she is with child again: and will bear in

     the winter.  What are prayers? she cries:

staggers wildly through the village, Avruml in her arms, invades the

     study house, and pleads

for death at the hands of Kalman's friends as she begged the stranger

     when he was done with her: extends her neck,

points at the sword in the belt he had not bothered to remove.  But her

     comforters hold her,

teach her the Law: how a Jewish mother bears a Jewish child, that the

     child will be welcomed:

a new child, a new life, in a land that has lost its children: and the

     words of  her comforters

thrust into her darkness, drive her shame from her heart, forgive her,

     save her from her mother's madness.

God has abandoned us, he is so distant! cries the midwife that December

     as she draws forth

the red, squalling blonde-haired Viking baby boy whose cry is like the

     ram's  horn blown at the New Year.

But Beyle laughs, weeping, holding the child:  No, God is close, in my

     belly, like the cat inside my sister!

            

4. CRADLE SONG

            

Sleep my little one, show me your future,

Sleep and dream, show me your past.

Show me my sister, my mother, my brother,

Show me your father, show me what lasts.

            

Sleep my little one, don't wake too soon,

Sleep and dream, don't wish for dawn.

For dawn takes away all your wonderful dreaming,

And daylight shows nightmares, a life to be borne.


Wake my little one, for you are crying,

Wake my poor little one, MamalaUs here.

Wake, my little one, for you have saved me,

The past is a fouled curse, the future is here.

            

Rise with me, little one, come dance in my arms,

Rise and dance, come up to the air.

Look down at the lights, reach out, touch the stars,

For they are as bright as the gold in your hair.

            


________________________________________________________________________

Kyle Cassidy                                     cass8806@elan.rowan.edu



                         BADMETAFICTION



   I took formal and more or less official possession of Elvis

Hemingway's room at exactly twelve noon, February the second, 1992.

It was Groundhog's day, that's important.

   The actual physical act of taking over the back room at #5b

Carpenter Street (upstairs from the _Ajax Tire Shop_ where the

violently broiling sounds of cursing, pneumatic tools and _Guns 'n

Roses_ could be heard almost continually throughout the day) was

not a pretty sight.  Elvis was a fat, fading, and failing hippie.

Neo-hippie I should say.  He was only 30.  Most of his _hip_ness he

got from smoking dope, watching other people smoke dope, listening

to the _Grateful Dead_ (while smoking dope), and renting the video

tape of _Woodstock_ (after smoking dope).  He was born in 1962

which would have made him, what?  _eight_ during the concert?

_"Don't take the brown acid.  The brown acid is bad,"_ he would

tirelessly intone (he thought it was funny, or poignant, or at

least vaguely _sixties_).  He lived on vegetarian bean sprouts,

Tab, and clove cigarettes.  He worked for _Greenpeace_-though he

kept a sock drawer you could breed maggots in.  There was a bong

next to his bed with an old sweat sock stuffed in the neck.

   I didn't know Elvis that well-I'd seen him for a total of about

three hours.  I got to stand there and watch him pick through old

_Relix_ magazines, ostensibly looking for a picture of Bob Weir and

Bob Dyllan throwing sticks off the side of London Bridge or

something.  He felt he had to show me that.  He was the type to

vanish noiselessly at frequent intervals and be gone for days at a

time.  He was supposed to have moved out by the 31st, but he'd

vanished again instead.

   "He gone?"  I said as I came banging up the hollow, wooden,

neverbeenpaintedsince1961 stairs in my huge black combat boots,

making a noise like a thousand stampeding wildebeests.  Of course

this comment was directed into the empty air, and I didn't know if

anybody was home, but it was meant for my frail, new roommate,

whose name-to his misfortune, and for the sake of elucidation-was

Hershel Feinstien.  I was bringing over the last of my things.  I

set them down on the kitchen floor.

   "Nope,"  he replied bleakly, looking up from the grapefruit half

he was gnawing on and away from the newspaper he was reading, "Not

gone.  Haven't seen him in weeks."  He was wearing a dark blue

suit-jacket and slacks, a white silk shirt and this mottled pink

and black tie with a knot about the size of a peanut.  He had on

penny loafers with nickels shoved in them.  The nickels didn't fit

properly and the stiff new leather was bulging and torn.

   "You know, you're supposed to put _pennies_ in those."  I

pointed.  He followed my finger briefly with his eyes but didn't

seem to understand me.  He ran four fingers through his curly red

hair, which was a little too long in the back, and shook the

_Books_ section of the paper. Over his shoulder I could read the

headline: "Sieze the Day!"

   Feinstien was inherently and overpoweringly Jewish (all his

friends were either named Ira, Moses, or Saul), though he tried to

pretend otherwise.  Even to the point of hiding, behind the

bathroom mirror, the tiny golden Star of David which his mother had

given him on his barmitzvah fifteen years before.

   "That's why they call them _penny_ loafers."

   "What?"  he looked up at me.

   "I brought the rest of my stuff.  This is it."

   "Good.  That's good."


   Most of my stuff was in the living room or the closet or piled

up in the corner of Hersel's room.

   Hershel Feinstien was a science fiction author who was suffering

from a traumatic, acute, and near permanent case of writer's block.

In fact, he hadn't written a word in two years, ever since George

Scithers cryptically referred to him as an "ant farmer" in the

elevator at a Chicago convention.  His exact meaning was never made

quite clear to me on that one, but Hersh was devastated.  (This

might have been related to an incident which had taken place two

nights prior, where Hersh had gotten severely intoxicated at the

hotel bar and leapt over a table to kiss a woman whom he thought

was Ursila K. Le Guinn, and who had in fact turned out to be the

wife of a vacationing steel magnate from Pittsburgh;-whose

distempered and impassioned bodyguard proceeded then to lay

Feinstien across every table in the room, spilling a good number of

drinks in the process.) Hardly anyone called him Hershel.  His

first (and only) book, _Christ & the Ceramic Belt Hammer /r_, was

published under the pseudonym Mitterand Belfgore.  Most people

called him _Belf_.  You kind of had to. (The book, by the way, was

a very complicated pseudo-religious tract about an intelligent, and

highly independent, race of neural impulses which existed in unused

portions of the human brain (largely in idiots) and psionically

regulated weather patters into a complex matrix of

literature/language, basically for the entertainment of some

miscellaneous and unnamed space bugs living in Dimension Z (that's

not the real name by the way, the location of the true alien home-

world escapes me at the moment). It's a real tough read, though it

garnered Hershel a glut of favorable reviews, mostly comparing him

with dead existentialists from third world countries.)

