Authors: Tom Sleigh
out at myself through holes in the muzzle,
the ass’s painted on eyes and lips what people saw
when they saw me, Shakespeare’s words booming
back from the head’s suffocating hollows
coming straight from the ass’s mouth, not mine.
I don’t remember how, but it ended in an alcove
above the carport where it softened
on the chicken wire, the paper sagged
and began to flake away, the muzzle and the eye-holes
shriveling into a gray, ulcerous mass—
when we moved from that town it got thrown
into the trash, taken to the dump and burned:
onion eaters, garlic eaters, hard-handed men,
that’s what Bottom and the mechanicals were—
and that’s what I was, what I’ve always been,
riding along on my bike’s fat tires
while that half god half man Theseus
laughs his courteous contempt of us whose
words come out like a tangled chain—which is
why there’s no bottom, why there’s never been
a bottom if you’re just an ass who speaks prose
to the Duke’s verse—an ass who kissed the Queen
of the Shadows and never got over it, my long,
scratchy ears and hairy muzzle pressed
to the ethereal, immortal, almost-not-thereness of her skin.
In those days, so many stairways were said to lead to happiness, mainly of a sexual kind—and as I climbed those stairs, I could hear my name being called from the top, as I so often did back then—and the sight of me bolting up the stairs with my eager, cartoon tongue hanging out wasn’t as sad or silly as it might seem. Naturally, there were the avatars of sex, the ones who claimed to hate it, the others who thought it led to universal harmony—they were out in front of the rest of us, and they believed it, and so did I: but as a friend recently said to me,
Always having to lead the way, be in front of the troops, all those speeches and sermons and truths you’d have to tell: such a burden
. It went on like this, stairway branching into stairway, endless others going up or down to meetings just as I was. And after many years, there we were: to find you, to hold you, led like steps up and down … the sadness and silliness, though just as sad and silly, were somehow more in earnest. Even my doggy-dog instincts, strong as always, understood some reckoning was at hand. The two of us had decided, mutually and irrevocably, to start climbing a stair that we knew was partly ruined, unlit except by the capriciousness of moonlight. But we had a method—and until the day when one or both of us stumbled off into the nothingness below, we committed ourselves to it—when one said,
Left
, we turned left. Which meant, because I have a terrible sense of direction, that I went whichever way you went.
Back in those days, when he told me about his adventures
in sex clubs it wasn’t the whys and wherefores
but technical details, like going rafting
down the Colorado River; and when he wrote
about a gay male friend whose first sexual experience
was with his stepfather, the friend told him
it wasn’t weird, but the best possible thing
that could have happened … I saw then that God,
who I never believed in, was dwelling in my heart
as a negative: that the negative had been developed
into a picture of a man who stares up at the sky
on a day so clear he sees through the mountain’s shadows
to the divinely human-seeming form that climbs it—
a neighbor in running shoes and sunglasses
jogging up the slope with his dog, tongue panting
and slavering, an acute look of happiness in its eyes
that could turn at any moment into exhaustion or pain
as in a maze of cubicles called Asshole Alley, little pyramids
of canvas called Lust of the Pharaohs, different pricing
for what you want, depending on the equipment,
the air thick with a sour, acidic, head-fogging reek
of come. … And my pal the poet, who believed
in infernal chemistry, in the spirit as a kind
of “spooky action at a distance,” he communed
with this God, this eternally dying father of all matter
who made out of our bodies his own maze of cubicles
where he hides himself away—his sanctuary
Asshole Alley where God’s own unholy loves
bubble all around him like a cauldron in his ears—
and my poet pal heard the bubbling, he stirred
the pot, he showed me the holy city, the sexual New Jerusalem
that came prepared as a bride adorned for her husband …
—That was how it was in those days, back when my friend
hadn’t yet met the coroner who wrote down
his cause of death as “polysubstance abuse”
that brought on his heart attack while fucking …
And regardless if I believed, whenever
we were together God shone clearer—
those were the days when every morning God woke up
in a blur of ecstasy and went to bed every night
in divine rage. Whoever loved him,
he loved. Whoever hated him,
he hated back: for who can doubt the vitality
of hate or the volatility of love.
It’s like you’re looking over my shoulder
and saying, as I sway on my third drink at the party
while a woman with pink hair and pierced upper lip
tells me how she did her piercings herself, it’s like
you’re saying,
Hey man, why are you still here
instead of putting a gun to your head like I did?
Your voice is broomstraw, wispy, shattered,
sweeping away the woman’s voice who presses
on a scar dead center on her sternum and says,
This
hurts, I used to have a piercing here
—the light’s so sharp
I can see beneath her silk blouse’s sheer scalloped
edges a tiny patch of skin she rubs more raw, maybe
flirting but maybe not, both of us in our
bodies brushing up against limits that dare
us to go further, but also just doing what people
at parties do, nothing not allowed—and is that why,
my friend, you’ve come back, lonely maybe,
wanting to burst in with advice for what I
should say to her?—but neither of us is really
in this moment of this woman and me talking
but in this moment where your voice comes from rubble
on the mountain framed by the stone arch I’m
looking through, you’re saying, smiling,
Tom, I wanted to go out at the top of my game
,
with good shoes on my feet, you know how much
good shoes and a suit, you know how much
all of that costs?
