Authors: J.D. McClatchy
It is as if, the stench intensified
And strong or weak alike now swept away,
The plague in Athens hurried its descent
By fear, a symptom leaving the stricken loath
To fight for life who had defied the great
Spartan ranks themselves, the sight of skin
Inflamed, the thirst, the dripping anus took
Hold of them until, in tears, they broke.
The dead in piles around them, a hecatomb
To gods who, like those mongrel dogs who crave
A corpse they drag to safety through the mud
To feast upon, had disappeared, their dreams,
According to Thucydides, seethed
With images of forsaken, drowning crews.
She had lost the bet, and in her sunken eyes
The birthday she had over and over prayed
To die before was offered like a present.
(Dressed in a party hat, I sat with both
My parents by the bed.) A toast was made.
Through the pleated, angled straw she took in
A burning mouthful of champagne, and rebuked
Her son-in-law for his expensive joke,
Drawing, hairless, an imaginary comb
Through memories of what pleasure anger gave,
Then smiled, “I’d stop all this if only I could.”
Even at ten I sensed that she had seen,
Staring at me, what would be bequeathed.
My mother slowly closed her eyes. We knew.
Years of sneaking sidelong glances toward the one
At the next urinal’s gaping mouth—
Between classes, between buses, between acts,
In dorm or disco, rest stop or Ritz—
Assemble them now in a sort of line-up:
Bald, one-eyed, red-faced, shifty suspects,
Each generic, all so individual—
Hooded, lumpish, ropy, upcurving,
Anchovy or shark, the three-inch alley cat
Or blood-choked panther whose last droplet,
Back-lit by porcelain, is wagged free to fly
In a bright sterile arc, its reversed
Meniscus shattered by the soon swirling flush.
But that slice-of-life in the Men’s Room
In retrospect seems an idle pantomime,
Old desires or anxieties
Projected onto a stranger’s handful
Of gristle, the shadowy dumb show
Our schoolroom puppets once swooped and wiggled through
Back when any sense of difference
Posed as curiosity’s artless cut-outs.
Only years later was I haunted
By a premonition of something I thought
I didn’t have, or have enough of
—Poor Punch, fingered, limp, flung back into his case.
•
Who knows what early memories are redeemed,
What primitive rites re-enacted,
By our masculine version of mother-love?
What daily unconscious tenderness
Is lavished here, such fastidious grooming
Rituals for the wrinkled baby
Capuchin. Each man’s member every morning
May be gingerly held and jiggled
Inside his Jockey shorts or lazily scratched
Through silk pajamas—in any case,
Fondled,
its crimpled, sweat-sticky, fetid skin
Lifted off the scrotal water-bed
And hand-dried as if in a tumbler of air.
Later, tucked behind the clerk’s apron
Or the financier’s pinstripes or the rapper’s
Baggy jeans, our meek little Clark Kent
Daydreams at his desk of last night’s heroics,
Hounded by a double life blackmailed
By grainy color shots of summer-cabin
Or backseat exploits that had won praise
From their pliant, cooing co-conspirators.
But now, absently readjusted,
As if fresh from cold surf, his ideal is just
The bud of classic statuary.
The marble is hard, the soulful cub withdrawn.
•
So, the old questions linger on unanswered.
Why in the fables on Greek kraters
Do those of the ephebes always stick straight out?
Why is it the last part of a man’s
Body to age? Though function may no longer
Follow form, its chthonic shaft and crown
Retain maturity’s rugged majesty.
What Ovid might once have figured out
As a shepherd who’d struck a king in disguise,
Or Plato have thought in an aside
The haphazard tail of white in the pot where
His abstract egg was hard-boiling into halves
Soon in search of some way to resume the shell
Of an identical privacy,
Scientists today measure as Anyman’s
Lowest common denominator,
A demonic’s tutorial in the means
Of his being manipulated
By unpredictable powers far beyond
His knowing but not his sad sensing.
Do I wish my own rose at will, and stayed put,
And was just, say, two inches longer?
Sure. So who doesn’t think he’s inherited
An apartment too small for his plans?
Do I cancel the party, or gamely shrug?
•
“But why,” Jane asks, “is something silly at best
And objectively ugly at worst
The focus of so much infatuation?”
Cults thrive on cloying contradictions.
Shrewd and aloof, women are thought to enjoy
What it does, the petulant master
They devour, or the wheedling spongy slave
They finally love to rub the wrong way.
And men? Men! Men are known to appreciate
What it stands for. History books have this
In common with off-the-rack pulp romances.
Small men with big ones, big men with small,
Lead lives of quiet compensation, power
Surging up from or meekly mizzling
Down to the trouser snake in their paradise.
If love’s the religion with the god
That fails, is it because blood goes to his head?
No, it’s that after the night’s tom-toms
And fire-dances are over and he’s sulking
In his shrine, sadness beats him hollow.
Asked by nagging reporters once too often
Why, despite the count of body bags,
We were in Vietnam, LBJ unzipped
His fly and slapped it on the table.
“Gentlemen, this is why,” he barked. “This is why.”
Chicago, 1969
Three boots from Great Lakes stumble arm-in-arm
Past the hookers
And winos on South State
To a tat shack. Pissed on mai tais, what harm
Could come from the bright slate
Of flashes on the scratcher’s corridor
Wall, or the swagger of esprit de corps?
Tom, the freckled Hoosier farmboy, speaks up
And shyly points
To a four-inch eagle
High over the Stars and Stripes at sunup.
A stormy upheaval
Inside—a seething felt first in the groin—
Then shoves its stubby subconscious gunpoint
Into the back of his mind. The eagle’s beak
Grips a banner
Waiting for someone’s name.
Tom mumbles that he’d like the space to read
FELIX
, for his small-framed
Latino bunkmate with the quick temper.