   He worked at _Captain Hook's!_ restaurant for children, where he

dressed in an outsized foam rubber pirate's head (patch, hook, and

boots) and was three times a night goosed in a mock sword fight by

Staci Randall, a coquettish seventeen year old High School senior,

who looked almost too good dressed in Peter Pan's green tights and

tunic.  He walked around bellowing, "shiver me timbers!" "you'll

walk the plank!" "swab the deck!" and other such nautical nonsense.

He'd first taken the job at the recommendation of his agent, Marty,

who told him (both of them in a drunken stupor) that science

fiction mogul Lester Dell Ray's daughter Cordelia worked there.  To

the disappointment and unrestrained despair of all involved (except

probably Marty), Lester Dell Rey turned out not to have any

daughters named Cordelia and the girl in question turned out to be

named _Mary Kay_ and not _Dell Rey_ anyway (her father was a

plumber from Clarksboro) ... but Belf stayed on just the

same-mostly due to the way in which Staci Randall filled out her

costume, and partly because he had just been promoted to Captain

Hook (whereas before he had merely been an ordinary pirate who

didn't get to bellow anything at all except "can I take your

order?" and "would you like fries with that?").


   I stomped around the apartment with an air of possessive

pride:-peeing loudly into the toilet and leaving the seat defiantly

in the air when I was finished-a purely symbolic gesture of bold

audacity directed at my last girlfriend who maintained an

obsessive, feminine, fixation about such things.

   "I want that man out of my apartment!" I blared from the

bathroom, carefully placing my brushes-tooth and hair, in the

vacant medicine cabinet.

   "So do I," bellowed Belf from the kitchen (he had, by now,

considerable practice in bellowing, it was well suited to his

meager form).  Belf _hated_ Elvis, with a passion not to be found

on the most memorable and egregious episodes of _Divorce Court_.

While Belf was neat and orderly (he folded his trash), slim, and

polite, Elvis smelled bad, snored, came in late, and perhaps worst

of all, bragged incessantly about success with women who never

existed.

   "Well, when's he coming? to get his stuff...."

   "I don't know...." There was the sound of a spoon being set down

on a plate.  I walked back down the hall-into the living room, "he

should have been here days ago.  Weeks ago.  He never should have

moved _in_.  I told him he was moving out.  I haven't seen him."

   "Where does he go?" I asked, looking over the battered books on

the shelf, there were dozens of them with unimaginably esoteric

titles, some in foreign languages.

   "I don't know.  I have no idea.  The only thing I know is that

people call and ask for him, late at night.  All these guys with

weird accents," he was pouring himself a cup of some expensive

smooth scented coffee, "I tell them that he's dead.  Every once in

a while I beat his clothes back into his room with a stick.  I

mean, I _dream_ about his clothes..."

   "What's that?" I asked, pausing by his desk, littered with paper

and empty coffee cups.  I pointed to a large manilla envelope tied

meticulously with a white string.

   "My new book," he said.  Written neatly across the top of the

envelope was the single word "Badmetafiction".

   "What the hell is _Badmetafiction?_"

   "It's a joke," he said, "Kind of.  Sort of a joke actually-it

would be funny if ... I don't know.  If only it were funny." He

seemed weary and dismayed.

   "Can I read it?"

   "Can?  well, you _could_-only there's not anything there.  I

mean, it's all just blank paper.  It's just a title.  It's going to

be about a science fiction author who's-well, he's out of ideas,

and it turns out to be because there are these government bore-

worms inside his head ... and all he can hear are the Watergate

tapes, playing over and over ... I just thought that if the

envelope were full-stuffed with paper and all, that it would

inspire me..."  His thought processes were stratospheric, neurotic,

and seldom understood by others.  He sounded nasal.

   I untied the string and looked inside the envelope.  There was

a sheet of bond paper with "Badmetafiction" typed across it and his

pseudonym, Mitterand Belfgore beneath it.  The rest of the envelope

was stuffed with coupons.

   "It has an almost finished appearance to it," said Belf.

   "You could fill your shelves with them."

   "I could.  I may." He wrung his hands pensively.

   I went into my room, Elvis' room.  It wasn't that there was a

lot of stuff-it just wasn't in any particular order.  There was no

furniture, just dirty clothes and paper bags.  Remnants of a

hundred take-out dinners at Taco Bell.  There were a lot of beer

cans.  It smelled like a locker room,-that particular fetid odor of

wet socks and perspiration which always reminded me of ...

something.

   "I don't think he's ever done his laundry.  Since he's been

here.  Not once." He kicked at a sock, which rolled bumpily into a

corner, "Look at this," he crouched next to the bed pointing, as

through at an unusually large Haitian Tarantula which had just

crawled from the drain, "he uses his _shoes_ for ashtrays.  His

fucking _shoes!_" Next to the bed were a pair of nondescript

brandless, canvass, running shoes-they were filled with cigarette

butts and ashes.

   "Does he _dump_ them before he puts them on?"

   "Yeah, he _dumps_ them all right ... he _dumps_ them here in the

corner," He pointed with his foot.  His hands were shoved into his

pockets as though he were protecting them.  In the corner was a

makeshift ashtray, partially obscured by a rolled up pair of long-

johns.  A cookie can which must have held four pounds of butts and

ashes.  They overflowed and spilled onto the floor.

   "He's _never_ emptied that."

   Next to the ashtray was the filthy purple bong with a sweat sock

shoved in the top-I mentioned that before.

   "He actually smokes out of that.  He takes the _sock_ out and

_smokes_ out of it.  He puts the sock there to keep the _water from

evaporating_.  Him and those damn lazy hippies.  They come up here

and smoke dope and plan the revolution and meanwhile his _socks_

are sneaking out the back door and committing _armed robbery_."  He

stomped out of the room.

