Read Callahan's Place 10 - Off The Wall At Callahan's (v5.0) Online
Authors: Spider Robinson
Tags: #Amazon.com
I longed to know the future, like the Oracle of Delphi
And then this cat knocked on my door: Goddam, it was myself! I
got the time travel blues, since I met myself comin' in;
I'd tell you all about it…but where the hell do I begin?
He said that I was going to invent a time machine—
That is to say,
I
told me, if you follow what I mean.
I said, "I'm no inventor, man: I'll never ever get it."
But he said "Copy this one, and we both can share the credit!"
I cranked it up, it blew right up, and then and there I died.
I wonder who that joker was, and why the bastard lied…
Got the time travel blues: one of my life's most awful shocks
Now I could use a doctor: in fact, I need a paradox
If I am dead, my murderer can't logically exist
But here I am in pieces, and I'm really gettin' pissed
I got the time travel blues—it's only natural, bein' dead
To want to think that time is really only in your head
Spice
And when I've just assuaged your lust
By flicker-light of telly
I love to lie between your thighs
My cheek upon your belly
To smell you and to feel you
And to hear your small intestine
And know that this is perfect bliss
Just as it was predestined
In the hour that my death draws near
And I wonder what my life was for
It'll be the afterglows
With your fragrance in my nose
I'll remember and relive once more
And now I rest, caress your breast
And sail in satiation
On the oceanic motion
Of your rhythmic respiration
And now my lips and fingertips
Are flavoured sweet and sour
For I have nipped and fully sipped
My favorite furry flower
In the hour that my death draws near
And I wonder what my life was for
It'll be the afterglows
With your fragrance in my nose
I'll remember and relive once more
I know in time I'll have to climb
Up next to you for sleep
With no regret, but not just yet
This moment let me keep
And suddenly it comes to me
—how glorious and dumb!—
I had so much fun making love
I plain forgot to come…
Please, Dr. Frankenstein
I've walked a thousand miles in an effort to retain ya
And I didn't come for charity: I fully plan on payin' ya
But I've been so depressive, guess I'm ready for some mania
That's why I've traveled all this way to gloomy Transylvania, singin
Please Dr. Frankenstein, won't you try and bring me back to life?
Cause I truly have been grieving' since I got "Goodbye, I'm leavin" from my wife
I'm slowly goin nuts because the memory of her cuts me like a knife
Please Dr. Frankenstein, won't you try and bring me back to life?
I cannot seem to find my pulse; my temperature is down
And I can tell I smell like hell, the way that people frown
I feel like rigor mortis, all I do is lay around
You gotta help me Frankenstein, I'm halfway in the ground (I'm beggin)
Please Dr. Frankenstein, I am up for any kind of change
Spent evenings in this coffin just a little bit too often, and it's strange
Please don't consider me more than some flesh for you and Igor
to arrange
Please Dr. Frankenstein, I am up for any kind of change
I'll stagger like the victim of a wreck
I'll wear those funny bolt-things in my neck
I’d love to be in stitches—what the heck
Do you need cash, or will you take a check?
I'm not afraid of what you'll do—I'm immunized to pain
Cause everything I ever had has bubbled down the drain
Make me the Pride of Frankenstein and I will not complain
Just strap me down and let me have a transplant of the brain: I need it
Please Dr. Frankenstein, won't you try and raise me from the dead?
My heart is barely beatin since I caught the woman cheatin in our bed
My entire world's a coffin and it doesn't get me off an like I said
Please Dr. Frankenstein, won't you try and raise me from the dead?
Come to My Bedside
by
Zaccur Bishop
Come to my bedside and let there be sharing
Uncounterfeitable sign of your caring
Take off the clothes of your body and mind
Bring me your nakedness; help me in mine…
Help me believe that I’m worthy of trust
Bring me a love that includes honest lust
Warmth is for fire; fire is for burning
Love is for bringing an ending to yearning…
For I love you in a hundred ways, and not for this alone
But your lovin’ is the sweetest lovin’ I have ever known
Come to my bedside and let there be giving
Licking and laughing and loving and living
Sing me a song that has never been sung
Dance at the end of my fingers and tongue
Take me inside you and bring up your knees
Wrap me up tight in your thighs and then squeeze
Or if you feel like it, you get on top
Love me however you please, but please…don’t stop
For I love you in a hundred ways, and not for this alone
But your lovin’ is the sweetest lovin’ I have ever known
I know just what you’re thinking of
There’s more to love than making love
There’s much more to the flower than the bloom
But every time we meet in bed
I find myself inside your head
Even as I’m entering your womb
So come to my bedside and let there be loving
Twisting and moaning and thrusting and shoving
I will be gentle; you know that I can
For you I’ll endeavor to be quite a singular man…
Here’s my identity, stamped on my genes
Take this my offering: know what it means
Let us become what we started to be
On that long-ago night when you first came with me…
O, lady! I love you in a hundred ways, and not for this alone
But your lovin’ is the sweetest lovin’ I have ever known
Out of Your Way
You went out of your way to make sure I’d love you
And now you say be patient for awhile
You went out of your way to be just as nice as you could be
Until I fell, and then you modified your style
You say you’re somebody else’s slave…I suppose we all got our crosses
But I ain’t nobody’s slave and I figure it’s time I cut my losses
You could end up mine some way, but baby until that day
I’m goin’ out of your way by a country mile
You went out of your way to make sure that I’d need you
You taught me the significance of need
And I went out of my way to show you who I am and how I fell
Which is for me a think remarkable indeed
You got a lotta laughs inside, but I’m afraid that’s where they’re keepin’
You got a lotta tears there too, and I reckon you’re much more fond of weepin’
You could end up mine, it’s so—but baby, until I know
I’m goin’ out of your way with all due speed
You went out of your way to make sure that I’d want you
With your eyes as much as with your knowing hands
But you’ll never be happy at all until you want to
And till I don’t want to be makin’ long-term plans
They’ve already dealt the hand: I’ll either win it or else I won’t
You understand how I feel and you either want me or else you don’t
Take as long as you need to decide—but baby, I got my pride
And I’m goin’ out of your way while I still can
—oh, can’t you see?
