NANCY SPRINGER
TRANSCENDENCE
Jeremy C. Bow Caldwell 302Tewksbury College Tewksbury, NJ 01234
MS. CHAVADON TIER
c/o Copper Lily Publishing
Box 14792
Tucson, AZ 71053-4792
Dear Ms. Tier,
I love your poetry. I love your poetry. I love your poetry. I am writing to tell
you how
much I love your poetry. More than I can say. Lines like, "My dreams
would grow hair on
a heron
I have douched a dead duck with maraschino
I have danced with Dahmer in my
denims from the Gap
I hide an apricot beneath my Calvin Kleins"
Lines like those -- I
don't begin to know what they mean yet they make me feel a
sense of awe and transcendence.
I keep your book Angels Fly to the Largest
Shopping Mall in the Known Universe under my
pillow, and it helps me get through
the times when college sucks. I believe poetry like
yours makes a real
difference in the world. I believe it has the power to change things. I
know it
keeps me going.
Your bio says you live in Manhattan. I am not that far away and if
it would not
interrupt your writing schedule too much I would love to buy you dinner and
tell
you in person how much your poetry means to me. I very much hope to hear from
you.
Fervidly yours,
Jeremy Bow
CHAVADON TIER140 W. 56th St.New York NY 10001 Jeremy Bow
Caldwell
302
Tewksbury College
Tewksbury NJ 01234
Dear Mr. Bow:
Thank you for your letter of unctuous
praise. Thank you for not asking me to
read your poetry, answer twenty questions for your
literature course, or
recommend your illustrations to my editor. You seem very nice;
therefore please
be assured you do not want to meet me, as I am quite nasty.
Sincerely,
Chavadon Tier
Jeremy C. BowCaldwell 302Tewksbury CollegeTewksbury, NJ 01234 Chavadon Tier
140 W. 56th St.
New York, NY 10001
Dear Ms. Tier,
I am ecstatic to receive a reply from you.
Of course I will never ask you to
look at my poetry or my artwork -- I wouldn't dare. What
you are doing is so far
above my level I can't breathe when you take me up there with you.
How can you
call yourself nasty? Are you suffering from low self-esteem? Please believe me,
only a caring, sensitive person could have written, We are wounded constantly
yet on we
ride
Side by side
We believe in the lovers' grail
We know we cannot fail to find
the halo we left behind
waiting at the end of the rainbow
Perhaps you are thinking of
some of your darker verse? But only one with a deep
understanding of human nature could
have written, Ontological goodness is a
bore
Beauty smiles but the Beast knows the
score
which is one of my favorite couplets which I have penned in toilet stalls all
over
campus, always of course attributing it to you. I will be in New York on
the afternoon of
the 19th, and will ring your doorbell just in case. Again, may
I thank you from the bottom
of my heart for the constant gift of your poetry.
Most unctuously yours,
Jeremy Bow
CHAVADON
TIER140 W. 56th St.New York NY 10001
Mr. Jeremy Bow,
Hell no, I do not suffer from low
self-esteem. I suffer fools not lightly, is
what I suffer. But perhaps I overreact; perhaps
I did not make myself clear.
Read my lips: YOU DO NOT WANT TO COME NEAR ME. I AM HIDEOUSLY
UGLY. In body and
spirit. Axl Rose is a blooming sweetie compared to me, and Rambo is apple
pan
dandy with whipped cream and a cherry on top. I am poet, hear me roar, I know
who the
hell you are. You are a doe-eyed, pimplesque, milky-mouthed sophomore
with bitty buttocks
and heart thumpies that shake your rickety wee ribs. I feed
on babies like you. Be warned.
Sincerely,
Chavadon Tier
Dear Chavadon,
There, that wasn't so bad, was it? Are
you sorry you let me in? I'm glad you
did, if only so you could see that I am not overly
pimplesque or bitty-butted.
The heart thumpies you are right about. I am thrilled to have
met you, and in
contrast to the Tewksbury Thought Police's everlasting political
correctness,
your trenchant honesty goes down like wine. I admire what you have done with
your life. It must be very difficult having such a serious facial deformity in
addition to
glandular problems. No wonder you are a recluse. Thank you very,
very much for letting me
visit you after all.
You claim to be ugly in body and soul. I guess it is sort of a cliche
that
people who come in unattractive packages should hide good things inside, and I
can't
blame you for bucking the stereotype, trying to be negative and cynical
and old and tired
when you are really not much older than I am. But I'm not
buying any of it. I am sure there
is a wonderful idealistic dreamer somewhere
deep inside you, wanting to make things happen,
wanting to change the world. I
am sure your poetry is more true to the real Charsalon Tier
than your crusty
mannerisms are.
May I come again? Dinner next time. If you don't want to be
seen in a
restaurant, we'll send out for Chinese or something.