   "Well, when's he gonna get back?  I mean, when can I start

putting my stuff in here?  Could I shove all this in the closet?

would he mind do you think?"

   There was some abstract rumbling from the kitchen.

   "Does he _mind_?" Belf bellowed, "it no longer _matters_ if he

_minds_.  We ought to just start a _fire_ or something.  Salt the

earth," he wandered back in the room, "I say we move it _for_

him..." he was wearing this gas mask that I had gotten at a yard

sale about ten years before (I had never found an adequate use for

it, but somehow I couldn't bear to throw it away), a single yellow

dish-washing glove on his left hand, an industrial (metal shop

workers?) apron, and on his right hand he was wearing his hook

which he was brandishing wildly.  He handed me a trash bag and the

other rubber glove.

   "Here," he said, "sorry I only have one glove-"

   I opened the trash bag and he started hooking clothes and

dropping them into the bag.  His breath was fogging up the inside

of the mask and his head tilted at odd angles in order to see

through the clear parts.  He picked up the million fragrant and

crumpled socks as though they were turds.

   "Where are we going with this?" I asked, "I mean, what are we

going to do with it."

   He stopped for a moment and looked directly at me.  Except for

the hook-for-a-hand, he looked like one of those guys in the

beginning of the _Andromeda Strain_, walking through that town

filled with dead people.

   "We're going to throw it in the river." He sounded like Darth

Vader.  It wasn't exactly a river, to allow you to believe so would

overly glorify our town.  It was sort of a wide stream, but it

passed beneath the main street about a half mile away in a splendid

and broiling waterfall that always made me think of salmon on those

PBS documentaries, you know, heroically leaping up stream and

thrashing their tails, tragically and wonderfully exerting

themselves in glorious slow motion, only to die horribly, gored and

mauled two miles upstream in the jaws of a two thousand pound

grizzly bear.

   "Clog the stream?" I said, "Pollute the environment?"

   "Yes.  With the environmentalist's trash.  Let _him_ drag it out

of the water with a stick or something.  I hope it kills a fish."

He picked up Elvis' shoes with a diligent and unrelenting disdain

and dropped them into the bag.

   "Tribbles like Vulcan's,"

   "Huh?"

   "But they _don't_ like Klingon's..."

   "What the hell are you talking about?"

   "We'll put the chain on the door tonight, and tomorrow we'll

change the locks and if anybody comes looking for him, we'll tell

them he _died_, that he was _shredded_ in a _combine_ accident in

Arkansas and they buried him in a fucking _mason jar_." He waved

his hook in my face, "We'll tell them he was _julienned_.  Then if

he _does_ come back we can garrote him with a lamp cord and bury

him in the back yard and no one'll suspect us because they'll think

he's already _dead_." He was beginning to sweat prolifically under

the gas mask and his wet hair was sticking wildly in the air.  The

plastic eye patches were completely fogged over.  He emphasized his

words with savage lunges of his hook, as though he were trying to

swat a bat in mid flight.


   Belf put on a long black _Botany 500_ overcoat (it was about

sixty degrees out) and dragged the first bag unceremoniously down

the stairs with his hook.  I followed, giddy with some crazy,

wicked, sense of desolation and havoc.  I tossed my bag up onto my

shoulder-feeling like an evil Robin-Hood-Santa-Clause.  It must

have weighed fifty pounds.  Together we trudged down the street.

After four blocks the bags grew fairly heavy and Belf bore down on

the _Dunkin Donuts_ with all the serious intent of a sailor coming

home to the best brothel in town after a year at sea.  Slinging the

bag inside the door, kicking it across the filthy, smooth tile

floor.  Groaning or sighing he sat down on a stool and pulled out

a cigarette.

   "I'm going through a lot of trouble to get this dimwit out of my

house," he shoved the cigarette into the corner of his mouth and

lit it with a loud, expensive looking, silver lighter, "If there

were justice in the world, _he_ would be carrying this trash down

and throwing it in the river."

   Two seats down from Belf sat a hacked old woman in an official

looking black coat specked with shiny silver buttons.  She was

short and disheveled, her stringy black hair fell in her face as

she alternately pulled at a tired looking cup of coffee and chopped

a cream doughnut with widely spaced teeth.  I thought at first that

she was a cop, an undercover cop or something, but then I realized

that she was a crossing guard, a ridiculous octagonal hat lay on

the counter in front of her.  Her face was beleaguered and lined.

She looked straight ahead, through the walls.

   Belf rapped his hook on the counter and ordered coffee.  Which

was brought to him by a blue-lidded fifty year old waitress with a

beehive hairdo.  She didn't look twice at his prosthesis, but

instead turned wearily to me without saying a word.

   "Coke," I said, "and a Boston Creme." She scowled at me and

languorously promenaded off on flat, white shoes.  Somewhere under

all that makeup there lived a sad and tormented soul, who had long

since come to grips with the damp and cheerless realities of the

world.  She realized that she would never be a princess or a beauty

queen.  She would never be an administrator, or even a seller of

used cars.  She couldn't be a secretary because she lacked

refinement and conversational skills-and besides that, she probably

couldn't type.

   Belf stirred his coffee with his hook.

   "Bout time ta get goin'," said the Beehive to the crossing

guard, passing a wet rag across the counter in front of her.

   "Uh-huh," said the crossing guard.


   We drank our beverages.  I gnawed on my doughnut while Belf

jabbered on with a continual stream of seemingly unconnected

thoughts on circumcision, computers, weather patterns, angels, ice

sculptures, and the mysteries of mezzanine floors. These he tried

to tie together with the crazy idea that he had been Galileo in not

one, but several past lives, all of which left me very confused.

This was one of the hazards of knowing him.  He fell silent and

stared forward for some time, lost in himself, then he turned to

me, his thoughts completed I supposed. "Lastday," he said

caustically, looking down into his open palm.

   "Huh?" I said. He showed me his hand, it was clean and young,

traced with faint pink lines.

   "Lastday," he said again.

   "What the hell are you talking about?"

