The poet-perpetrator’s place
Is now nothing if not disowned.
This is an age that craves the good
If not the actually martyred,
The poems that suggest their poets
Should prove admirable, at least
To a fair-sized tranche of readers
Whose concerns, for themselves, seem fair.
Was it ever any different?
Maybe not. The morals may change
But morality is stubborn.
Even tricksters get makeovers
To show their tricks all to the good
In the long run. In the long run,
Keynes famously cracked, we’re all dead,
Immortal tricksters, too, we’d guess.
But we’re not looking for the sly,
Here, nor the righteously martyred,
Heroic, noble heretics.
Where’s the poet-perpetrator
Who can do something really wrong—
Doesn’t have to be violent,
Better if it wasn’t. Doesn’t
Have to defy a faith or be
A crime of any kind. No tricks.
Just these lines you read one morning
That you resist, that you don’t like,
That make you squint at the ocean,
The waves so calm they’re unsettling.
You can sense something isn’t right.
Thursday, September 16, 2021
Too Late
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