Felix hears his name and starts to stammer—
He’s standing there beside Tom—then all three
Nervously laugh
Out loud, and the stencil
Is taped to Tom’s chest. The needle’s low-key
Buzzing fusses until,
Oozing rills of blood like a polygraph’s
Lines, there’s a scene that for years won’t come off.
Across the room, facedown on his own cot,
Stripped to the waist,
Felix wants Jesus Christ
Crucified on his shoulder blade, but not
The heartbroken, thorn-spliced
Redeemer of punk East Harlem jailbait.
He wants light streaming from the wounds, a face
Staring right back at those who’ve betrayed him,
Confident, strong,
With a dark blue crewcut.
Twelve shading needles work around the rim
Of a halo, bloodshot
But lustrous, whose pain is meant to prolong
His sudden resolve to fix what’s been wrong.
(Six months later, a swab in Vietnam,
He won’t have time
To notice what’s been inked
At night onto the sky’s open hand—palms
Crawling with Cong. He blinks.
Bullets slam into him. He tries to climb
A wooden cross that roses now entwine.)
And last, the bookish, acned college grad
From Tucson, Steve,
Who’s downed an extra pint
Of cut-price rye and, misquoting Conrad
On the fate of the mind,
Asks loudly for the whole nine yards, a “sleeve,”
An arm’s-length pattern of motives that weave
And eddy around shoals of muscle or bone.
Back home he’d signed
On for a Navy hitch
Because he’d never seen what he’s since grown
To need, an
ocean
which …
But by now he’s passed out, and left its design
To the old man, whose eyes narrow, then shine.
By dawn, he’s done. By dawn, the others too
Have paid and gone.
Propped on a tabletop,
Steve’s grappling with a hangover’s thumbscrew.
The bandages feel hot.
The old man’s asleep in a chair. Steve yawns
And makes his way back, shielded by clip-ons.
In a week he’ll unwrap himself. His wrist,
A scalloped reef,
Could flick an undertow
Up through the tangled swash of glaucous cyst
And tendon kelp below
A vaccination scallop’s anchored seaweed,
The swelling billow his bicep could heave
For twin dolphins to ride toward his shoulder’s
Coppery cliffs
Until the waves, all flecked
With a glistening spume, climb the collar-
Bone and break on his neck.
When he raises his arm, the tide’s adrift
With his dreams, all his watery what-ifs,
And ebbs back down under the sheet, the past,
The uniform.
His skin now seems colder.
The surface of the world, he thinks, is glass,
And the body’s older,
Beckoning life shines up at us transformed
At times, moonlit, colorfast, waterborne.
Figuring out the body starts with the skin,
Its boundary, its edgy go-between,
The scarred, outspoken witness at its trials,
The monitor of its memories,
Pleasure’s flushed archivist and death’s pale herald.
But skin is general-issue, a blank
Identity card until it’s been filled in
Or covered up, in some way disguised
To set us apart from the beasts, whose aspects
Are given, not chosen, and the gods
Whose repertoire of change—from shower of gold
To carpenter’s son—is limited.
We need above all to distinguish ourselves
From one another, and ornament
Is particularity, elevating
By the latest bit of finery,
Pain, wardrobe, extravagance, or privation
Each above the common human herd.
The panniered skirt, dicky, ruff, and powdered wig,
Beauty mole, Mohawk, or nipple ring,
The pencilled eyebrow above Fortuny pleats,
The homeless addict’s stolen parka,
Facelift, mukluk, ponytail, fez, dirndl, ascot,
The starlet’s lucite stiletto heels,
The billboard model with his briefs at half-mast,
The geisha’s obi, the gigolo’s
Espadrilles, the war widow’s décolletage …
Any arrangement elaborates
A desire to mask that part of the world
One’s body is. Nostalgia no more
Than anarchy laces up the secondhand
Myths we dress our well-fingered goods in.
Better still perhaps to change the body’s shape
With rings to elongate the neck, shoes
To bind the feet, lead plates wrapped to budding breasts,
The sadhu’s penis-weights and plasters,
The oiled, pumped-up torsos at Muscle Beach,
Or corsets cinched so tightly the ribs
Protrude like a smug, rutting pouter pigeon’s.
They serve to remind us we are not
Our own bodies but anagrams of their flesh,
And pain not a feeling but a thought.
But best of all, so say fellow travellers
In the fetish clan, is the tattoo,
Because not merely molded or worn awhile
But exuded from the body’s sense
Of itself, the story of its conjuring
A means defiantly to round on
Death’s insufferably endless emptiness.
If cavemen smeared their bones with ochre,
The color of blood and first symbol of life,
Then peoples ever since—Egyptian
Priestesses, Mayan chieftains, woady Druids,
Scythian nomads and Hebrew slaves,
Praetorian guards and kabuki actors,
Hells Angels, pilgrims, monks, and convicts—
Have marked themselves or been forcibly branded
To signify that they are members
Of a group apart, usually above
But often below the rest of us.
The instruments come effortlessly to hand:
Fish bone, razor blade, bamboo sliver,
Thorn, glass, shell shard, nail, or electric needle.
The canvas is pierced, the lines are drawn,
The colors suffuse a pattern of desire.
The Eskimos pull a charcoaled string
Beneath the skin, and seadogs used to cover
The art with gunpowder and set fire
To it. The explosion drove the colors in.
Teddy boys might use matchtip sulphur
Or caked shoe polish mashed with spit. In Thailand
The indigo was once a gecko.
In mall parlors here, India ink and tabs
Of pigment cut with grain alcohol
Patch together tribal grids, vows, fantasies,
Frescoes, planetary signs, pinups,
Rock idols, bar codes, all the insignia
Of the brave face and the lonely heart.