A Heapin' Helpin' of Milk-Sop Angst
So I wrote a poem the other day.
I don't normally do this -- reserved as it often is for wieners and downy-soft proto-"Sarterian" jabber-mouths. I'm a proto-Nietzschean wiener, so pages of bombastic vitriol are normally my bread and butter.
However, I was feeling very Sarterian and wienery at once (bad combo) and this is what came up. To offer a summary, it is about how obnoxious everyone is, and how futile it is to do anything of substance in the world -- shackled as we are by the incredibly asinine and self-indulgent nature of our generation (18-35 years of age). Bah.
You'll be glad to know, however, that I am acutely aware of the irony implicit in my producing this "piece." In so doing, I have made myself an asinine and self-indulgent person. With this I am fine. But owing to an oft-times schizophrenic nature, the present-me is going to make fun of the past-me as if the past-me is someone else.
In essence, lacking a specific target, I have chosen myself -- and I don't feel bad about it. Call it exorcism, call it whatever you like. I am making fun of myself as a proxy for all of you proto-Sarterian wieners in the world.
Humbug!
Here it is:
***********
I woke up wrapped in the stars and stripes,
Unable to move.
I lay in the alley next to a liquor store.
Prowled the angry streets,
Smiling "Nuts",
Black and white.
The old men, toothless, skin stretched tight on heads like light bulbs,
Nodded.
And wept.
And wrung their hands,
On chairs on porches at houses on oak and spruce lined streets.
Winked and smiled.
Four-score ten-ton tin soldiers
In the dust of hot, silvery Babylon screamed,
With pricks hard and in hand,
Sounds of metal made music rang in ears
That knew man's birthing cries.
She rolled a cigarette and sat on the corner of the bed,
I touched her shoulder but she crumbled into flakes of green copper.
She dropped her book,
And I picked it up and I tried to read,
But the pages wouldn't turn.
And copulated on pool tables and stools,
Smiling red-eyed at bracketed televisions,
Which hung like spiders in cob-webbed corners.
With their teeth,
Big as the blocks of marble that hold up
Where he sits,
Alone in the red swamp dusk,
Half-concealed, tearless and bloodless in pale urine light.
And cast yellow jaundiced eyes on corn fields, and forests, and rivers.
Listening.
Ear to the ground for something to put on their salads,
Green and wrinkled with presidents like croutons.
They ate and disgorged on their children in vomitoriums of steel and ivory.
On a blanket of nitrogen-bloated bluegrass.
In a desert,
Of wrinkled Mexicans and dusty water.
As cows farted,
And the pages of Nietzsche and Plato and Marx and the Holy Bible flipped idly under the gaze
Of MTV and
Eight-hundred children saw their faces for the first time.
Lingering in good time ripples.
With spent shell casings underfoot.
I woke up in tangled brambles of scrubby Greek underbrush,
With spear points and still more shell casings.
I woke up in an English bog,
Where Anglo-Saxon Man crawled up from under the corpses of Druid priests and
legionnaires.
I woke up in
In a train station.
Talking nonsense to a French Jew, who played violin in
Where once mountainous kings stood staring back in robes of gold,
But where now they die with the ceremony of insects.
That iron-bottomed tabletop of empires and fools,
Reading about Malcolm X and Cuckoos' Nests.
And I asked,
Where are the uncles?
Did they disappear? My fathers' brothers?
Are they in jungles? Helping rice grow fat and white?
Do they still wander in primordial green sludge?
Hollow-eyed into the abyss?
Ten million cellphones.
Twenty million radios.
Forty million televisions.
Eighty million cars.
One-point-six billion cows lowing and farting and eating and dying,
Cast out to the trucks for a blind odyssey into the unknown,
Where no Sinclair waited,
Where no Reed waited,
Where no one waited.
To rest with popcorn kernels and cigarette butts,
And to seep into the earth and give birth, one day, to vast rivers of black blood,
For steel mosquitoes to probe and collect,
For more tin soldiers and more cellphones and more televisions and radios and cars
To feed the cows.
And saw their tracks.
I started to follow, but turned back,
And wished I were still asleep.
***********

