Authors: Frederick Seidel
And carnivorous and fast and keeps going.
Sri Lanka, southern India, Myanmar
(Where Ne Win, the senile military dictator who has tried to ruin
Rangoon and everywhere else and everyone, still keeps the daughter
Of the great patriot democrat of the country
Under house arrest, but one day that will end).
For nine months she travels, pregnant.
On the day she turns into a tree,
She gives birth to a boy.
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A man is masturbating his heart out,
Swinging in the hammock of the Internet.
He rocks back and forth, his cursor points
And selects. He swings between repetitive extremes
Among the come-ons in the chat rooms.
But finally he clicks on one
World Wide Web woman who cares.
Each of her virtual hairs
Brings him to his knees.
Each of her breasts
Projects like a sneeze.
He hears her dawning toward him as he reads her dimensions,
Waves sailing the seas of cyberspaceâ
Information, zeros-and-ones, whitecaps of.
Caught in a tangle of Internet,
Swinging in the mesh to sleep,
Rocking himself awake, sailing the virtual seas,
A man travels through space to someone inside
An active-matrix screen. Snow falls.
A field of wildflowers blooms. Night falls.
Day resumes.
This is the story about humans taking over
The country. New York is outside
His study while he works. Paris is outside.
Outside the window is Bologna.
He logs on. He gets up.
He sits down. A car alarm goes off
Yoi yoi yoi yoi and yips as it suddenly stops.
Man has the takeover impact
Of an asteroidâthrowing up debris, blotting out the sunâ
Causing the sudden mass extinction
Of the small bookstore
At the millennium. The blood from the blast cakes
And forms the planet's new crust:
A hacker in Kinshasa getting it on with one in Nome.
Their poems start
With the part about masturbating the heartâ
Saber cuts whacking a heart into tartareâ
Heart art worldwide,
Meaning that even in the Far East the subject is love.
Here in the eastern United States,
A man is masturbating his art out.
An Ice Age that acts hot
Only because of the greenhouse effect
Is the sort of personality.
Beneath the dome of depleted ozone, they stay cold.
Mastodons are mating on the Internet
Over the bones of dinosaur nuclear arms,
Mating with their hands.
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A dog named Spinach died today.
In her arms he died away.
Injected with what killed him.
Love is a cup that spilled him.
Spilled all the Spin that filled him.
Sunlight sealed and sent.
Received and spent.
Smiled and went.
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I see a first baseman's mitt identical to mine
On the right hand of the best who ever lived.
The dark deep claw of leather
Called a trapper hungrily flaps shut and open
While Stan Musial stands there glowing and magnified
In Sportsman's Park on the red dirt behind the bag,
A crab whose right claw is huge,
Costumed legs apart and knees slightly bent,
Springy on spikes, a grown man on springs,
Source of light with wings
(And when he is at bat, one of the beautiful swings).
The pitcher goes into the windup and rears back with desire.
Stan the Man pounds our glove
Broken in with neat's-foot oil.
We get a runner caught in a rundown between first and second.
I can't get the ball back out of the pocket
To throw to the pitcher covering second in time.
Then fifty years pass.
Nothing is next.
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The beauty of the boy had twisted
Into a shape brain damage has.
Into the room walked a twenty-year-old
Helix with a head
Lopsidedly.
The radiant
Grimness of the Shostakovich
Fifteenth Quartet, the last,
Most austere, most beautiful solemn terror,
The most music one repeated note can make, put out green leaves.
The twentieth century was drawing
To a close with a foal caught in amber smiling
At his mother.
Whose infinite eyes as he limped
In the room smiled.
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A gerbil running on an exercise wheel whirs away the hours
To eternity by reciting the
Iliad
.
Just a gentle gerbil under Joseph Stalin, the eagle Osip Mandelstam.
Biting the arctic stars, black sky,
Spruce trees line his lower jaw.
Stalin flutters like a moth against his hot light.
Lightning flutters against the hot night.
St. Petersburg and Moscow are having sexual intercourse
In a slaughterhouse,
And will produce many sons.
But in the meantime there are the mixed moans.
The cockroach telephones Boris Pasternak from the Kremlin to croon
His fellow poet will be all rightâbut adds, “You don't really say
Much to save your friend,” and hangs up.
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The United Nations is listening
Via simultaneous translation to the poet Mandelstam.
Tier after tier of the Tower of Babel tribunal being
Breast-fed by their headsets hear his starry eyes,
Marbles of melody and terror.
PowerBooks, powder of the rhinoceros horn, delegates
In every kind of suit and sari and sarong and dream
Men and women around the round world wear, rip
The ribbon from a box of chocolates
And find inside his wife and him,
And hear him begging Nadezhda not to leave the box.
A United Nations of all the languages is going
Through the air, a motorcycle going fast
Into the Nevada desert,
The joy of the original
Into a beautiful emptiness.
Through the double-parked side streets of New York
Into a tunnel, under a river,
The joy of the original goes
Into a tile hole
Which amplifies the sound.
The leading edge of the wing is your face
That comes to earth to me.
I watch you wait.
A twentieth-century
Power outage brings the darkness back
In the vicinity of Jesus Christ, a Caucasian male.
I want the General Assembly to know
How China greets the day.
They don't like blonds and they don't like blacks.
The smell won't go away.
The smell of sperm on the edge of the axe.
Among them Mandelstam, among the millions.
Into the aurora borealis cathedral he walks, filling the choir.