   He looked down into his palm again.  "Yesterday it was red, now

it's blinking." He looked back up at me, "Let's get out of here."

He aimed a finger out the window.

   "Sure," I replied, dropping the remains of my donut on the

napkin.  "You're a nut," I told him.  The crossing guard looked at

us and then at her watch.


   "You don't believe what I was saying?" asked Belf as we again

lugged the bags down the sidewalk.

   "No, that's not it, saying about what?  I guess I'm ... aw hell.

I forgot what I was going to say.  I don't know."

   "Open the pod-bay doors, Hal," said Belf, shining his teeth like

whitewashed fenceposts at me.


   _Across from us, school is out, and there is a group of kids

waiting to cross, standing on the curb and watching the traffic on

322 pass in front of the middle school.  The traffic is pretty

heavy, and as far as I can see are cars in both directions.  One of

the kids, who looks about thirteen, is wearing a new denim jacket

and stomping brown work boots.  He looks pretty antsy, like maybe

there's a good baseball game on, or he's going to meet some girl

behind the library.  He's looking left and right, up and down the

street, and instinctively my eyes follow his.  Finally there comes

a small break between cars, maybe twenty feet and he runs out

between them.  The instant that his foot hits the pavement, I know

he isn't going to make it.

   "Look!" I say, and point.  Suddenly everything is noiseless and

calm, as though one universe ended as I said those words and

instantly, another began.  Belf follows my arm just in time to see

a car-it all happens so fast now that I don't even remember what

kind of car it is-smack into him.  He folds almost in two, like a

carpenters ruler at an awkward place in mid-leg, somewhere around

the knee, but I can see that it is in an unhealthy direction, then

he recoils from the car like a bullet from a gun, he flies up into

the air and somehow his pants came off, completely stripped off,

and before he hits the ground I can see one of his boots flying

through the air.  It must go thirty feet, I watch it and see it

land in the street. There seems to be nothing in the world but me

and that boot, now sitting upright and untied on the pavement,

looking unassuming and perfectly normal_.


   "Knocked his pants off," I heard Belf say, his voice was loud

and seemed to punch through a sheet of silence which had been

stretched tight between me and the rest of the world.  Suddenly,

although I didn't know that any time passed, the street was filled

with people and flashing lights and the traffic was stopped.  We

picked up our bags and kept on walking, slowly, trying to get a

quick glimpse of what was going on without looking like

rubberneckers.  A short, fat woman, with a recessed face and large

protruding necks, plastic rimmed glasses, dressed in pastel green,

polyester, bell bottoms and a tight white sweater, was lumbering

from the accident to my side of the street, swinging her heavy arms

in order to lift her feet. I heard her call to someone behind me:

"Both his legs are broken!" The kid was laying on the cool asphalt

with two or three blue-jeaned people kneeling over him.  From the

quick glance I got between squatting bodies I could see a broken

bone sticking through the flesh of his leg, red and white and

painful.  I looked away, back up the street, and as I did, I saw

the crossing guard, the one from the donut shop, and she was

running down the sidewalk really fast, holding her hat in front of

her, clutched to her chest with both hands and her hair was

streaming out behind her.  I could see then that she was short and

a little over weight.  There was a look of absolute terror on her

face; I knew that she could see the flashing lights, and see the

people.  I knew that she knew what happened and I felt sorry for

her.

   "Look," I said to Belf, pointing again, then almost wishing I

hadn't.

   "Bet she feels like shit," he said.

   "Yeah," I replied quietly, "yeah, I bet she does."


   We lingered a couple of seconds longer but Belf wasn't

interested and he started reciting the laws of robotics, complete

with corollaries, and poking me in the arm with his hook.  We

walked on down the road towards the spillway where the ground

dropped away on one side.  I looked over, it must have been a mile

down.  Tiny, great, crashing, furious, ruinous, clouds of water

splashed into the basin below with a distant roar and a cold spray,

like a vaporizer.

   "Say goodbye to Elvis," croaked Belf with an air of melodramatic

sentimentality, his springy hair doing crazy pirouettes in the

wind.  It was kind of noisy where we were standing.

   "Do you think we really ought to?  I mean, these are his worldly

possessions..."

   "Ought to?  Do I think we _ought to_?" he looked at me for a

brief interval, as though I had an enormous pimple beneath one eye,

and then he shouted: "_Into the drink you foul reeking Pig-God!_"

hurling the bag as far as he could over the side.  We both leaned

against the stone wall and watched it fall.  It fell slowly as the

wind wafted up from under it, spreading it out like a parachute.

It seemed to take ages to reach the bottom where it made a far off

"whumph" and vanished in the churning waves.  It rose up a few

seconds later and was instantly sunk again.  For some time it was

gone entirely and our eyes eagerly searched the water until it

appeared ten or twelve yards away in the calmly swirling water,

barely floating now, an oil slick upon the surface.

   "Now you," said Hershel, looking over at me and closing the

collar of his coat against the cold air with a thin hand.

   "Elvis Hemingway: In the name of God Almighty, I drown thy

fleas!" I lifted the bag up with some gleeful recklessness and set

it on the white wall, looked cautiously, left and right, for

police, and pushed it over the side.  It opened on the way down and

his clothes began to spill out.  They scattered, and the bag landed

upside down, thrashing on the churning waves.  After a few minutes

the bag floated limply out of the maelstrom.

   "Look," called Belf, pointing.  I followed his finger and could

see one of Elvis' shoes bobbing lazily on the surface of the water.

We watched it for a while, until it was out of sight around the

bend.  Then Hersh said:

   "I talked to my dad on the phone yesterday.  He called."

   "Oh yeah?  Really?  What did he say?"

   "Not a lot.  He asked how I was doing, you know; if I had fleas,

if I'd got a job yet, if I'd written anything, was I still eating

oatmeal three times a day."

   "What did you tell him?"

   "I told him I'd written another book, and that it was called

_Badmetafiction_ and that it was going to blow _Christ & the

Ceramic Belt Hammer /r_ right out of the water and that it would be

on the shelves any day now.  I told him it was being reviewed by

Saul Bellow in the _New York Times_ book review section, and that

I'd sold the movie rights to Steven Spielberg and that I'd be rich

and famous inside the year."