Very best regards,
Jeremy
Dear Jeremy,
You are wrong, wrong, wrong about me! The "crusty mannerisms" are not
packaging;
the poetry is. Get this: nastiness = reality, poetry = fairytale, okay? It's all
PR, don't you see? I have built myself a palace of poetry, all mirrors and
fountains and
fancy lighting and special effects, and I myself am the monster
who hides "deep inside," to
use your youthful excavation imagery. You have
penetrated my palace, and the lumpen
freak-face you see is what you get. You
have found, in its entirety, the misshapen prize in
the crackerjack box.
Congratulations.
You say you find my honesty refreshing, but you have
not heard so much honesty
from me yet as spleen. I called you a milk-drinking sophomore,
when you are a
damned lovely young animal and you know it, don't you? Wide wise hazel eyes,
for
God's sake. Fawn-golden faun-soft skin over those austere cheekbones. Innocent
sensual
mouth. Muscle. Shoulders. Sweet yielding smile. Where the hell did you
come from? I didn't
think they made them like you anymore, old-fashioned
beautiful idealistic kids who write
letters.
It beats me why physical beauty bears so much weight in the universe anyway, but
it does. I see it, and my heart turns over. So be it.
You ask if you can come see me again.
Last time I told you not to, and you came
anyway. This time I am going to tell you yes, by
all means, come see me, and
maybe that will keep you away.
Chavadon
Dear Chavadon,
Dinner was
excellent. Thank you. I had never experienced home-delivery French
before. It was
memorable. You seem to think I am doing you a favor by spending
time with you, like I'd be
fighting off hoardes of panting coeds otherwise.
Riiiight. In case you haven't noticed,
dirty guys with tattoos and nose hair are
in. Drugheads are in. Sneers are in. I don't have
enough "attitude," whatever
that means. And as for where I came from, I come from Iowa --
how uncool. Nobody
is interested in me.
I wish I had the talent to be a writer, make
something of my life that way. Give
it meaning. Alchemize art out of pain. I admire what
you do so much, yet you
seem to think I'm a fool for loving your poetry. You keep telling
me to shut up
about it, go read Yeats, your stuff is nothing but a plastic flim-flam, it's
a
sham, a cosmetic illusion you've put between you and the world, it's your
labyrinth to
hide in. But that's nuts. I can't believe you think your poetry is
something separate from
you. I can't believe you think it misrepresents you.
Your poetry came out of you, it's an
emanation of you, it's your soul, don't you
see? And it is beautiful. Therefore you are
beautiful.
I'll see you next week. Let me pay for dinner this time.
Love,
Jeremy
Dear Jeremy,
God, you signed your letter "love," what do I have to do to make you see
I am a
big ugly joke? Listen to me for once. My poetry which you so adore is a
consummate
farce. Here is how I write it: I put buzzwords on squares of scrap
paper, throw them all in
a margarine tub and pull them out two at a time.
Whatever gets paired up, I just splice it
together into a line. It's totally
random. It doesn't mean a thing, understand? It's a
party game.
You think you mean something to me? I can fix that. I can write a poem about
you. All I have to do is come up with some Jeremy words, thus:
milk
pagan god
hazel eyes Bugle Boys honey
cheekbones wise child
boat shoes
shoulders angel
Then I throw them all in the butter cup, mix them up and pour
them out and stick
them together with syrup. It's no more challenging than those collages
kiddies
make out of magazine clippings for summer-camp arts&crafts. It means nothing.
If you
still want to come next week, let me know and I will cook. You can't
afford to feed me. You
have no idea how ravenous I can be.
Chavadon
Dear Chavadon,
Whoa, I never knew mere food
could be so good! Anybody who can make meringue
like that has the soul of an artist, so
stop trying to tell me you're a fake. I
don't care what you say about the way you create
your poetry; it's the
manifestation that counts, and the transcendence is there. You ask
where did I
come from -- well, where the hell did you come from? You are the most amazing
person I have ever met.
I've been thinking about you a lot. Do you have family? Are there
people
(besides me) who care about you?
Care about you, hell, I need a good dose of your
honesty. What I am really
trying to say is, are there people who love you? Maybe that's a
sophomoric
question, maybe the way you keep company with the angels you're above wanting
hugs and kisses, but I have to ask because I am kind of obsessed by the idea of
love. I
guess love is what I want the most in the world, because I haven't had
much so far. My
family is a mess -- I don't want to bore you with a lot of
sob-story detail, I'll just say
it's bad, abusive, and I've survived by leaving
it behind. (Thank God for scholarships.) So
I try not to look back, I look to
the future, and what I dream about is finding what I
haven't had in the past.
You know. A beautiful girl -- no, a beautiful woman who by some
miracle wants
me, and I fall like crazy, and when we touch the earth moves, and we build a
life together, the whole hearts-beating-as-one cliche. And I don't know why I am
being so
inane and babbling about myself when what I really started to say was,
do you have family
or are you alone? Because if you are alone, that makes two of
us.