He and the other children weave
A rose window with the face of Shakespeare as the rose.
The tale he tells is made of Northern Lights.
Hairs of titanium are the bridge cables, of spun glass.
Horror has been hammered
Into white gold and gold gold,
Benumbed. Stalin has become sweet butter and salt
On an ear of summer butter-and-sugar corn.
The phonograph record pinned
Under the needle reaches the scratch.
Don't stop
thump
don't stop
thump
don't stop.
Snow is falling.
A candle burns.
I watch you waiting for me to wake.
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The perfect body of the yoga teacher
Stains a timeless pose.
Her perfect tan
Is an untouchable.
The beauty of her body
Is a storm
About to hit.
The monsoon air is rank and sweet.
Lightning storms a room
Which thunder overpowers
With stun grenades
That blind and deafen.
Her skin contains the storm
Inside the pose.
Rain squalls wash
The sidewalks raw.
The bombing run unleashes
Mushrooms on a path.
The Stealth flies unseen
Inside out.
High above the homeless,
Back and forth,
Job walks inside out
Weeping storms.
The widow throws her body
On her husband's pyre.
The pose is pain
About to fall in floods.
The goal is grain
Enough to feed the world.
Bodies floating down the Ganges
Do the pose but while they do
The king is entering the field.
The queen is entering a grove.
The king is singing to the troops.
The storm is starting.
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My tiny Pitts
Fifteen and a half feet long
Brightly painted so it can be seen easily
By the aerobatics judges on the ground
Is a star.
The invisible biplane
Parked on display in my living room
With an inferior roll rate cheerily
Outperforms the more powerful Sukhoi's
Loops and spins.
G's of the imagination fasten
My five-point harness
To the star upside down
The sky is my living room
A chuck behind each wheel.
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Suddenly I had to eat
A slowly writhing worm
A woman warmed on a flat stone in a jungle clearing
Or starve. I had to charm a Nazi waving a Lüger
Who could help me escape from a jungle river port town or die.
I had to survive not being allowed to sit down,
For ten hours, in a Mexico City
Jail, accused of manslaughter because
My cab driver in the early morning rush hour
Had killed a pedestrian and jumped out and run.
The prostitute even younger than I was that
I had spent the night with had been
So shy I had gone home with her to meet her parents
When she asked. In the Waikiki Club
Where she worked, I'd faced her machete-faced pimp wielding a knife.
At the Mayan Temple of the Moon, “that” instead of “whom,”
Which the explorer Richard Halliburton
Has written everyone must climb on a night of the full moon
At midnight who wants to say he or she has lived,
The guard dog woke the guard up.
I heard the lyrical barking from the top.
I saw the wink of the rifle barrel far below in the moonlight and hit
The deck like a commando on the ramp along the outside of the pyramid to hide.
When at last I looked up Orson Welles stood there, doe-eyed sombrero silence
Expecting a bribe. I walked with him all innocence down the ramp.
I walked past him out the gate and he fired.
I felt invulnerable, without feelings, without pores.
A week after I got back home to St. Louis I fainted
At the wheel of a car just after I had dropped off a friend,
And for four months in the hospital with a tropical disease I nearly died.
Suddenly in the jungle there was an American professor named Bud Bivins
Who had fled from Texas to avoid the coming nuclear war.
The Nazi found passage for us both on a tramp steamer which ran
Into a violent storm in the Gulf not long after Bivins had gone mad
And taken to pacing the deck all night after the cook had demanded
On the captain's behalf that we pay him more, on top of what
We'd already paid, or swim, with his butcher knife pointing to a thin line
Of green at the horizon, the distant jungle shore.
The captain would be delighted to let us off immediately if we wished.
No one saw Bivins when we reached port.
In the middle of the night a huge wave hit
The rotten boatload of tarantulas and bananas, slam-dunking us under.
The cook and all the others, including our captain,
Kneeled at the rail holding on, loudly praying, so who was at the wheel?
Bivins was last spied on the deck. I was sixteen.
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Nothing is pure at 36,000 feet either.
Even in First, there is only more.
The wing is streaked
By the jet engine's exhaust. Sometimes
I stand outside a toilet
Which is occupied, staring out
A window somewhere over Malaysia at dawn.
I am the wing,
The thing that should be lift,
Soiled by power.
Make no mistake about the heat.
It also has to eat.
It eats the fuel it's fed.
It eats the air.
It eats the hair.
It eats what's there.
The jungle devours me with its eyes which are
Screamed skyscrapers of plasm.
I said dismal. I meant passion.
The sky unfreezes me alive.
There is heaven the mainland. And there is heaven the island.
There is the warm water of heaven between.
The minister of defense bull's-eyes on the helicopter pad
With security all around wearing a curly wire into one ear.
Code-named Big Fish, he likes Eau Sauvage
To be there ahead of him wherever he goes.
There is heaven the novel, and heaven the movie.
Below you is the sky at 35,000 feet.
Above you is the muezzin until it ends.
I have the lift, but think I ought to land.
The blank eye of the sky muezzins the faithless to rise
And face the heat
And urinate and defecate and eat and act
Another day.
I wish I knew your name.
Powerful forces have built a road
Through the jungle. Muslim apparently
Women fully clothed are apparently allowed to expose in the lucky
Warm water with their brown kids sporting like putti flying fish.
Quiet on the set, please, thank you. The actors are rehearsing.