   "Did he believe you?"

   "No.  He said: _If a schlemazl like you sold umbrellas; it would

stop raining; if he sold candles; the sun would never set; if he

made coffins; people would stop dying_."

   "Some dad."

   "He's got faith in me, yeah." Belf sighed and we walked back

towards our apartment.


_____________________________________________________________________

CORE is published by Rita Rouvalis                         March 1993





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        QQQQ]          QQ]     QQ] QQQ]  \QQ\   QQQQQQQQQ]
        QQQQ]          QQQQQQQQQQ] QQQ]   \QQ\  QQQ]
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        QQQQ]          QQQQQQQQQQ] QQQ]     \QQ\QQQ]
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        QQQQQQQQQQQQQ]                          QQQQQQQQQQQQQ]



                              Volume II
                               Issue II


                           ISSN:  1062-6697



                            ~~~````''''~~~
        CORE is  an electronic journal of poetry, fiction, essays,
        and  criticsm.  Back issues  are  available via  anonymous
        ftp from  ftp.eff.org from  the  /pub/journals  directory.
        They are  also available on CompuServe  from  Library 5 of
        the EFFSIG forum.


        Please  feel free  to reproduce  CORE in  its entirety only
        throughout Cyberspace.  To reproduce articles individually,
        please contact the author.


        Questions, submissions, and subscription requests should be
        sent to core-journal@eff.org.



                           ~~~````''''~~~


                    Little Teapots, Short and Stout:
                    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


        Weirdest of the WELL      ..........        Bryan Higgins
                                  ..........        David R. Smith
                                  ..........        Flash Gordon, MD

        Autumn and Spring         ..........        Alexander Blue

        Woolworth Parakeets       ..........        William Dubie

        Being with Beetoven       ..........        Aviott John
  

______________________________________________________________________


                          WEIRDEST OF THE WELL

                           !!~~~````''''~~~!!


The following three pieces recently won the weird conference writing
contest on The WELL. The weird conference is just like it sounds. The 
WELL is a message-based BBS in Sausalito, California.


->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->
Bryan Higgins                                        bryan@well.sf.ca.us

Shoplifting.  My friends and I were into it in a big way back in junior 
high school.  We did it as a sport, as collectors, rather than stealing 
stuff we really wanted.  I focused solely on Score hair cream (7 ounce 
tube) and I would never have put that stuff in my hair.  Rather, I liked 
the white box with the green lettering, and I liked the fact that unlike 
the typical white hair cream Score was a transparent green gel.  Actually, 
I knew this from television, because I never opened a single tube that
I stole.

I got my tubes at several drugstores around town.  Also, Safeway carried 
it, but A & P didn't, for some reason.  It was surprisingly easy to 
steal Score by putting it in my coat pocket.  I only took one or two 
tubes from a store at a time, because I didn't want them to get suspicious 
at finding the entire Score stock depleted, but I would sometimes hit five
or ten stores in an evening and return home with a backpack full of a
couple dozen tubes.  I had to hide the backpack outside of each store so 
as to not arouse suspicion in the store with the pack.

By the time I quit I had about 350 in my collection.  It became a real
problem hiding such a large collection in my room.  One time I was sure 
my mother found it where it was hidden in my closet, stacked behind some 
old shutters that we no longer used that were stored there, because it 
seemed to me that the shutters had been move.  But if she did she never 
said anything.

I finally quit because one of my friends who shared my hobby (though 
he collected assorted bars of soap rather than Score) told me that the
FBI had been notified because Score is an ingredient, along with Clorox 
II dry bleach, in making an incendiary preparation used by arsonists and 
terrorists.  It seems you mix the two together, and after ten minutes or
so the stuff gets hot enough to spontaneously burst into flames, by which 
time the perpetrator is long gone.  I don't know if my friend was making 
this up or not but I got scared because I didn't want to get caught.  
Luckily I never was.

->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->
David R. Smith                                     drsmith@well.sf.ca.us


The event that defined my relationship with John Jaster involved
a butter dish. We were working at General Electric in
Schenectady, former site of Thomas Edison's lab.  In fact, it
was only just before I started working there that GE tore down
one of Edison's old buildings.  My coworkers mocked a guy
who went down to the lot and scavenged demolished bricks from
the old Edison site, but they were singing a different tune once
GE started selling commemmorative bricks with brass plates
mounted on teak frames, for twenty-five *big* ones.
 
But Jaster.  It was the Christmas luncheon, 1987 I think, and my
group sat at a table in the back, where coworker Ed unleashed
bad puns on any who would listen.  Ed would put the small,
decorative dish of butter in front of you, and joke "Have some
butter pecan without the pecans."  This dish eventually ended at
the vacant seat next to me.
 
Jaster came to the luncheon late, and sat next to me.  Ed had a
chance for one more milking.  "John, it's butter pecan, without
the pecans," said Ed.  "Oh," said John, who -- oblivious to the
pun, and in spite of the fact that no one else had dishes of butter
in front of them -- immediately picked up a spoon and dove
right into that dish of butter.  Before I could think what to say as
a warning, a generous helping of pure butter was on John
Jaster's spoon and in his mouth.  At that point, he suddenly
stopped moving so quickly.  I suspect he was taking a mental
tally of the situation, calculating how many boss brownie points
he would lose by spewing out a mouthful of saliva-melted butter
in the middle of a corporate Christmas luncheon.  New meaning
to the dilemma "Spit or swallow?"  He ended up swallowing.
 
I never did hear the end of that butter incident; because I
happened to be the one sitting next to him, JJ seemed to blame
the incident on me.  Well, *I* wasn't the one who made the
butter pecan pun, nor was I the one who failed to get it.  At
every social gathering thereafter, the butter story came up again.
 
John Jaster worked for Jerry Jaiven.  Once they attended a
work-related conference at the Jakob Javits convention center in NYC.
 
 
->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->
Flash Gordon, MD                                     flash@well.sf.ca.us


Dear Ms. Manners:
 
I have never written any advice columnist, but recently found 
myself in a situation where I was somewhat uncertain of the 
etiquette.  I hope you can help.

