A poem for the 21st century: Visions of the Empire
By Jon Rappoport
I've been writing and editing a 6000-word poem, VISIONS OF
THE EMPIRE, for the past ten years. Here I present the first section. I
may post other excerpts.
Poetry in the grand tradition of, say, Walt Whitman may seem
to be dead---and who cares about poetry anyway? But poems are life blood
on the page. They have the potential to awaken the sleeping mind and
spirit.
I cast this one out like a wind across the landscape, with
full knowledge that reading anything, much less poetry, is a dying art
in many quarters. Frankly, that doesn't stop me. I know, from 17 years
of writing at nomorefakenews, that there are untold numbers of people
who can still read and want to read. My articles have found them.
Going against the grain doesn't bother me. It motivates me.
Every day. The seemingly absurd proposition that a poem can have a
life-bearing effect---I hold that view and always will.
The unbound, wide-ranging, free and electric spirit within us
is THERE. We can step on it and bury it and forget it, but it doesn't
die. With that knowledge, and without apprehension, I freely give you
this. Do with it what you will. As with everything else I write, I stand
on the words.
VISIONS OF THE EMPIRE, Part One:
This poem is not a warning
This is poem is not an alert
This poem is not a shopping cart in a supermarket
This poem is not my uncle talking about America with a cigar in his mouth
This poem is not about the H-bomb
This poem is not my grandmother speaking Russian in the Bronx a hundred years ago
This poem is not a microwave
This poem is not
This poem is not a robot car on the highway
This poem is not a power outage
This poem is not
This poem is not a peace treaty
This poem is not a shadow across your eyes
This poem is not Karl Marx or Mussolini
This poem is not a molecule invented in a laboratory
This poem is not a political philosophy manufactured in a secret bank
This poem is not a machine
This poem is not a system
This poem is not asking for an answer
This poem is not people dying in hospitals even though people are dying in hospitals
This poem is not bread or the fountain of youth
This poem is not a doctor
This poem is not a professor on a pension
This poem is not a union
This poem is not a dollar
This poem is not a major or a colonel
This poem is America and not-America
The dream America
After money was sold down the river and resurrected on a cross of blood
After a cash-loaded God strolled into town
After the Universal Hospital drugged synapses and drove the wild horses of imagination down into underground canyons
and sculpted androids stepped out in the aftermath buying back their own memories
geologic wraiths spiraled up inside television sets---
their only ambition to stunt prayers for deliverance and kill raw desire---
we watched wildcats of Texas dripping sweat into their high
hats pull black blood out of the ground and send it through tubes of
night to porcupine refineries on the shores of the Body of Christ
apostles were resurrected in knife-cutter fins of long
Cadillacs running hot across the Kansas plains with blondes in the back
seat drinking
New horizontal towns were multiplying on Long Island, stage
flats of perfect geometry coddled in the breasts of hopeful mothers
asking for redemption from pill-addled afternoons and hallucinatory
music cooking in shining ovens
monthly budgets laid out neatly on Formica counters below the knives
distant farm fields dead in the snow
blank-eyed children walking in the snow
cultivating nightmares they would one day visit on Reality
I flew over those fields and heard the crackerbox houses rot and rust as nothing ever rotted before
We tamed the wolf and the copperhead
we broke a pond of ice and sent Promethean serpents to force a
tunnel all the way down to the volcanic hats of ancient Chinese poets
We tracked mobs and gangs and politicians and drowned them in thunderous secret rivers under the Southwest deserts
we launched charges against the bosses and carried our
prosecutions into courtrooms of fish eye and coral and waving undersea
weeds and dragged paid-off judges from their galleon-wrecked thrones
We stood in the blinding sunlight reflected from low slung
whitewashed buildings of Pasadena and El Segundo and Long Beach and felt
the roar of departing space rockets cutting tunnels through the future
and pulling back the future with giant magnets of illuminated dust
We walked through measureless windows of wheat and corn
growing in the middle flatlands under the warm rain of supernatural
mansions
We draped curtains of night in the upper hills of Los Angeles
where the mountain lion and the coyote and the melted mythical Greek
beast roamed like vagabonds free of the Wheel
Under poles of yellow lights, gasping midnight locomotives clamped on to lines of freight cars in the backyards of Chicago
Plastic lilies grew in the pastures of St. Louis haberdashers and department stores
In White Plains we carved a diamond on cracked asphalt and
climbed a decaying elm and walked along the iron railing of the fence
holding rotting branches and threw marbles down on to Davis Avenue and
watched them bounce into the muddy stream of World War Two newspapers
and swollen milk cartons and broken whiskey bottles and torn black
