Saturday, November 8, 2014

Inordinately Fond


The air is fresh; tonight the wind will bring
Solace to the sweaty, even here,
Where sun has burned the hillside and the dogs
Eat the rotting remnants of a deer.

For our last intercession did the trick
And Power deigns to grant us this reprieve:
Shall we now stay and cultivate the soil
Or be the first to grab our hats and leave?

Angora is the softness of her bosom,
Dynamite the power of her mind;
How could I leave her when her faith’s forgotten
The innocence not even fear can find?

We’ll stay then, wrap ourselves in satin robes
As befits a naughty monk or friar
Dissembling in the tragedy, who hopes
To grant forgiveness in the face of fire.

We love this circus and its painted lies,
The bear who laughs, the antelope who frowns,
The ringmaster inviting us to share
His stricken smile, donated by the clowns.

We miss the imperfections in the home
Which others see and titillate their ardour;
But we are not designers: curse the gate
And keepers who exhort us to try harder.

We visited the land of songs and verse
And love and sex and jolly good boating weather,
And for this swift and hedonistic crime
Were shown the door and legged it hell for leather.

We only ask to live where we are known
Biblically, as Amos, Ruth and Paul;
And to Damascus, then, on route to which
The prophet said, when he was known as Saul:

Christ is risen.  Hallejulah, boys!
And, like a liegeman, venerate your Lord!
Let him seduce us, for his silver tongue
Is not as sharp or mighty as the sword.

And, like a liegeman, love the soil we own
For it will soon be subject to the bond
Which fastens us to service of that lord
Of whom we are inordinately fond.

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