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      October 11, 2016William E. ArchilaDuke Ellington, Santa Ana, El Salvador, 1974

      He paces the cool and dusty classroom,
      hands in his pockets, rows and rows
      of chairs, sixth grade children looking
      straight at him, his big band walk.
      At the black board, he turns around
      and breaks the silence, “instead
      of trotting through an oriental garden,
      picture a dessert under a devil sun.”
      He snaps his fingers two plus one
      as if to say one more time.
      We shout back a demented version of Caravan,
      crashing cymbals, drums and horns
      muffled rhythms from a line of saxophones.
      Edwin Martinez gets on his feet,
      tortures the trumpet and leans over the music stand,
      pouring all his memories of Egypt from history class.
      Douglas Diaz slaps the bongos
      exactly the same way he taps
      the cans of coffee and milk at home.
      Señor Ellington claps his hands along,
      dancing a two-step blues, stomping
      in the center of everyone, like a traffic cop
      conducting a busy city street.
      Before break, he will tell us
      stories of a smoky blue spot
      called the Cotton Club.
      We will learn all the Harlem rhapsodies
      from the Latin Quarter up to 125th Street.
      He will punch the piano, a syncopated phrase
      and we will listen: no need to study war no more.
      He could be my grandfather,
      a black boy from Chalatenango—
      an indigo-blue family
      from the Caribbean through Honduras.
      He could be the one to write
      a tone parallel to Sonsonate
      a trombone to roll to the wheels
      of a cart and the wrinkled man,
      toothless, pulling his corn.
      I want him to come back
      more than a Congo drum in a cabaret
      more than a top hat and tails before a piano.
      I want him and his orchestra
      to pound the doors of a ballroom
      by the side of Lake Coatepeque.
      I want the cracked paint to peel off the walls
      the lights to go dim, the floor to disappear,
      a trumpet to growl
      my country to listen.

      from Issue #15 - Summer 2001