Read new poems Online

Authors: Tadeusz Rozewicz

new poems (7 page)

BOOK: new poems
3.8Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
 
top hat stetson and cowboy boots
 
then there was a banquet
seven thousand pounds of beef were consumed
(the old world will feel the effects in a few years
or a few days)
five and a half thousand pounds of ham
(this bodes no good either)
sixty thousand giant shrimp
 
the former president once again
bid farewell to the nation
once again apologized
to the district attorney and the nation
that he had lied that he had put his finger
where he shouldn't have
the finger from the atomic button
(don't put your finger in the door!)
he promised he'd give back the chairs
and flew off
 
the sky wept the earth wept
the lands and oceans trembled
diplomats and generals
wiped their noses
(the cardinals smiled)
 
I wept too
as I read the papers
then I laughed through my tears
as I listened to the radio
building the Tower of Bauble
she would gaze upon her features
innocent and so attractive
in the mirror every morning
and at night before retiring
she would gaze upon her features
oval white
and appetizing
as a slice of bread and butter
 
once she looked in a pier glass
(an heirloom from an aunt or grandmother)
and saw herself
full length
from head to foot
 
she turned her head with winsome grace
and she saw her other face
or rather her coin's alternate
side
in the mirror magnified
 
she gazed upon the face
of an angel
which changed
in eyes mirrors
till many years later
in a star-filled
(one- or maybe four-star) hotel
her eyes to the ceiling directed
found her body reflected
as in a sheet of water
 
she read “rip van winkle”
noticed that she herself had no
winkle
the pier glass came to mind again
she took another look
sharp wordless and then
after in the bath she sought
herself and her identity
drank Kafka with cream
invoked Potter's assistance
climbed up on Pegasus
and winged in this manner
sat down (on her backside)
to compose an auto
biographical novel
“building the tower of bauble”
her patron was kundera
and the thoughts of Haripoter
Chagall's flying cows
she read the daily lama
dipped into ulysses
found her grandfather's roots
became an unmarried mother
but wrote on like no other
 
“Building the Tower of Bauble”
on the way for the heck of it
she scribbled some poems
“rose without thorns”
and “thorn with no rose though it grows”
 
she won prizes
was a huge hit
in magazines you'd find
pictures
of a ravishing
behind
 
she took an interest in noah's ark
 
and wrote on like no other
 
“The Tower of Bauble” has reached the sky
so maybe it's time
to bid it goodbye–she thought–
 
because it'll make a hole in the sky
 
or maybe there's still time
to fill the hole with the kama sutra
Adolf Hitler and the brahmaputra
Stalin and bill clinton's finger
all the stops
must be pulled out!
so she knuckles down and buckles down
writing like no other no other
throws it all into the sack
cloning and genes and infestations
wives' and mothers' obligations
and the intern's vestmentations
a great big bang
tummy upset
porno on the internet
c-section and a quadruplet
 
she writes like no other
writes like no other
all asweat . . .
 
Mutter fleht: Sandra
bitte stell Dich! . . . and my
mama fukuyama . . . doesn't
get a Thing . . .
exit
. . .
 
 
white isn't sad
or happy
just white
 
I keep
telling it
it's white
 
but white doesn't listen
it's blind
deaf
 
it's perfect
and oh so slowly
it becomes
whiter
philosopher's stone
this poem
should be put to sleep
 
before it starts
to philosophize
before it starts
 
to cast about
for compliments
 
summoned to life
in a forgetful moment
 
attuned to words
to glances
it seeks deliverance
from the philosopher's
stone
passerby walk on
don't lift the stone
 
under it a tiny white poem
naked
is turning
to ash
 
[2002–2003]
words
words have been used up
chewed up like gum
by lovely young mouths
have been turned into white
balloons bubbles
 
diminished by politicians
they're used for whitening
teeth
and for the rinsing out
of mouths
 
in my childhood
words could be
applied to a wound
could be given
to the one you loved
 
now
diminished
wrapped in newspaper
they still contaminate still reek
they still hurt
 
hidden in heads
hidden in hearts
hidden under the gowns
of young women
hidden in holy books
they burst out
they kill
 
[2004]
landslide
we've been struck by a landslide
of rocks stones pebbles
 
you could say that the poets
have stoned poetry to death
with words
 
only the stuttering
Demosthenes made good
use of pebbles
turning them
in his mouth
till he bled
he became one of the greatest
orators
in the world
 
