The
hang glider sails out
over
the concert goers
over
the border
bringing
death
Portrait
of a family
three
smoldering husks
in
a burned-out car
their
heads thrown back mouths open in
a
perpetual scream
No
Munch, no Goya
No
Icarus falling
into
Breughel’s sea
Not
even Pinochet’s
airforce
dropping prisoners
high
over the
Pacific
Skin pealing
from
the backs of
Hiroshima’s
dead
I
can shut my eyes
but
I cannot unsee
the
horrors before me
before
you before us
I
had thought this was behind us
but
I was wrong Men I have met
ordered
the death of Lumumba
calmly
as you order tea
the
spectacle of the bullet
in
Bin Laden’s brain
lacking
only popcorn
in
that theater at
the
White House
So
now a Secret
Service
agent concedes
he
found the second bullet
there
was a second bullet
Oswald
could never
have
acted alone
Kennedy
stares
up
from the gurney
into
a future
he'll
never see we’ll
never
see our
children’s
children
will
suffer unspeakably
The
diplomat leaving the
consulate
carrying
Khashoggi
in a suitcase
parts
is parts
permits
a
negotiation nobody much wants
five
years hence, a deal
somebody
else hopes to stop
hence
the graceful silent
mechanical
birds in the cloudless
air
you cannot breathe
if
you are burning alive
your
flesh curdling crisping
the
smell of your eyebrows
your
hair your hands
Permit
me to kiss you
on
your burned-out lips
I
can’t even tell your gender
it
burns away as with dreams
loves,
memories, unfinished
business
that would still
make
you anxious if only
you
could remember
what
it was to live on this planet
Ron
Silliman
[image credit: Didi Menendez] recently moved to Springfield, Pennsylvania after
28 years on the Main Line. He teaches at Penn. With Alison Fraser, Benjamin
Friedlander and Jeffrey Jullich, he co-edited David Melnick's Nice:
Collected Poems, just published by Nightboat Books.
the
Tuesday poem is curated by rob mclennan