Tuesday, May 23, 2023

The Garden of Sad-Angry Poems: Guns and History, They're Still With Us

 Two of my poems were published online last month. 



My poem "They Came" was posted last month on Poetry Superhighway's 25th Annual Yom HaShoah Issue. The poem was inspired by German pastor Martin Niemöller's famous 1946 postwar writing “First They Came.”  


They Came

First they came for the immigrant children
And we looked away
Because the Leader’s toady told us, “Those are not
our children”
And we looked at our own children,
and were reassured

Then they came for the people who cover their heads
or pray too much
And again we looked away
Because we were not Iranians, or Iraqis, or Gazans,
or children of the West Bank detained indefinitely without charges
And, as the man said,
those are not our children

Then they came for the abused, and those who accused their abusers,
and for the accusers’ advocates,
and for those who fought against their abusers,
But we looked away, and jested at the comedie humaine,
because we were not ourselves the victims of abuse
or the advocates for the abused,
and, after all, we were “not his type”

Then they came for the ones who would never
play ball with Der Leader
The ones who would always be trouble
because they were cheated out of their land
or, perchance, had been enslaved
or who had once owned a country that the slave-owners wished
to possess for themselves
or who, we feared, were willing to work
for too little money
or who loved the wrong people

And then because no one else remained standing
in our diminished patria,
neither advocates,
nor scribblers with their pencil over the ear,
nor Enemies of the People with their hand-held devices,
nor workers’ parties,
nor defenders of the beaten, humiliated and disappeared

nor anyone able to kick the ball from their feet,
nothing was left for us to do
but to lay our own bodies before his feet

as the painted, spiked, and horny-headed demons of extinction
cheered, and drank, and laughed, and danced upon the bodies
of their victims
and ran up history’s score


First published by The NewVerse.News in July 2019



My poem “Allen Ginsberg’s ‘America’ and Ours” was published New Verse News on April 29. This poem makes use of and takes off from Ginsberg's 1950's beat poem screed titled "America." His assessment of the politics of his day inspired me to be a little profane about our own.


Allen Ginsberg’s “America” (and Ours)

 

America I’ve given you all and now I’m nothing.” – Allen Ginsberg, Howl and Other Poems, 1956

 

I am frankly envious of the poet who, on Jan. 17, 1956,

wrote, in a poem entitled “America,”

“America, go fuck yourself with your atom bomb.”

 

Tennessee, I invite, in the same spirit of candor,

go shoot yourself with your absolutely unqualified no-foolin’, stand-your-ground

irredeemably nut-case gun rights laws,

per events on the ground taking place March 28, 2023.

I could simply echo every sentiment in that mid-century poet’s inspired piece

     of unbridled spontaneity

composed on the theme of his America, in which he that mid-century poet vowed,

amid other proclamations,

“I won’t write my poem till I’m in my right mind”…

but I do not expect to be in my right mind

so long as the YMCA in which I seek to run away from my fury and despair

offers news channels on its TV service available to rats like me

who run on treadmills of anger and despair

 

Networks, that is, on which the munitions-injury expert

is asked to describe the effect of AR ammunition on the bodies of children,

and what I increasingly wish somebody (even crazier than me) would do

to the persons of the elected Tennessee officials

who valiantly protected their freedom-loving constituents from any limitation,

however slight and publicly supported by official law enforcement,

on their natural right to destroy the bodies of children

with whatever armaments the Good Lord, acting through the protected mediation

    of the National Rats Association,

entitles them to possess

 

“America,” Ginsberg demanded in his disarming and eternally youthful way:

“when will you take your clothes off?”

“America” – how’s this for pre-visioning the paramilitary far right? –

“why are your libraries full of tears?”

 

America, we ask in our hair-tearing, torn-clothing way,

Why are your courthouses, state houses, ballot boxes and school boards

full of self-made demagogues who failed to read the books

in their now besieged schoolhouses when they had the chance?

who think that libraries are merely back alleyways for the gang fights

     of the culture wars?

America, we ask, why do the voters of Tennessee develop amnesia of the ballot box?

When will it end, America, your war on humanity?

When will you be worthy of your blues singers, jazzmen, street corner poets,

         dancers on the page as well as on the stage?

When will you invite Stephen Colbert to be the speaker at the next inauguration?

America, the cherry trees are blossoming

and I feel sentimental about the days of wine and roses and that legendary decade ban

     on assault rifles…

and even when the party of Richard Nixon was, by comparison, a beacon of moderation

Americans, we are obsessed by media, by the Chinese timebomb that goes TikTok, TikTok

 

America, the best minds of my generation are already underground

America, there is nobody left to vote for

America, our ancestors saved the world from fascism

But all the fascists have to do today is show their pure-white fannies on TV

and the writing on the wall goes tic-toc-clock, as the timebomb of private self-interest

     melts the glaciers

and brings the ocean to your living room

just before the signoff of the foxed and phony nooz

 

America, you are teaching all the world how to kill people,

     best result for the buck

Because that is all you remember how to do

 




Lilac Days in Massachusetts: The Sweet Smell of Spring

Lilac Days

They shine because this is their month,

their showtime,

but so also the cherry and other fruit trees

in their many branching varieties, 

as do the dogwood, and apple, and willow,

and the nameless white-flowering beauties,

blossoms, their offerings lasting only a week or maybe, with teasing, and the right weather,

a little more.

 

And the gentle sun,

Keeping its schedule, as always, to a perfection

unknown here below

slipping with matchless grace down a cloudless horizon

to the last bans of sunset, twilight

 

but still at night  they sleep with us

still they house and keep the birds safe

     in the quiet hours

and still the morning prays again

that time persists once more to be beautiful

precisely because it is so much older than we



May All Be Blessed!*

 

The little fingers on the little piggies

The big men in my childhood nightmares

     thumping through the shadows of my mind

The killers and the haters, even.

     Who somehow survive my wrathful imaginings

as if they were nothing but what they are –

      maya!

 

All the yoga ladies

The muscled guys

The busy life of the highway where

     the machines take us where they will

And the slow life of the late winter day –

     Gleaming March sunshine,

Brutal west wind

And the yard full of squirrels chasing one another’s

     tails

The tails wagging the dogs of peace,

The people below the bombs

The lasers of love’s eternal springtimes,

The offerings,

Those who carry the finger bowls of time

In which we dip our fingers


*(After a song by Peter Kater)