Poem
For Anne Boyer
The ones who wash.
The ones washed.
The ones who wash the washed.
I am washing the ocean
With my golden eyeballs because
I live across the street from it
And now, you see, I’m filling
My golden eyeballs with the washed
World because they
Are goblets and this is
A medieval poem
And you are my hide,
My manuscript, so I’m going
To erase the glyphs
And write over you oh
Apocalyptic pile-up
Of cars. The car wash would you
Like a car wash no I said
I don’t want a fucking car wash today
No. Press
The ‘no’ button is red fill with
Gas. They believed the
Glyphs, the script was
Nonsense, that the letters
Were pictures of eyeballs
And so everything written
Was staring at you like
you were an erased animal in
Surveillance in
Passports we cross—the poem
Slop, I don’t want this poem
To be bought, it can’t
Ever be bought OK
So I’m posting it here in
The sell zone—if you touch
This poem
I will die
Without knowing
What the words were
Selling to you
In the eyeballs
The eye wash mine are
Open to the passport picture
Is this you
Ezekiel?
Are you there?
In screen? Inshallah?
In real time? In “The Scream”—
The stealing of it—the zone
Of the ‘what isn’t’
The ‘is’ zone
Separated by wing
air washing above and below
aerodynamic lift
In the half-life
That decays once it begins
Where nothingness
In tin
tandem
toss
In community that props
Up corpses
Where are you?
We’re here in this
Tube of oxygenated atmosphere
above
Some countries—a son—
He is composed of
Cameras now.
Or tubes.
Or clicks. Is he clicking?
Does DNA
Make a sound
When it’s pulled apart?
I can’t tell if I’ve made
Cells or
Wires or tubes or
A language coming
Together like
Drops of water.
Wash
The toast. He says
“Wash mama”
So I do and now
The toast is all soggy.
An old writer—we say he’s ‘washed out’—a
Corpse ‘washes up.’
To be watched and opened
like a passport
Or woman.
The beautiful women
Of poetry posing
On a page of poetry. Do not buy
Me anymore.
Or sell my face
Is being washed because
It’s tired and I want
to stop. The sons
Of the beautiful women
Of poetry—the only
Place where once you
Could be beautiful
Or ugly or neither one—to want
to be ugly—
To reign, transcend— match
The ugly modern world
In the face mirror.
To transcend
A nation like a passport or surveillance
Or clicking on the posing
Images
That have been washed
Like fruit.
To be deposed.
Deported.
To be a son.
There are consequences, my lovely darling.
In ethic in shall uh in cleansing nick
In son of Israel in scrolls
That roll up around
The child’s foot—
The sun cupping them in
Like golden eyeballs.
In clicks of photographs
The beautiful women of poetry,
Their legs longer than
The horizon
The poems sold
Like the old world forever
Being sold I can’t tell what
I’ve made no I can tell
I’ve made cells
That are flying above
The ocean
Of horrors—the middle part
Where nothing can survive
Where the organs are supposed
To be pumping and digesting
and filling with joy
but now in the middle of the ocean
There are mirrors
And there is seaweed and a young girl
Is being wrapped up
With a white sheet
She is your sister
And you must remember that forever
And her feet have not
Been washed
By God or by anyone
How dirty the feet
And though they will end up
At the center of the sea
Two feet without a body
Walking half life
They will always be dirty
Because even the sea can’t
Wash this away. The sea’s
Defiance. The stars milk
Mothers and then the mothers’
Milk rots and that’s
What we have to work with.
This event. That one.
Those ones too. All of these events.
These times.
Tuesday, March 15, 2011
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1 comment:
Heroic.
My "word verification" word for this comment is "prose". Which I call poetry because it seems to rise out of itself.
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