PS
I too stumbled on a stone
at the very start of my journey
my old Guardian Angel
the avalanche of angels
brought about
by inspired poets
artists priests
and American
movie directors
is infinitely more foolish
than the one brought about
by Romantic poets
 
the products
of the dream factory
–the “holy wood”–
are sugary white
like the cotton candy
young children
adore
 
my Guardian Angel who
is 83 years old
and remembers all
my misdeeds
flew to me in consternation
and told me he was
being pestered
by salesmen
pedophiles sodomites
from commercial public
and religious TV
to endorse “angel's milk” custard
with little wings
dance hip-hop with seniors
and sell
sanitary napkins with wings
and without
 
they gave him
a gold watch with no time
a depilator a vibrator
a cell phone a garden gnome a paid
trip to Babylon
 
another empty vessel
offered him
the post of Angel of Europe
and guardian angel of the euro
 
my good old Guardian Angel
hid his face in his wing
and wept
“don't cry” I said–
O heavenly angel guardian mine
Stand beside me all the
time! Morning noon and in the night
always keep me in your sight
from all evil keep me far
at this point my Guardian Devil
flew up on the
black wings
sprouting from his heels
 
my Guardian Angel and my Guardian Devil
began to fight
for my little soul
golden thoughts against a black background
since awakening
I've been having black thoughts
 
black thoughts?
 
try perhaps to describe
their form their substance
 
how do you know they're black
 
maybe they're square
or red
or golden
 
that's it!
 
golden thoughts
 
golden flakes in a dead sea
of tired language
 
those from Gogol for instance
“nothing reassures
like history”
or
“humor is no laughing matter”
 
and one other thought
that should be contemplated
by young people
and those “in the prime of life”
 
“it would be a poor world
without old people”
 
PS
there'd be no one to give your
seat to in the streetcar
and what use is life
without good deeds
à la Wyspiański
in dreams I see a crowd
moving toward me
 
in dreams
I see ever more people
talking shouting
 
while in life nothing
rouses me any more
 
in dreams they speak to me
the dead the living
word after word
falls apart
 
flowers push in
through empty eyes
earth pushes in
through sockets
 
I brush off stars with my eyelids
I hear the heart of the bell
crack
 
I hear Wawel rocking to and fro
putting the nation to sleep
such is the master
he wakes
looks about
something should remain
of the things of this world
but what?
 
the angels have departed
 
Tipsy
on sleep on wine
sated with gall
and vinegar
the old poet
strives to remember
which of the things of this world
were supposed to remain
 
poetry and love
or maybe poetry and goodness
he chews the words toothlessly
goodness I think it was goodness
and beauty?
or perhaps compassion?
 
he steps back
to better see Warsaw
 
The other one was beautiful and evil
her “sister” ugly and good
 
such is the master
playing while he spurns
obscuring so as to explain
 
he closes his eyes sees two
nailed feet
 
they fly from the planet
fairy tale
my legs were numb
I woke
from a long
uncomfortable
sleep
 
into a pure world
 
into a light
newly born
into Bethlehem or perhaps
another “lowly” town
 
where no one murdered
children
or cats
or Jews or Palestinians
or water or trees
or air
 
there was no past
and no future
 
I held hands
with mommy and daddy
in other words God
 
and I felt so good
it was as if
I didn't exist
 
[Christmas 2002]
 
 
. . .
 
 
Dostoevsky said
if he had to choose
between Jesus and the truth
he would choose Jesus
 
I'm beginning to understand
Dostoevsky
 
the birth life death
resurrection of Jesus
are a huge scandal
in the universe
 
without Jesus
our little planet
is devoid of consequence
 
this Man
son of God
if he died
 
rises again
each day at dawn
in anyone
who emulates him
 
[2003–2004]
finger to the lips
the mouth of truth
is closed
 
a finger to the lips
tells us
the time has come
 
for silence
 
no one will answer
the question
about what truth is
 
the one who knew
the one who was truth
is gone
the last conversation
instead of answering
my question
you put a finger to your lips
 
said Jerzy
 
does it mean
that you won't
that you can't answer
 
it's my reply
to your question
“what meaning does life possess
if I have to die?”
 
placing a finger on my lips
I answered you in my thoughts
“life possesses meaning only because
we have to die”
 
eternal life
life without end
is existence without meaning
light without shadow
echo without sound
 
 
. . .
 
 
ever since the “little”
pope
smiled at me
the world has been a tad better
 
lord! What was his name
 
Luciano
or Luciani
that's it
Albino Luciani
 
He was like a child
he asked
what had happened
at the Ambrosiano
bank
 
when that little pope
smiled at the world
the “grown-ups”
took offense
 
Children would ask him
if they could call
God
mommy and daddy
he answered
yes
yes you can
God may contain
more of the Mother than the Father
(at which Cardinal B. made a face)
 
Naive as a child
though wise as an owl
he sought to know
the mysteries of banks and accounts
and money laundering
he died of a heart attack
 
they took some papers from his hands
and gave him a book on Emulating
Jesus
he emulated him well
he tried to drive the merchants from the temple
 
he left behind some worn slippers
eyeglasses and a smile
that illuminates
our depths
BOOK: new poems
3.8Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Universal Mirror by Perkins, Gwen
Creation by Greg Chase
Proof of Heaven by Alexander III M.D., Eben
Antarctica by Kim Stanley Robinson
Homing by Stephanie Domet
Phoenix by Elizabeth Richards
Beauty Tempts the Beast by Leslie Dicken
The Twin by Bakker, Gerbrand