I'm a physician and writer and maintain an office in my home.  
Recently a woman came by on a business visit (hers, not mine).  
She noticed Edison, one of my two cats (his twin, Electra, was 
upstairs) and proceeded to stroke him and compliment him.  

Edison appreciated the attention, and, noble beast that he is, 
decided to give her something in return.  Something wonderful.  
Something tasty.  Something both chewy and proteinaceous.  
Something he found in the wastebasket in my bedroom.  Something 
that I had worn, briefly, the night before, on a part of my 
anatomy that is probably not suitable for mention in your column.  
He retrieved this prize and deposited it at her feet, looking up 
at her adoringly, saying "Here!  This is for YOU!"

I was embarrassed.  Try as I may, I could not remember which, if 
any, rule of ettiquette was applicable to this situation.  So I 
said 

"Gee, he must really like you!  He's never given one of those to 
anyone else before."  

She laughed, and I then put the used condom into the waste 
basket.  

I don't anticipate this exact dilemna occuring again - for one 
thing, the cats are no longer allowed in the bedroom.  However, I 
hope you can recommend what to do in a similar situation.

Thanx in advance.  I greatly enjoy your column and all your 
books.
 
 
 
Yours very truly


________________________________________________________________________
William Dubie                                  dubie@tnpubs.enet.dec.com


                         WOOLWORTH PARAKEETS


They nod, gridded against windowglass
and no wide eyes.  But you behave
passively, beginning to pass
knowing you cannot save


them, as though they'd sing in your parlor
and learn the swears you'd teach.
They live anonymously here, not unlike your
countenance; still, you reach


to see what you can afford--another existence
that you could well do without,
and it without you--so you two trade silence
for subsistence, and you scout


the aisles for fragrance, razors, any other thing
to carry yourself well past remembering.

________________________________________________________________________
Alexander Blue                                          ajblue@COLBY.EDU


                           AUTUMN AND SPRING


        i


No baptisms in this rain.  The dead
squirrels wash along the gutters.

Sewer gratings are blocked with colored
leaves, and there the corpses will rest,

frozen in manic death-poses, forelegs
outstretched, backs arched, and screaming.


        ii

As the sun is rising, men in orange
pick with gloves the bloated bodies
from gratings, and collect also the confetti

of autumn.  They leave them
in the back of their truck to be chewed
and swallowed.  Water flushes underground.

________________________________________________________________________
Aviott John                                           avjohn@iiasa.ac.at

                        BEING WITH BEETHOVEN


Before he actually came to Austria and visited the city, he had not
believed in its existence.  To him it was not a real place but a
literary device, invented by writers of spy thrillers and musical
fantasies as a background for their plots.  He came to Vienna in
search of Ludwig van, as though hoping that some of the composer's
immortality would rub off on him.  He found he was a century and a
half too late; but still clung on, trembling a little in every
passing breeze, like an autumn leaf caught in an abandoned spider's
web.  He looked frail and infirm, but in reality was a sprightly old
man; an iconoclast in his old age, wandering around the town looking
for adventure, finding it sometimes unexpectedly; in the Volksgarten
for instance, where a knotted gardener advanced on him like a house-
proud hostess with a threatening shout: 'Hey you, don't walk on the
grass!'  His helpless shrug and hands splayed in expiation did not
appease that zealous keeper of the green.  'I never could levitate,'
he said by way of added apology.  'Ich hab's nie gelernt, frei zu
schweben.'

Or it might be the ubiquitous little old lady (like him, a dying
species, he dispassionately observed), who objected to his nocturnal
ramblings, his insomniac prowling around deserted city streets when
all self-respecting citizens were in bed.  And his reply: 'Ah, but
who with?' was met by a stare of unamused indignance and a slammed
window.

There were many compensations.   He enjoyed quiet moments in his
favourite cafe, where the smell of roasting beans clung to the faded
velvet curtains with the tenacity of tradition; the welcoming smile
as the waiter brought unbidden a cup of hot chocolate and his
newspaper.  He was known here, and therefore he had a station in
society; retired as he was, a distinction he did not take lightly.
He still clearly remembered the first time the waiter had addressed
him as Herr Doktor, a smile of flattering complicity, not the least
subservient, on his lips.  The complimentary epithet bound him to the
coffee house for ever.  He knew from now on he would never patronize
another.  To his tired old heart, it was as though he had found a
second home.

In his first years here, finding his feet in this strange city soon
after retirement, he had wandered around like a homeless waif,
clutching a fistful of Reisefuehrers, Polyglotts, Baedekers,
Fodor'ses, Harvard Guides, Berlitz Books, city maps.  He sought
traces of his favorite genius in the dozens, scores, of buildings
where he had once lived, for however short a time.  He sniffed the
air around these buildings as eagerly as a young puppy, hoping to
find some lingering traces of Beethoven's presence in the air.  He
wandered through the Stadtpark in the summer where the strains that
waltzed through the crowds were of Strauss rather than Beethoven, and
could hardly hide his bitterness and anger, the wounded sense of
sacrilege, when the magnificent opening bars of the Ninth Symphony
were used to advertise the efficacy of a brand of detergent.

Still he lingered in the city, buying a ticket to a concert here,
listening to a new rendering of the piano sonatas there, spreading
his arms out wide to clasp the elusive bars of sound to him.  In the
old Gasthaus with its sooty, wood-panelled walls, chequered
tablecloths and white-tiled ceiling, he imagined the hairy, barrel-
chested owner's ancestor serving the great man a schnitzel, together
with a limp, pickled salad and a carafe of the strong, dry red wine
that the penurious composer always downed with great enjoyment.