jackets of old soldiers who had died in snow drifts over the winter and
mysteriously disappeared
I ran under trees filled with light green inchworms hanging from long threads until I was invisible
and glimpsed smiling robots sitting in cafes in the next platinum century
In Los Angeles, concrete sunset of three stacked freeways, a
carpet of park in Beverly Hills, old poolroom on Broadway downtown, bus
to San Francisco, a bum holding out his hand and saying On Venus Jesus
will show you machines of love
I saw politicians jumping out of floating windows
their briefcases cracking open
spilling secrets like lazy snowflakes
dazzling in the sun
trillion dollar thefts
naked amazons stashed in condos and yachts
banks sucking money from the vacuum of the heavens
dead agents
in a rock pasture outside Des Moines hitchhiking to New York
glimpses of prehistoric time
before the beginning before the beginning of sacred
money before the first idols were built, before sacrifice was thought
of, sly prophets were trying on robes and combing out their long hair
and rehearsing their future executions
Standing up on a hill past Albuquerque on 66, I caught a ride
into a no-name Arizona town, walked in the foggy morning along an empty
road to a pine-filled snow-filled cliff and stared out at a spring
valley a thousand feet below
In blinding rain I stood on the Indiana Turnpike outside
Chicago pointed east and wound up in the Pennsylvania countryside
driving the car of a half-crippled man with a Bible I met in a Howard
Johnson
our headlights went dead on a curve and a cop pulled in behind us and stopped us
he led us to a fat judge's house in the middle of the night where we paid thirty bucks
then parked on a quiet lane and slept until dawn
early spring in March
flowering magnolia trees
he dropped two Thorazine and told me to drive
and his babbling about Heaven slowed down and he slept
and when we pulled into Manhattan he had me park in midtown
he looked at me with glazed doe's eyes and said
son, I've reached the end of the line, this is it, within a month I'll kill myself
I walked along the astral cloisters of Wall Street among
crowds lapping at honey loopholes in a web of proprietary secrets and I
flew through steel walls into the psychotic fandango of the
international electronic invented money Surge
I recorded architects laying out blueprints for the perfect
human in bunkers of Virginia where silent factories printed minds whose
memories could be selectively erased
technicians built new bodies from tendons and ligaments of
cougars and predatory owls and membranes from soldier ants and feral
dogs
I walked through fields of cactus east of Tijuana
into caverns of mass graves where sacrificed Aztec skeletons still stank in pulsing blood rhymes of a toothless hobo Ziggurat
I sat in the courtroom where the two-hundred-year trial of
America labored like a wounded beast, witness after witness screaming
accusations at captains of production and dark iron-masked prosecutors
hammered their fists on tables and smooth Rockefeller men sat in the
witness box and advocated drugging the population
One Sunday night I walked out of a small bookstore on 3rd
Avenue and a drunken Ben Franklin, wearing his waistcoat and slippers,
his spectacles halfway down his crooked nose, pulled me over to the
doorway of a paint store, and whispered:
"I should prefer, to an ordinary death, being immersed
with a few friends in a cask of Madeira, until that time,
then to be recalled to life by the solar warmth of my
dear country!"
he patted me on the cheek and grinned
What about the weathered Declaration on which you staked your honor, your future, your fortune, your life, I ask him
His face turns sour
Oh that, he says
They sold it for a war, and it fetched a handsome price
They sold it for a bank, and rated it a fair exchange
They sold it for a choking nightmare called the greater good, and it drained their living blood
They sold it for a legend of heaven under a burning copper sky and it vaporized in the whirlwind
Fifty million video cameras record the washed out moment-to- moment ballet in streets and offices
people stop for a moment in a bulging tableau
light peers in through immobile troughs of fury
complaints are frozen
all the children of America with their endless needs are frozen
We slashed our way through faded blue Virginia mountain ranges ruled by subhuman priests
lizards crawled through the sunlight between leaves on rumbling paragon trees spreading out their knuckles above ground
Through dream gardens of the starlit Sagittarius, coral horses, amber-fed lichen
we walked the Colorado Cherokee Trail glittering with bodies frozen in the silver fog
We flew over steaming cities and freezing cities and came to
the Asia plain of tropical magic where the walls of enduring space were
cracked and broken and the false curtain of the sky lay at half-mast
torn and stained
Here the empire had shriveled and small mobs wandered under saturated space broken off from the Maypole of trance
We still hear a voice of freedom
in the
aether
now freedom barks like a dog
it weeps over stones
it demands cash
it lies in the mud and croaks
flees a burning church...
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