And as she and I stand talking
right there at the actual Marquis de Sade’s
actual chateau that Pierre Cardin has bought to add
to his collection of four hundred chateaux, all of it
so ridiculously unlikely that I start to see your point,
I say as a way of flirting you’d applaud,
So how’s the old Marquis treating you?
and she, smiling
back at me with her pierced lip says,
Sadistically
.
But now you’re telling me how some aristocrat stood
gazing from the death cart with undistracted eyes
at the sights of Paris, the crowds gathered on the sides
of the streets no longer blocking the view so
for the first/last time he saw the buildings, windows
of houses he’d visited and got drunk in, as I’m
staring now though my stare’s nothing like your condemned
man’s blinking, infinite leisure—
So fuck it
, you said,
that’s how I decided to go out, looking
at it straight, OK?
And then I’m back talking
to her pierced lip while I watch you watch me play the fool
by staring up into the sun in its million
million years of never breaking down—
though just by shutting my eyes I can make the sun fall.
Don’t look behind you
is what I remember telling myself,
scared in the prison opening all around me,
for encircling me were tiers of cells and walkways
in a circle leading up to the skylit dome where a dozen birds
whirled among the Russian prisoners you could visit by paying
a few rubles. They dressed in black uniforms, wore flat black caps
and pushed mops and buckets in front of their black boots,
the slopping water driving a mouse down the corridor,
mops leaving a slick of soap drying on stone floors.
When the doors closed behind me, I could hear
the room I’d been in go silent and the room I was entering
grow louder—and then there weren’t any more prisoners,
no white nights, there was just me and the triage nurse
and my urine sample—black—what have I done wrong
or what has gone wrong and what more is
going wrong before it can’t be helped? And then a Mr. Mohammed,
from Queens, one foot amputated, the other an open wound
wound in bandages, began to shout, despite his diabetes,
Bring me my apple juice! I am a son of Prince Abdullah!
And the nurse brought him a little juice box
but asked him about sugar, should he be drinking sugar,
and he told her apple juice was fine, it was orange juice
that was bad as she quieted him down
by patting his arm—but then he started shouting,
Ice! Ice!
—
what kind of hospital is this that you don’t give us ice?
And so she brought him ice and quieted him
down by patting his arm, until he asked her in a voice
that already knew the answer,
Do you think my foot
stinks? Tell me what you smell
. But despite the smell,
and despite the old man groaning in the bed next
to mine, his smashed hip still unnumbed by morphine, Dilaudid,
even OxyContin, while his daughter keeps pleading
with him, saying, so gently, for what seems like hours,
Dad
,
please, you have to keep covered up
—despite the metronomic
drip of the IV in my arm, the contrapuntal
beep of the heart monitors, my panic
begs me to let it go—I’m not going to die, am I? No, not
this time, maybe another, my mind skittering off
into crevices and corners to sniff out
some crumbs left by one of the prisoners who so tames me
that I creep into his hand to eat out of his palm—and when
I finally do die, he’ll put me in a cigarette pack and lay me
under the cross in the exercise yard in the insomniac white nights,
while over the wall, littering the parking lot, lie hundreds of messages
the prisoners write on paper scraps they fold into darts
and through toilet paper rolls joined painstakingly
together into long blowguns, blow out
through the barred windows to be picked up by
what must be mothers, sisters, girlfriends since all of them
are women unfolding and reading and putting
the messages in their purses, ready to send them on
to the address written inside, until they get tired
of reading and leave the rest unread, glinting
under arc lights, each crisp fold relaxing in the summer air.
Just as in the movie about Hitler’s brain, in which Hitler
has himself decapitated and his head placed, still living,
in what looks like a fish tank, so that after
Germany’s defeat he can rise again
with the special G gas and rule the world
from South America,
and just as the the dread of watching Hitler’s skin,
clearly made of wax, begin to melt off the skull
as the movie ends and the credits roll
and flames shoot up around his head
so that everything that should have remained
secret, hidden, has become visible,
and just as Bill Freed, the actor who played Hitler,
never acted again, his dialogue consisting
of yelling,
Mach schnell! Mach schnell!
while his flesh and moustache burn,
yes, just as the name “Station Zed” in the actual camp
of Sachsenhausen a few miles beyond Berlin,
on a casual Sunday in hot July,
turns out to be an
SS
joke—you came in at Gate A
and went out by Station Zed—so the tape hiss
of the survivor’s German, digitized down
but not erased to give that feel of
This
is real
, then overlaid by the translator’s English
that becomes garbled background to the camp walls,
so that hiss turns into an echo, an echo
of an echo in the voice telling
how “Iron Gustav plunged among us
to beat us with a pipe, his slaver flying in our faces,
his hunched-over body and dark complexion
nothing like an Aryan’s,” so all these
echoes and counter-echoes drifting
and unraveling under birch and poplar trees
in the nowhere breeze in the shady cemetery
slowly entangle and blur
into the
caw caw caw caw
that rises up where clouds in Technicolor light
turn to an ancient parchment scroll, some mystical notation
summoning pure evil, though really just voices
you didn’t expect to hear, your mother’s voice
calling, calling you back home, or the dead lover
you abandoned and haven’t thought about in years,
your own brain’s canned footage,
their faces like notes that eddy and flow,
whispers and murmurings of fear and dread …
and then strings playing so softly the notes barely graze your ears