But time did not stop and exchange rates continued to fluctuate.
The value of the schilling rose.  When it rose it seemed to him as
threatening as an advancing tide, cutting off his retreat to safety;
and when it fell, he walked with pleasure and impunity by the edge of
the sea, collecting the treasures revealed by the retreating tide.
His pension was adequate, but he had to to be careful.  In the summer
now there were hordes of tourists, many groups of young people.  They
swarmed and chattered in clusters, following the paths he had traced
years ago; all hoping, like him, to encounter a wisp of genius,
however brief the encounter; to inhale a trace of an ancient
ambience, however musty the air.  'Sit still,' he wanted to tell them
with his hard earned wisdom.  'Sit very quietly and listen hard, or
you won't hear it.'  But still they thronged and chattered, and still
they came, walking by the old man with hardly a glance at him.  'He's
a bit ga-ga,' they said to each other, for he sat and stared at the
empty sky with a smile on his lips.  They thought he was mad and
avoided him, because they couldn't hear the strains of the music.


** First published in Imaginary Friends, an Anthology of American
   Fiction, Apple Blossom, 1985) **
___________________________________________________________________
CORE is published by Rita Rouvalis.                   December 1992



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                              Volume II
                               Issue I





                            ~~~````''''~~~
        CORE is  an electronic journal of poetry, fiction, essays,
        and  criticsm.  Back issues  are  available via  anonymous
        ftp  from  ftp.eff.org from  the  /pub/journals  directory
        They are  also available on CompuServe  from  Library 5 of
        EFFSIG.


        Please  feel free  to reproduce  CORE in  its entirety only
        throughout Cyberspace.  To reproduce articles individually,
        please contact the author.


        Questions, submissions, and subscription requests should be
        sent to core-journal@eff.org.




                           ~~~````''''~~~


                        Flavors of the month:
                        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


           MARK SCHORR  .................. A POINT OF ORIGIN
                        .................. COBOL ODE


           FIONA WEBSTER  ................ INTRODUCING MAMA LANSDALE'S
                                           YOUNGEST BOY




_____________________________________________________________________
Rita Rouvalis, Editor                                    rita@eff.org


I had ventured into real life for a reading of the Merrimack Anthology.
One of the readers, Mark Schorr, caught my ear when he mentioned working
for "a large computer firm in Littleton".  I thought to myself, "he
works for DEC; I'll bet he has an enet address and I can con him into
submitting something to CORE." (Editors are always on the make for new
material.)


Mark not only let me have a couple of his poems, but he also told me 
about a project he is working on to to distribute, display and promote
poetry in Cyberspace.  The "Kiosks" are After Dark (R) slide shows 
created by using an illustration and a screen capture program.  I've put 
three of the Kiosks in the CORE directory on ftp.eff.org as 
PoetryKiosks.sea.bin.  


You'll need a Macintosh and the After Dark program to view them.  


   1.  Download PoetryKiosks.sea.bin to your Macintosh.  
   2.  I've stuffed them using a self-extracting program, so just double
       click on the icon.
   3.  Choose one of the folders, and drag all the slides in it to your
       Slide Show folder, which will be located in your After Dark folder
       (probably in your system folder).
   4.  Start up the After Dark control panel, and choose Slide Show for 
       the display.


The idea is copyleft; use it and create your own Kiosks.  If you do, let
both Mark and me know about it -- especially if you do it under other
hardware platforms.  If I can collect enough of them, I'll set up
special directory for them here.  The text for two of the poems follows.
The third Kiosk is of CORE1.03.


_____________________________________________________________________
Mark Schorr                                schorr@ljohub.enet.dec.com


                        A POINT OF ORIGIN


                    In memory of Robert Ross


Making my way 
from a land 
that can never
measure up


Past safe harbors
and beach roses
and the rotting hulls 
of nuke subs


Past nineteenth century visitors
who measured New England
as so many miles
of rivers and poems


These days
my thoughts run simpler
to foreign friends
or family members
met or missed

to journeys made
sometimes with you,
sometimes not
or sometimes not made at all


Or run to others who
are only signatures 
where sky and sea align
or run along different line


Caught up with each other
until they too
retrace your eddied light
and herbal banks


To get their bearings
with reverse immigration
reciting every maiden name
back to where we came


Until there in that garden isle
we simply are

beyond all land or sea
a point of origin.



______________              ~~~````''''~~~           _________________


                              COBOL ODE


                   In memory of Adm. Grace Hopper


ENVIRONMENT DIVISION.


Your larger outlines
  would drive us mad
    if we were in the
     business of the past
       or common oriented
         business
           aboard some
     mother courage carrier
     that shells the straits
     of Lebanon
     that depends on you
     to perform
     perform well down
     to the lowest level
     a figurative constant
     or some LIFE-like
     picture clause.


But instead you satisfy
  some inner need for order,
    some need
    to situate ourselves
    for you are nothing
    if not
    a place,
    a structure,
    or a map
    we can invoke at will


Even in the absurdity of
  Sunday afternoon traffic,
  we sense the bold outlines
  of El Salvador
  across your sodden sky,
  and from the terminal grid
  even the most 
       mundane designs,
       begin a process
       we don't even have
       the sense to know
       until what *ONCE WAS*
       a pilgrimage is now
       a People Express
  
  that checks,
  "BAD PEOPLE RECORDS"
  in packed decimal
  in so many coding squares
  of so many
       paragraphs,
       statements,
       clauses.


INPUT/OUTPUT


Observe the order of a pack of
cards
that say
"DO NOT FOLD OR MUTILATE"
       for the pleasure
       mere pleasure
       of folding cards.


But by all means
       fold the cards
       to fit them
in your pocket.


Everything we have built
  Should have some art or use
    Else build it better.


DATA DIVISION.


Provence.


 When I think of the way we
 rushed through Arles
 observing the inscriptions
 on every row and column
    in the metropolis of time,
    then your graphic
    asterisks seem closer.


On the high bluffs opposite
the River Rhone
we waited for fireworks
to reflect how small the state
to reflect how small we
feel at a time like this.


When they finally explode,
there are eight obscure points
and hundreds of asterisks.


Picture the way we hate
watching the kill
in the arena of Arles.


EXIT PROVENCE.


PROCEDURE DIVISION


COBOL-ODE.
Crowbar.
   O! I had a little chicken
   who wouldn't lay an egg
   so I laid a crowbar
   down on his head.
   O! the little chicken cried
   and the little chicken begged
   but the crowbar laid
   a hard boiled egg.


