For The "Projects" Boys... And Girls
Tom Waits Jersey Girl Lyrics
Got no time for the corner
boys,
Here is the odd part though. Yah, we were corner boys even that young, although we had no corner, no official corner like a corner mom and pop variety store, or a pizza parlor like I did later at Doc’s Drugstore in middle school and then later as the king hell king’s scribe to Frankie Riley in front of Salducci’s Pizza Parlor but just the back end of the elementary school, as long as we were quiet and nobody cried murder and mayhem to the cops. The following, in any case, a little revised, represents my “homage” to Denny and the gang from those by-gone days and even the girls that ninety-three point four percent of the time I was scared to death of/ fascinated by. Well, some things haven’t changed anyway.
*******
Taffrail Road, Yardarm Lane, Captain's Walk, Quarterdeck Road, Sextant Circle, the Old Sailor’s Home, the Shipyard (abandoned now) and Sea Street. Yes, those streets and places from the old public housing project down in the Irishtown section of Adamsville surely evoke imagines of the near-by sea that touched its edges, of long ago sailing ships, and of battles fought off some mist-driven coast by those hearty enough to seek fame and fortune. And with the wherewithal to hold on to their booty (no, not that booty, dough, prizes, stuff like that) But, of course, we know that anyone with even a passing attachment to Adamsville had to have an instinctual love of the sea, and fear of its furies when old Mother Nature turned her back on us. Yes, the endless sea, our homeland the sea, the mother we never knew, the sea... But, enough of those imaginings.
Today I look to the landward side of that troubled housing project peninsula, that isolated expanse of land jutting out of the water and filled with wreckage of another kind, the human kind . No, this will not be a sociological survey of working class pathologies made inevitable by the relentless struggle to scramble for life's necessities, the culture of poverty, or the like. Nor will it be a political screed about rising against the monsters that held us down, or the need for such a rising. Nor even about the poetic license necessary to cobble pretty words together to speak of the death of dreams, dreamless dreams or, maybe, just accepting small dreams to fit a small life. Rather, I am driven by the jumble of images that passed through the thoughts of a ragamuffin of a project boy as he tried to make sense out of a world that he did not create, and that he had no say in.
And the kids. Well, the idea in those “golden” post-war days was that the projects were a way-station to better things, or at least that was the hope. So there was plenty of turn-over of friends but there was a core of kids, kids like me and my brothers, who stayed long enough to learn the ropes. Or get beaten down by guys just a little hungrier, a little stronger, or with just a little bigger chip on their shoulder. Every guy had to prove himself, tough or not, by hanging with guys that were "really" tough. That was the ethos, and "thems were the rules." Rules that seemed to come out of eternity’s time, and like eternity never challenged.
Down in the street makin' all
that noise,
Don't want no whores on
eighth avenue,
Cause tonight i'm gonna be
with you.
'cause tonight i'm gonna take
that ride,
Across the river to the
jersey side,
Take my baby to the carnival,
And i'll take you all on the
rides.
Down the shore everything's
alright,
You're with your baby on a
saturday night,
Don't you know that all my
dreams come true,
When i'm walkin' down the
street with you,
Sing sha la la la la la sha
la la la.
You know she thrills me with
all her charms,
When i'm wrapped up in my
baby's arms,
My little angel gives me
everything,
I know someday that she'll wear
my ring.
So don't bother me cause i
got no time,
I'm on my way to see that
girl of mine,
Nothin' else matters in this
whole wide world,
When you're in love with a
jersey girl,
Sing sha la la la la la la.
And i call your name, i can't
sleep at night,
Sha la la la la la la.
*************
Peter Paul Markin comment:
Funny how some stories get
their start. A few years back one of my old Adamsville South Elementary corner
boys, Denny Romano, he of the squeaky burgeoning tenor in our impromptu 1950s
back end of the school-yard summer nights doo wop group (and I of the squeaky
bass, low, very low bass) “connected” with me again. He did so through one of
those looking for old high school graduates-based Internet sites that
relentlessly track you down just as, in your dotage; you think you have finally
gotten out from under that last remnant speck of fighting off the last forty
years of your teen alienation and teen angst.
Denny asked me to speak of
the old “corner boy” days down at “the projects,” the Adamsville Housing
Authority low-rent housing where the desperately poor, temporarily so or not,
were warehoused in our town in the post-World War II good night when some
returning veteran fathers needed a helping hand to get them going back into
civilian life. Corner boys, in case you were clueless (or too young to know of
anything but mall rat-dom), were guys, mainly, who “hung out” together. Poor
boys getting a long way from home, or trying to, no money, no other place to
go, or with no transportation to get some place, hung out in front of a million
mom and pop variety corner variety stores, corner pizza parlors, corner bowling
alleys, corner fast food joints, hell, even corner gas stations in some real
small towns from what some guys have told me when I asked them.
