Something Is Not Right
A Story in Free Verse
I
The Student knocked
on the Poet’s door,
hoping for entry.
*
As he waited, the faint sounds
of old blues music wafted through
the atmosphere,
*
underlaid with the soft sounds
of far-off wind chimes,
the mixture a holy sound in unholy times.
*
The Student waited,
brow furrowed, just starting
to turn away,
*
when the door opened,
and the Guardian appeared.
She was tall and strong,
*
lithe and limber, a fierce
force of nature behind
moss green eyes that saw
*
everything, felt everything,
knew everything,
and she took her protective role seriously.
*
The Guardian said nothing,
looking the Student up and down.
Eyes narrowing, she gently placed her hand
*
over his chest, taking one,
two,
three deep breaths with eyes closed.
*
When they opened again,
the ferocity was leavened
with understanding.
*
“You cannot enter the Sanctum,”
she said softly, “but you can
meet me at the gate.
*
“I will lead you to the Poet from there.”
II
The Old Poet was seated
under a cabana cover
on an old Adirondack chair,
*
eyes closed, with the blues,
louder now, drifting off
an old phonograph machine.
*
Buddy Guy, singing about the
trials and troubles
of a Hoochie Coochie Man.
*
The Student stood silently
while the Guardian leaned
over, kissed the old man
*
on the cheek, whispered in his ear,
then moved another Adirondack
chair beside him.
*
“If he asks you to sit,” she whispered,
“you will sit here.” She touched
the Student’s face. “Peace be upon you.”
*
The music continued as the Guardian
strode away, and the Student could
not help but watch her exit.
*
When he turned back,
the Poet was smiling at him.
“I’m a lucky man, wouldn’t you agree?”
*
he asked, his almond-colored eyes
smiling, “to be loved and protected by
one such as her?”
*
The Student could do nothing but
nod in assent, overwhelmed by the
fullness of the Poet’s attention and energy.
*
“Sit, my friend. If she
brought you here,
you have need of me.
*
“How may I be of service to you?”
III
The Student took in a long breath.
“I fear, sir. I fear for this land,
I fear for her people.
*
“I fear that our ideals
are being eroded away
in the name of power and greed.
*
“I fear that the promise of this nation,
not always kept or even attained,
is now in mortal danger.
*
“And I feel helpless, sir. I am no
man of power, I hold no office,
I have no station. But I can read,
*
“and I know history, and what
is happening now – it is not right.
Something is not right.”
*
The Poet took in the Student’s words,
hands tented, bright eyes focused on
every syllable.
*
When the Student said no more,
the Poet took a long breath,
and leaned closer to the younger man.
*
“You are seeing things clearly, my friend.
You are correct about all you see.
Something, in fact, is not right in this world.
*
“I know this feeling you feel. I felt it
when I was a young man in Rome of old,
when I had a choice to make between
*
“defending the Republic or caving
in to tyranny. I was terrified when I
made those speeches, even more
*
“terrified when I made the decision
to take my own life, rather than live
under a dictator’s mercy.
*
“Cato, they called me then. Cato the martyr.”
IV
The Student gasped a long inhale.
Stories of the Poet’s past
had long abounded.
*
The old man smiled.
“Yes, my friend. It is true,
and not the only lifetime I have lived.”
*
He leaned back in his wooden chair,
elbows on the armrests, fingers tented again.
“But you suspected as much, did you not?”
*
The Student could only nod,
and a long silence passed between them,
words unspoken passing from one to the other.
*
The Poet straightened after a while.
“The only counsel I can give you today,
my friend, is to rely on your own strengths.
*
“You mourn your lack of station,
but you shortchange your gifts, for you, too,
are an artist; I have seen your work.
*
“I have heard your own stories,
your own poems, the plays you have written,
the music you have made.
*
“And I have seen you making these things
to make sense of the world,
and this is how you will resist the oppression to come.
*
“So the instruction I give you is this:
make art as an act of resistance.
Sow love in a time of sorrow.
*
“Create mirrors of words and sounds,
of music and lyrics, of graffiti in the streets,
to hold up truth for all the world to see.
*
“This is the charge I give you,
the instruction you have come here to receive.
Go now, and resist through love.”
*
The Student listened as the old Sage
gave him his orders. He thanked
the Poet for his time and attention.
*
Walking back out the gate, he was reminded
of the Buddha’s admonition:
all is impermanent. No thing lasts forever.
*
In the meantime, me and mine, he thought -- we will do what is right.
About the Creator
David Muñoz
I'm a recovering artist in Austin, Texas. Stoic student, mystic, writer, poet, guitarist, father, brother, son, friend. I am an eternal soul living a human experience. Part of that experience is working through my stuff by making art.



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