       UNTIL NO-MORE-COBOL-ODE
OR NO-MORE-CROWBAR.
   PERFORM TERMINATION.


EXIT-COBOL-ODE.
   STOP RUN.


Initialization.


   I am talking to you
   people who
   shift lock CAPS on subway walls.


   graffiti figurative clauses
   under a proscenium
   words upon a public telephone
   spray paint constants
   on a public convenience
   or who asterisk comments
   around a square.


   And I am talking to you
   people who work, meet, live
   in the fourth subbasement
   or on the fourteenth floor
   but who leave the
   business of living


   to some Common Business
   Oriented Language
   that works below the
   surface of your lives.


   And I am telling you to write
   the number
   on corner
   of your electric bill
   and also
   on the corner
   of your check


        And I am not telling you
        about the legendary
           figurative constant that...    


TERMINATION.


When all the files are closed,
  there is no system on earth,
        no pyramid of data
        that can do to us
        what we would not do
        to ourselves
        or, not doing,
        what we would do.


_____________________________________________________________________
Fiona Webster                                           fi@grebyn.com




                INTRODUCING MAMA LANSDALE'S YOUNGEST BOY


Joe R. Lansdale.  Let's talk about Joe R. Lansdale.  Life-long
resident of East Texas, one of the weirder corners of this planet, by
anyone's estimation.


Joe Lansdale is a writer who doesn't get compared to anyone else, who
doesn't fit into the pre-arranged categories residing in the minds of
literary agents and publishers.  I don't mean just the genre
categories--although he does range widely through westerns, mystery,
science fiction, thriller, crime, and horror--often all in the same
book--but also those other, more insidious categories, about what sort
of social commentary is allowed in an entertainment rag, or what sort
of plotline a successful story should follow.  So he's had a hard time
making it.  (I'd bet good money you haven't heard of him.)  But if you
approach a dedicated horror maven--not your casual King or Koontz
reader, or your trendy splatterpunk reader, but someone who's been
patiently panning the stream for a long, long time to find those few
chunks of gold that make it all worthwhile--and you ask, "Who's
original? who's brilliant?" you will hear about the man from East
Texas.


Now, as usual when I'm recommending horror fiction to people I think
of as discriminating readers, I feel the need to issue caveats.
Horror is a literature _in_extremis_, and as such, it's not terribly
refined.  Maybe it's because of the intensity of emotion evoked by the
extreme situations being portrayed--what other genre is labeled not
for a type of story, but for the specific *emotion* it aims to provoke
in the reader?  Maybe it's because the field, despite having roots
going all the way back to Shakespeare and Beowulf, is very young.  The
pioneers of the contemporary horror tale--Richard Matheson, and of
course, Stephen King--are still alive and writing.  Whatever the
reason, as things stand now, you have to cut a horror writer some
slack, and accept a certain simplicity of theme.  You should also bear
in mind that if sometimes the language is crude, that's because the
story is chopped from the author's heart, rather than processed
through their head.


What you should not tolerate in a horror writer, though, is lack of
originality.  If you find yourself thinking, as you read, "This is
just another haunted house tale, vampire/werewolf tale, psycho-killer
tale, sigh..." you should put down the book and look elsewhere.  And
that's why I'm trying to drum this one name--Joe R. Lansdale--into
your head.


What makes him special?  Former manual laborer and good ol' boy that
he is, Lansdale might find it odd that I'm applying this word to his
work, but this man has an *aesthetic.*  His fictional world is firmly
placed amidst the piney woods and chicken plants and hard-bitten
characters and tall tales and bigotry of his home state, but also
mixed in is a dumbfounded fascination with the tawdry imagery of pop
culture.  Neon lights and garish decor.  Cheap paperbacks with glossy
red-and-black covers.  Spiritual concepts straight out of
_Weekly_World_News_.  Clint Eastwood movies.  Roger Corman's dyed-red
"blood popcorn."  It all co-mingles in Lansdale's highly visual
aesthetic sense, and what comes out is not these images _per_se_--
Lansdale is sparing in his use of quotations from the media--but
utterly new word-pictures.  Such as a man wearing nothing but cowboy
hat and boots, who floats, adrift, through a starry sky where '57
Cadillacs and Mexican whores beckon to him--a strange recasting of
the figures in the cyclone, beckoning to Dorothy.


But it's not all about beauty: you're not in a stylish and yet
desiccated post-modern landscape, when you're in a Joe Lansdale story.
This man writes with soul.  He writes unflinchingly about the racism,
the ignorance, the often callous disregard for values that he sees in
the people he grew up with.  His stories have been turned down
because they're too graphic, but more often because they make a blunt
social statement that makes editors so uncomfortable, they simply
shudder and then try to forget.  Lansdale is funny, bleak, and
truthful--in the sense of presenting basic truths about the human
condition--and the result is an unsettling brew that doesn't always
leave you smiling.


So what should you read?  Well, if you asked that hypothetical horror
maven, "What's the best horror short story of the past twenty-five
years," you just *might* hear them say, "Guess I'd have to pick 'Night
They Missed the Horror Show.'"  In fact, if you don't check out Joe
Lansdale for any other reason, do so for "Night They Missed the Horror
Show."  For this reason, and also because his novels go out of print
quickly and are darn hard to find, I recommend his anthology of
shorts, _By_Bizarre_Hands_.  The Avon edition is still on bookstore
shelves, and the cover features a lovely illustration by J. K. Potter
(one of horror's best artists).


I suggest you read "By Bizarre Hands" and "The Fat Man and the
Elephant"--and perhaps "On the Far Side of the Cadillac Desert with
Dead Folks"--to ease yourself into Lansdale's world, and then head
straight for "Night They Missed the Horror Show."  It's a ride you
won't forget.


**This piece originally appeared in _The Reading Edge: An Unpretentious
Newsletter for Readers_, edited by Sherry Mann (smann@ihspc.att.com).**
_______________________________________________________________________


CORE is not a publication of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, and its
contents, unless specifically indicated as such, should not be mistaken 
for the opinions of either the organization or the editor.


                  //>>     November 1992     <<\\











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