What made you start
writing poetry? Was it this love thing? When thousands of
people love your poems, does that
count as thousands of people loving you?
Maybe, seriously, that is what I should do --
learn to write. But I don't
exactly want to be famous. I really just want somebody to love
me. Do you want
the same thing?
See you next week? Please? I swear I'll pay for the food
this time.
Love,
Jeremy
Dear Jeremy,
Oh, Jeremy, my beautiful Jeremy, what am
I going to do? No. Absolutely not. Do
not come here anymore -- the mansion where I live,
made of poetry, it is a
prison, Jeremy, not a palace. Stay away. Do not think anymore about
being a
writer, about being alone, about being like me, any of that. Save yourself, run
from
me. You are young and full of heart and you do not deserve to be devoured
by a lonesome
loathsome thing. I am hideous, but you are so lovely all the
flower-faced girls will adore
you once they wake up and see. I swear it. They
will all love you. Jeremy gazes with
wise hazel eyes
In the morning love comes to him
With alar cheekbones he seeks
transcendence
In stone-washed denim love comes to him.
Jeremy waits with his soul
unfurled
In Jordache jeans love comes to him
With a sweet mouth he awaits her
On
a lazy angel wind she comes to him.
Jeremy stands in the harsh wet grass
In a halo
of beauty love comes to him
He watches her shoulders for a sign of wings
In a dress
by Lauren love comes to him.
Jeremy blinks into the sunrise
Love comes to him, love
comes to him
She kisses him on his innocent lips
In the morning love comes to him.
Love comes to him.
Love comes to him.
In a halo of beauty love comes to him.
There. A poem for you and only you, Jeremy. I will never publish it.
Okay, so I used a few
words besides the ones I threatened to. Okay, so maybe I
did not pull it out of a margarine
tub. Maybe I even mean some of it, awright?
Keep it and be happy.
It beats me why you want
to hang around me anyway. What the hell is this, beauty
and the beast? Thank God I did not
give you my unlisted number. Stay away.
Chavadon
Dear Chavadon,
I know you made cranky
get-lost noises at me in your last letter, the one with
the poem, but I do not for a minute
believe any of them. I just want you to know
you don't fool me. I would have been there at
the usual time except I had to be
somewhere else.
It was an amazing poem. I don't know what
to say. Thank you.
The strangest thing has been happening. Maybe you gave me confidence or
something, but all of a sudden, like the morning after you sent me that "love
comes to him"
poem, girls started saying hi to me and smiling at me everywhere.
Okay, I'll be honest, the
reason I was not in the city last week is that I had a
date with a girl to go skydiving, of
all things. I can't believe I did that, but
I loved it, I want to do it again. It's scary,
but wonderful, almost like
flying.
Talking with you is like that, like flying. See you next
week?
Love, Jeremy
Dear Chavadon,
Why have I not heard from you? Are you not feeling well?
I should get in there to check on you, but -- God, what did you put in that
poem, anyway?
Love potion? Was the ink made of something you could bottle and
market and sell for a
billion $$$? This is so weird and wonderful, I have not
had a spare moment, and now it's
all happening, it's all coming together, better
than skydiving and even scarier, I am
terrified and ecstatic, I go around
trembling and babbling and grinning and looking at the
sky. I think I am in
love. Her name is Temple --isn't that a beautiful name? She is brainy,
rude,
kind, quirky, brave, sweet, exquisite -- floating auburn hair, and perfect,
almost
translucent skin, and long legs, and -- oh, she is damn indescribable. I
want her clear to
my bones, to the marrow of my bones. And she seems to want me
the same way. I can't believe
it, she actually seems to feel something for me.
I am flying too high to say anything
intelligent or even very coherent, so I had
better just go. Let me know how you are doing,
and I will keep you posted.
Luv, Jeremy
Dear Chavadon,
Temple and I are getting married. Her
family has completely accepted me, which
is wonderful, almost as wonderful as she is. We
have gone to pick out rings. I
cannot tell you how happy I am.
Since I have not heard from
you in months, I guess you really meant it after all
-- you just want me to stay away from
you. I won't write you after this, or
bother you with a wedding invitation or anything. But
I had to let you know I
have found what I was looking for, because somehow I can't help
feeling I need
to thank you. Thank you. Thank you for your poetry; it got me through a hard
time. I wish I could send you a package full of the ecstasy I am feeling now. I
want that
kind of happiness for you.
All good wishes, Jeremy Bow
Dear Jeremy,
I am dictating this
letter to a nurse, so it will be short. I have not been in
very good health, and am
receiving absolutely no visitors.
This is one time Beauty knows the score. Yes, I just want
you to stay away,
because nobody has ever understood me as you do. Everything you have said
about
my poetry is true, and that is dangerous. KEEP OUT.
I am publishing a final volume,
Transcendence, with the proceeds going to you
and Temple. Your goodness was never a bore. I
wish you all the happiness in the
world.
Love forever,
Chavadon