August  28  2021  				 
	
				
			
							
											Jeff Grant  
					
					Blog  
											 andy thibault ,  louis colavecchio ,  louis the coin ,  ravi shankar  					
									
				
			
			
			        
                                        
Louis the Coin  
Ravi Shankar 
____________ 
Decades before a cadre 
of Secret Service agents 
and New Jersey gaming 
troopers surveilled, busted 
 
him in the parking garage 
of Caesars Atlantic City 
with a Milano red Honda 
Civic with a trunk stuffed 
 
full of eight hundred lbs. 
of counterfeit casino chips 
(plus cash, an unregistered 
handgun), you would have 
 
found the late Louis the Coin 
toiling at his Italian immigrant 
father Benedict’s tool shop, 
forging handmade gavels 
 
and engraving corbeled brick 
dentils for window lintels. 
That’s where he learned not 
to make fakes, but authentic 
 
imitations. He would trial 
alloys of strip metal stock,   
peer under a microscope, 
cut shapes with blanking 
 
tools on a roller mill, overlay 
surfaces with a vintage electric 
plating machine and a Mario 
Dimaio coining press 
 
(for nothing beats Italian 
pasta nor craftsmanship) 
to make molds in his closet 
that produced perfect tokens 
 
that allowed him to bilk 
the ultimate swindlers, 
the casinos, for four years, 
before, well, he grew greedy. 
 
Lavish Louis in his loafers, 
on a yacht flying one sail: 
LLO, ladies love outlaws. 
Even in prison, he laughed, 
 
played bocce with the wise 
guys, never ratted anyone 
out, though he was connected 
to the Patriarca crime family 
 
in Providence and had seen 
bodies in the back of Buicks 
maimed beyond recognition 
and knew which Federal Hill 
 
jewelry shops were actually 
fronts for laundering money. 
When I first met Louis years 
later at a benefit for young 
 
writers, he had on his arm 
a young woman wearing black 
lipstick and all he had left over 
from the high life was a taste 
 
for blow and Berluti alligator 
leather loafers scuffed around 
the heel yet still shiny, supple 
as a new glove unwrapped 
 
from tissue paper on Epiphany 
Eve in the devoutly Catholic 
Colavecchio household. 
The last time I saw the Coin 
 
he was living alone in a weary 
one bedroom in Pawtucket, 
which he had transformed 
into an atelier: piles of wood 
 
fiber, animal glue, aluminum 
chloride, ultraviolet lights, 
melamine formaldehyde resin 
in jars stacked like blackberry 
 
jam on a supermarket shelf, 
it was like the enchanted inside 
of a sorcerer’s workshop 
and shifting gingerly around, 
 
not wanting to touch anything, 
I could hear the warning 
of Goethe’s ballad tolling: 
the spirits I have summoned  
 
I now cannot rid myself of again…  
Now standing at his grave 
at the sprawling Cranston 
St. Ann’s cemetery, I recall 
 
that he still owes me money 
and how he had held up 
a reproduced and magnified 
quarter inch of a C-note 
 
to show me the watermarks, 
security threads, color-shifting 
ink, microprinting he knew 
he could exactly reproduce 
 
with practice in his kitchen. 
If suspected, he had an alibi 
even: undercover counterfeit 
deterrence specialist. 15 more 
 
months in prison was the net 
result and I don’t know how 
he weathered hypertension, 
wardens, dementia, chronic 
 
obstructive pulmonary disease, 
correctional officers, chaplains 
and loneliness those last months 
of his life. Around me, obelisks 
 
and granite monuments and fake 
flowers and rosaries and framed 
portraits and votive candles 
and huge headstones engraved 
 
with anchors, lilies, weeping 
willows, phrases that seem flimsy 
when carved into stone: loved  
by all , into the sunshine , blessed  
 
mother, till we meet again, the gates  
are open, on the wings of angels.  
Of the deceased, he must be 
one of the most colorful, 
 
yet his final resting place 
is one of the simplest here, 
and there’s some modern 
parable in that paradox 
 
which someone else can 
puzzle out, for dark clouds 
are forming on the horizon 
and evening’s growling low. 
 
I will work this poem over 
the way he worked the lathes 
until it shimmers with enough 
of him that becomes genuine 
 
effigy and candid elegy both, 
faceted and beveled and 3-D 
enough to trick the cosmic 
slot machines into paying out 
 
its jackpot in lurid, astonishing, 
confounding stories, leaving us 
richly barren, forever dreaming 
of a time there will be more—    
(RIP Louis B. Colavecchio January 1, 1942 – July 6, 2020)  
DR. RAVI SHANKAR. 
Shankar is a Pushcart prize-winning poet, translator and professor who has published 15 books, including the Muse India award-winning translations Andal: The Autobiography of a Goddess and W.W. Norton’s Language for a New Century: Contemporary Poetry from the Middle East, Asia & Beyond called “a beautiful achievement for world literature” by Nobel Laureate Nadine Gordimer. He has taught and performed around the world and appeared in print, radio and TV in such venues as The New York Times, NPR, BBC and the PBS Newshour. He has won awards to the Corporation of Yaddo and the MacDowell Colony, fellowships from the Rhode Island and Connecticut Counsel on the Arts, founded one of the oldest electronic journals of the arts in the world Drunken Boat, and recently finished his PhD from the University of Sydney. His memoir “Correctional” is forthcoming in 2021 with University of Wisconsin Press. Ravi Shankar can be reached at: https://www.poetravishankar.com/ .