Here is the odd part though. Yah, we were corner boys even that young, although we had no corner, no official corner like a corner mom and pop variety store, or a pizza parlor like I did later at Doc’s Drugstore in middle school and then later as the king hell king’s scribe to Frankie Riley in front of Salducci’s Pizza Parlor but just the back end of the elementary school, as long as we were quiet and nobody cried murder and mayhem to the cops. The following, in any case, a little revised, represents my “homage” to Denny and the gang from those by-gone days and even the girls that ninety-three point four percent of the time I was scared to death of/ fascinated by. Well, some things haven’t changed anyway.
*******
Taffrail Road, Yardarm Lane, Captain's Walk, Quarterdeck Road, Sextant Circle, the Old Sailor’s Home, the Shipyard (abandoned now) and Sea Street. Yes, those streets and places from the old public housing project down in the Irishtown section of Adamsville surely evoke imagines of the near-by sea that touched its edges, of long ago sailing ships, and of battles fought off some mist-driven coast by those hearty enough to seek fame and fortune. And with the wherewithal to hold on to their booty (no, not that booty, dough, prizes, stuff like that) But, of course, we know that anyone with even a passing attachment to Adamsville had to have an instinctual love of the sea, and fear of its furies when old Mother Nature turned her back on us. Yes, the endless sea, our homeland the sea, the mother we never knew, the sea... But, enough of those imaginings.
Today I look to the landward side of that troubled housing project peninsula, that isolated expanse of land jutting out of the water and filled with wreckage of another kind, the human kind . No, this will not be a sociological survey of working class pathologies made inevitable by the relentless struggle to scramble for life's necessities, the culture of poverty, or the like. Nor will it be a political screed about rising against the monsters that held us down, or the need for such a rising. Nor even about the poetic license necessary to cobble pretty words together to speak of the death of dreams, dreamless dreams or, maybe, just accepting small dreams to fit a small life. Rather, I am driven by the jumble of images that passed through the thoughts of a ragamuffin of a project boy as he tried to make sense out of a world that he did not create, and that he had no say in.
Ah, the scenes. Warm, sticky,
humid summer nights, the air filled with the pungent, overpowering soapy
fragrance from the Proctor & Gamble factory across the channel that never
quite left one's nostrils. Waking up each morning to face the now vanished Fore
River Shipyard superstructure; hearing the distant clang of metals being worked
to shape; and, the sight of flickering welding torches binding metals together.
The endless rust-encrusted, low-riding oil tankers coming through the channel
guided to port by high whistle-blowing tugs.
The interminable wait for the
lifeline, seemingly never on time, Eastern Mass bus that took one and all in
and out through that single Palmer Street escape route to greater Adamsville.
Or that then imposing central housing authority building where I was sent by my
mother, too proud to go herself, with the monthly rent, usually short. Oh, did
I mention Carter's Variety Store, the sole store for us all the way to Sea
Street but police take notice off limits to corners boys young or old, another
lifeline. Many a time I reached into Ma's pocketbook to steal money, or
committed other small hoodlum wanna-be larcenies, in order to hike down that
long road and get my sugar-drenched stash (candy bars, soda, a.k.a. tonic but
that word is long gone, Twinkles, Moon Pies, and so on, sugar-drenched all)
And the kids. Well, the idea in those “golden” post-war days was that the projects were a way-station to better things, or at least that was the hope. So there was plenty of turn-over of friends but there was a core of kids, kids like me and my brothers, who stayed long enough to learn the ropes. Or get beaten down by guys just a little hungrier, a little stronger, or with just a little bigger chip on their shoulder. Every guy had to prove himself, tough or not, by hanging with guys that were "really" tough. That was the ethos, and "thems were the rules." Rules that seemed to come out of eternity’s time, and like eternity never challenged.
I took my fair share of nicks
but also, for a moment, well for more than a moment as it turned out, I was
swayed by the gangster lifestyle. Hell, it looked easy. With old elementary
school classmate Rickie B., Denny knows who I am talking about, who, later,
served twenty years, maybe more for all I know, for a series of armed
robberies, I worked my first ‘clip’ in some downtown Adamsville Square jewelry
store, Sid’s I think, the one with all the onyx rings on display in the front
and the twelve signs about how you could have anything in the place on very
easy terms, only a million installments (with interest piling up, of course). No,
thanks.
