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Recuts from "american poetry (free and how) [Koja Press, 2001, NY] (In the following poems I manipulated language of various classic literal works, or their translations, to create poems of my own.) Sign of the Beast (Dante, Inferno, Cantos 1, Henry F. Cary translation) For Wiliam James Austin As a savage who wanders out of a gloomy wood, the valley of the dead behind my shoulders, I found me: (no easy task) a man with a speckled skin chasing the sweet season of a she-wolf, my every vein weeping with delight midway between a robust growth and pitiful past. A cause and a source had filled me with purpose: I must lead thee to see the beast that invokes hope. Onward we move Natural Man (William Shakespeare, The Comedy of Errors, Act 5) sorry I hinder'd you, a chain dishonesty doth it this week hath been heavy, man: buried a friend this afternoon. extremity of rage had his eye stray'd. I gained my freedom, so help me heaven. a living dead, not rough enough in private. his urging head jealous, sweet recreation moody and dull. life-preserving rest disturbed his sickness. decipher this: these conduits are the parents of my blood, a mere anatomy of my gnawing fortune. the copy of our conference fed clamours of his sleeps, therefore comes his meat upbraidings fit of madness, done wrong: we came into the world and now let's go! his fury had committed: we shall make a full satisfaction of the present hour against the laws and statutes of this town hark, hark, brother scorch your face does thou know my voice? God speaks to me, so I grant you fear of death and shut doors of imagination the raging fire of fever bred his venom more deadly than a mad dog's tooth. a needy hollow-eyed wretch bound by grim justice, beheaded by Time's deformed hand. my grained face will drizzle your memories and draw cuts into the world sorry I hinder'd you, brother. come, stand by me, fear nothing. our sour age deceives a natural man The Better Part </b> (John Milton’s Paradise Lost: Book I) 1 Sing, Muse of Chaos! restore us from loss, illumine what is low. In the beginning the chosen seed pour'd from your frozen loins to become your barbarous sons who blotted out among the powers of Eve, came like a deluge on the South, and spread to transform the image of a brute, adorn'd with gay religions full of pomp and gold, by falsities and lies. First, Moloch, a horrid kid, besmear'd his parents' tears— for the noise of drums (his lustful orgies costed plenty) till a good scandal drove them to Egypt of inglorious neighbourhoods. "O Mr of P.O.s, Mrs with M.A.! that strife was dire, as this place and this dire change testifies, but what power of mind, could have predict’d such loss? And who could believe, that all these YPs, whose exile hath emptied the cities, shall fail to re-pulse? and repossess their native LA and such? Wav'd round the coast, a pitchy cloud of locusts is looking for a trendy spot in the sun impious like night, and so numberless a multitude like which the populous North never seen. Surrounding fires darken all the land of Nile. 2 Hey, Muse of Chaos! Come singly where you stood on the bare strand, while the promiscuous crowd display’d its shapes and forms, be witness for me of Moloch homicide, of those male and feminine spirits that can either assume godlike sex or approve of the bestial love, or both; dilated cumbrous-like flesh can please when they so soft but, in shape can execute their aery purposes, and works of love, and his lowly down though large, of despicable crescent spears nightly by the moon virgins paid on th' offensive mountain, while smooth like heat all a summer's day ran from his purple with blood of Infected daughters 3 led by the vision, Ezekiel saw the dark idolatries, his eye displaced In his own temple, turning inward. Next came alienated Judah who mourn'd in earnest and lopp'd off his sea monster, yet his temple dreaded a downward fish. Him follow'd Rimmon, whose delightful seat was like the fertile banks of Abbana and Pharphar; and Ahaz, his sottish conqueror, bold with odious off'rings. After these, appear'd a crew under names of Osiris, Isis, Orus, with monstrous shapes and abus'd; the least erected led them on. Their wand'ring brutish forms did not escape th' infection when they doubl'd sin with the Calf in Oreb, equalling his Maker with a matron. Belial came last, with lust and violence more lewd then love at the altars, and worse than rape. 4 Behold, Muse witness the streets of Sodom, injury and outrage in luxurious cities, where the noise of riots ascends above their loftiest tow'rs, and when night darkens the streets, then wander forth the sons of Belial, flown with insolence and wine, hurling defiance toward the vault of heav'n. High above them, a face of deep scars, a dove-like sadist with ever-burning ego discerns hideous urges and courage to discover what else is not to be overcom’d to provoke our better part. For the Present (Homer, The Iliad, Book 1, Samuel Butler’s