You ain’t no use to me like this: there ain’t enough of you left to miss
Why don’t you come out of your way, just one more time, with me?
Hardon You
I know my constant horniness gets hardon you
Sometimes it seems I’m always in the mood
If that is so I truly beg your pardon, too
It wasn’t my intention to be rude
My love is like
my horniness, in that it never quits
But I’d love you if you didn’t have those tits
Men have only got the one thing on their mind
It gets so repetitious it’s a crime
Somebody said a hard man is good to find
As long as you don’t find him every goddam time
You are not only
something that I lust for, that I hunt
I would love you if you didn’t have a cunt
I’m neurotically erotic, with a taste for the exotic
And your body is hypnotic when it’s next to me
I’m dementedly attentive, and in need of no incentive
But you know you represent much more than sex to me…
You know that I was horny for you from the start
And that’s the way it’s always gonna be
But you ought to know your sexiness is just a part
Of the value you will always have for me
It may have been what caught my eye: it isn’t why I stick
I would love you if I didn’t have a dick
Mountain Lady
(Jeanne’s Song)
Mountain Lady, sing for me: your singing makes me glad to be alive
Mountain Lady, give to me your lovin’, for it helps me to survive
Mountain Lady, stay with me, and let me drink your beauty with my eyes
I want you to lay with me, and be there in the morning when I rise
You give me what I need, and you need what I can give
Like you I live for loving, and like me you love to live
I swear I’ll make you happy if there’s any way I can
And if you will be my Mountain Lady, I will be your man…
Mountain Lady, smile for me: your smile is like the rising of the sun
Wait a little while for me—I’m coming back as fast as I can run
Mountain Lady, talk with me, for talking is essential to our growth
I want you to walk with me through all the days remaining to us both
You give me what I need, and you need what I can give
Like you I live for loving, and like me you love to live
I swear I’ll make you happy if there’s any way I can
And if you will be my Mountain Lady, I will be your man…
Mountain Lady, dance for me
Your dancing takes my breath away, you know…
Save that loving glance for me—I love it when you let your loving show
Mountain Lady, give to me a kind of love I’ve never had before
I want you to live with me: I cannot live without you any more…
You give me what I need, and you need what I can give
Like you I live for loving, and like me you love to live
My love is deep and stronger than a river running wild
I want to be your lover, and the father of your child…
Dramatis Personae:
I believe in my heart of hearts—and in my brain of brains, for that matter—that an epigram should be like a good son-in-law: completely self-supporting. If it needs footnotes, it’s not an epigram. My old friend and esteemed editor Jim Frenkel, however (like clams, he’s better esteemed than eschewed), is certain you will find the epigrams in this book more enjoyable if you know a little something about their speakers. And he is quite keen that you enjoy yourself, since he has overpaid me so outrageously for this volume and wants to be sure you’ll give copies to all your friends for Christmas. Who could argue with that? Well…me, for one.
It’s not just that I’m lazy, though I’m proud to say I am. It’s not even that he’s getting extra work out of me for free, which offends my religion. My feeling is that if you finish this book curious to know more about the people whose wit and wisdom hold its covers apart, the sensible thing for
me
to do would be to just refer you to the six available volumes in which they appear at much greater length, and hope you take the bait.
But in all fairness, I have to admit that might not be the most sensible thing for
Jim
to do, as none of those six books is published by this house just now. (Although Jim was the editor who bought the first Callahan book…and was working for Tom Doherty at the time! Life is strange.) Therefore I bow to his editorial insight, marketing savvy, and phenomenal endurance in argument.