The clip, again for the
clueless, is nothing but kids’ stuff, strictly for amateurs because no
professional thief would risk his or her good name for such a low-rent payoff.
The deal was one guy went in and got the salesperson’s attention while the
other guy ripped off whatever was “hanging low on the tree.” In that
arrangement I was usually the “tree” guy not because I had quick hands,
although come to think of it I did (and big eyes, big greedy eyes for all the
booty, and you know what booty means here now since I told you before, dough),
but because I didn’t have the knack of talking gibberish to adults. Hell, you
probably did the clip yourself, maybe for kicks. And then forgot about it for
some other less screwy kick. Not me.
Okay, so at that point maybe
every kid, every curious kid ready in whatever manner to challenge authority
and I (and most of my then corner boys, although not Denny if I recall
correctly) are even. Here is the tie-breaker though. Moving on, I was the
"holder" for more expansive enterprises with George H. (who, later,
got killed when a drug deal he was promoting, a lonely gringo deal down in
Mexico, went south on him). See George was a true artist, a true sneak thief
who was able to get into any house by stealth and sheer determination. Mainly
houses up in Adams Shore where people actually had stuff worth stealing unlike
in the projects where the stuff was so much Bargain Center specials (the local
Wal-Mart-like operation of its day).
George needed me for two, no
three, things. First, I was the “look-out” and even the clueless know what that
means. Secondly, I actually held and carried some of the loot that he passed to
me out of the window or door, and one time out a backyard bulkhead (the good
stuff, televisions, silverware, a stamp collection, a coin collection, and some
other stuff that I have forgotten about, was in the basement family room).
Lastly, as George started to draw school and police attention I actually “held”
the stuff in a safe location (which I will not disclose here just in case the
various statutes of limitations have not run out). That went on for a while but
George got busted for something else, some unruly child baloney rap thing, and
that was that.
That was just a kid’s
gangster moment, right? It was not all larcenies and kid dreams of some “big
score” to get himself, and his family, out from under though. It couldn’t be
for a kid, or the whole world, poor as it was, would have just collapsed over
my head, and I would not be here to honor Denny’s request.
Oh, the different things that
came up. Oddball things like Christmas tree bonfires on New Year’s Eve where we
scurried like rats just as soon as neighbors put their trees out to be taken
away in order to assemble them on the beach ready to be fired up and welcome in
the new year. Or annual Halloween hooliganism where we, in a sugar frenzy,
worked the neighborhood trick or treat racket hitting every house like the 82nd
Airborne Division, or some such elite unit running amok in Baghdad or some Iraqi
town ...
Hey, wait a minute, all this
is so much eyewash because what, at least in my memory's eye, is the driving
"projects" image is the "great awakening." Girls. Girls
turning from sticks to shapes just around the time that I started to notice the
difference, and being interested in that different if not always sure about
what it meant. You don’t need a book to figure that out, although maybe it
would have helped. And being fascinated and ill at ease at the same time around
them, and being a moonstruck kid on every girl that gave me a passing glance,
or what I thought was a passing glance, and the shoe leather-wearing out
marathon walking, thinking about what to do about them, especially when the
intelligence-gatherers told you about a girl who liked you.
And the innocent, mostly
dreaded, little petting parties, in dank little basements that served as
'family rooms' for each apartment, trying to be picked by the one you want to
pick you and, well, you get the drift. Remind me to tell you some time, and here
is where Denny comes in, how we put together, a bunch of corner-less corner
boys, a ragtag doo wop group one summer for the express, the sole, the only
purpose of, well, luring girls to the back of the school where we hung out. And
it worked.
Now a lot of this is stuff
any kid goes through, except just not in "the projects." And some of
it is truly "projects" stuff - which way will he go, good or bad? But
this next thing kind of ties it together. Just about the time when I was seriously
committed to a petty criminal lifestyle, that “holding” stuff with my corner
boy comrade George, I found the Thomas Crane Library branch that was then in
the Adamsville South Elementary School (now located further up the street
toward Adamsville Square). And one summer I just started to read every
biography or other interesting book they had in the Children's Section. While
looking, longingly, over at the forbidden Adult Section on the other side of
the room for the good stuff. And I dreamed. Yes, I am a "projects"
boy, and I survived to tell the tale. Is that good enough for you, Denny?
No comments:
Post a Comment