Here's to Killing
Here’s to killing. Here’s to screeching
rubber-burned through happy standers-by,
to the bomb like a small sun
born above the city. Here’s to murder,
manslaughter, the lexicon of –cides: where Cain
slinks back from the lamb-specked pasture,
a prince goes epileptic over bitter wine, or a boy
drops the gun by his wound-bleached mother.
Here’s to the noose, to the mortar, to the spear
so patient in its palm-draped pit,
to the death ray arriving from a distant planet
to melt the trees into brownish scum. Friends,
here’s to killing—not because it’s fun,
but because the days fill up with static,
because the limbs go numb from sitting,
because anyway we can’t run
from the inside-out gas creeping through the city
or the tumors that swallow our bowels as we sleep—
because, at last, we must succumb. And so
we have a duty: To break. To bleed. To go
quietly dumb in our book-lined studies
or cough ’til our lungs give up their longing.
Which is to say, we must receive.
So here’s to giving. |
Psalm of the Apple, Psalm of Mud
After the city of ash and sulfur; After the fall
to the dark of the lake; After all
the wrong angels had baked into age,
the good Lord, they say, got lonely, lonely…
Dead-dog and sweet-Lucy-done-left-me lonely.
Rogue-cosmonaut-lost-in-the-vacuum lonely. And so
he built a beast of earth that wouldn’t bark
or bite, that fawned, that had no spite
boiling in it like bile, a thing
that he could tickle on its little head at night
before bedding down in his hammock of stars—
Sweet Lucy,
he wanted to make it right.
He wanted to make another you. He wanted to do
it all over but you,
you skulked through the night
to tongue your double’s ear;
you taught it to fight, to flirt, to steal cars.
What is it we fear
the dead might do, tiptoeing
like thieves through the brain’s backyard?
What is it we want
when we make of the living the ones we’ve lost?
God missed the dead. He brought
them back. And there’s the cost:
To let them die again.
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