translation) 1 The memo said, "outwit shall not overreach up your bidding? rue my coming. persuade me. find me a hereafter in fair exchange to my liking, or I will come and take, your own whomsoever " 2 and he to I may come shall let us draw the sea into a ship But of thought this we take will let us have a hecatomb on board and let us send ____ let some be in us command man chief among , either, or , mighty that or yourself, and appease warrior you are, that we may offer the the anger ; for the present, , and find her expressly; , scowled steeped at him and , "You are in insolence and lust of gain. With what can any bidding foray in your open heart? I came answered 3 not fighting ills me. me and them there is a great between 4 space - Sound Insolence! We have followed you, for your pleasure, from gain - not ours - to your shameless satisfaction I have toiled this rob for self, to forget the given to threaten the have and for You Never when me which , for and which of . sons of T.R. sack any rich prize my hands do better MY CITY, I DO 5 receive your share so good as you do, When the sharing comes, back to my done my labour, my sharing though it is of the part I, the largest and forsooth, I can get and be therefore, go back gather gold substance_____ MUCH BETTER Now, Fly if you will (thankful is done. "no prayers will do me honour I will not stay" 6 DISHONOURED SHALL COUNSEL OTHERS and stay above all her tent is another fear TAKE YOUR OWN PRIZE care for your anger it will be me . . . for you." the affected answer, a divided heart Go home as you are hateful ever quarrelsome I care neither for you nor my ship; comrades are game " There is no king here, Was it not ill heaven that made you brave? Fever of Babylon (William Blake, The Second Book of Milton) they said: pretend to poetry: a false body of Visionary Life renderd Deadly O Daughter of Babylon When I first Married you, I gave you my whole soul I thought that you would love my loves & joy in my delights Seeking for pleasures in my pleasures O Daughter of Babylon Then thou wast lovely, mild & gentle. now thou art terrible In jealousy & unlovely in my sight, because thou hast cruelly Cut off my love in fury & I have no love left for thee She relents in fear of death: She shall begin to give Her maidens to her husband: delighting in his delight And then & then alone begins the happy Female joy As it is done in thou Babylon. I write down these Visions to cast from Poetry all that's not Inspiration to despise a self-devouring monstrous human Death & to go on & go on She bursts her crimson: Men are sick! I have turned my back upon these Heavens builded on cruelty In which Man liveth! O sweet Female forms— dwell on! float in the air! spread your magnificent shine over the whole Earth with songs of amorous delight in a spontaneous dreadful heart! Her little throat labors with inspiration: thrill, thrill, thrill into the great expanse! O Virgin Mother of Whoredoms! awake from the Slumber of Six Thousand Years! bring Jerusalem in the arms of the night watches; and give in the streets to display Nature's cruel holiness! The Lamb falls! Madness & blasphemy are triumphant over Death! I come to discover The Idol Virtues of the Natural Heart! They stood in a dark land of fiery corroding waters, pale and cold, upon the Rock of Ages[:] lured by the Shadow Mother Spinning the Egg form'd World from her bowels Daughters of trembling Sons of fear collecting distinct fibres of the Selfhood into impregnable strength of the utterd word, fixd into a frozen bulk of a subject Beyond the outline of Identity, I seek answer Beacon One (Percy Bysshe Shelley, "Adonais") 1 Thaw the frost which binds such dear minds! awake from the trance of sad empty years Rise, my obscure compeers, on the fringe of a ruined Paradise don’t mourn all the fading melodies mocking a true melancholy to satiate the circumference of desolation and their appointed inheritors of unfulfilled renown transformed into a marble dust: a sustained feed of consigned fragments attracts to crush to pierce their guarded wit 2 My bark is driven past the revolving year before we blow it in the coming bulk of our refulgent prime before we learn the art of speaking the fitting truth before corruption eats our bones and darkness descends over our minds Rise, my obscure compeers, say: with me the Future dares! 3 they say: "we made it with nature just follow the green" another flush through the pale limbs, another stain of moonlight vapour fragrant corpses lead the city to a a hoary slope of Desolation One plastic stress sweeps through the dull dense world access the bones—access the Paradise, access the shatter'd wilderness Break this dome of multi-gray stains, transfuse the white radiance of fragments! from kindling brain to brain repelling sustaining cold to Burn through the web of being a man and a beast Far from the shore, sphered skies are burning through the Beacons.</i> …………. …………. 1997-2001 |
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