January 30, 2008
WEDNESDAY POEM
My Message
Cecil Rajendra
And now you ask
what is my message
I say with Nabokov
I am a poet
not a postman
I have no message.
but I want the cadences
of my verse to crack
the carapace of indifference
prise open torpid eyelids
thick-coated with silver.
I want syllables
that will dance, pirouette
in the fantasies of nymphets
I want vowels that float
into the dreams of old men.
I want my consonants
to project kaleidoscopic visions
on the screens of the blind
& on the eardrums of the deaf
I want pentameters that sing
like ten thousand mandolins.
I want such rhythms
as will shake pine
angsana, oak & meranti,
out of their pacific
slumber, uproot them-
selves, hurdle over
buzz-saw & bull-dozer
and rush to crush
with long heavy toes
merchants of defoliants.
I want every punctuation --
full-stop, comma & semi-colon
to turn into a grain of barley,
millet, maize, wheat or rice
in the mouths of our hungry;
I want each & every metaphor
to metamorphose into a rooftop
over the heads of our homeless.
I want the assonances
of my songs to put smiles
on the faces of the sick,
the destitute & the lonely,
pump adrenaline into the veins
of every farmer & worker
the battle-scarred & the weary.
and yes, yes, I want my poems
to leap out from the page
rip off the covers of my books
and march forthrightly to
that sea of somnolent humanity
lay bare the verbs, vowels
syllables, consonants . . . & say
"these are my sores, my wounds:
this is my distended belly:
here I went ragged and hungry:
in that place I bled, was tortured;
and on this electric cross I died.
Brothers, sisters, HERE I AM."
Posted by Jim Culleny at 12:10 AM | Permalink





Comments
Such insipid stuff--I think I've had enough of these poems. Where are the links to all the interesting articles such as in the past? I will tend to bypass this site if I must scroll down past all the poetry.
Posted by: Grouch | Jan 30, 2008 12:53:14 AM
Poems work better without pictures plastered next to them. Really. So thanks for this one.
Oh—Grouch thinks he's had enough—better post a few more so he can make up his mind.
Posted by: A N | Jan 30, 2008 2:01:31 AM
Comment's like Grouch's make me wonder what slice of 3qd's readership love the daily poem as much as I do. I hope you aren't losing hits over it.
Great choice, by the way. This one couldn't be further from 'insipid'. I hope they keep coming.
Posted by: George D | Jan 30, 2008 7:07:24 AM
Dear Grouch,
I used to feel that way myself until I actually started to read poems --I mean, be open to them. A set of personal events that could not be mitigated by science, philosphy, history, or religion was the cause of that change. Poetry addressed the unwanted reality of the events profoundly.
I first came to 3QD because of a tip from a friend. I kept coming back because of the excelllence of it's links to marvelous articles, but not every one perked my interest enough to read in full. I had to scroll past some. Is it really that taxing on a finger?
Here's to more great articles, and (hopefully) poems. I'd love to please everyone with my selections, but with the general inclination of human nature, that's not gonna happen.
As the Lord of Liberty said, "Different strokes for different folks."
By the way, how did you happen to l pick that screen name? ;)
Jim
Posted by: Jim | Jan 30, 2008 7:18:18 AM
I loved this poem! Thanks, Jim, for your ALWAYS excellent selections.
Posted by: Abbas Raza | Jan 30, 2008 7:29:45 AM
I love poems about poems and writing. Thank you for posting it.
Posted by: Christine | Jan 30, 2008 8:57:11 AM
I'm really happy about the poetry development on 3QD. Thank you, Jim.
Posted by: Jane | Jan 30, 2008 11:43:40 AM
Another anti-grouch, here.
Posted by: SB | Jan 30, 2008 2:54:41 PM
Thanks, Grouch! Your comment makes reading these poems all the more enjoyable!
Posted by: Nikolai Nikola | Jan 30, 2008 3:42:40 PM
This one is my favorite yet....keep it up and thanks.
Posted by: Another Jon | Jan 30, 2008 4:06:33 PM
Reminds me of Dylan Thomas, which is great, of course.
Posted by: aguy109 | Jan 30, 2008 4:29:30 PM
I have two degrees, one of which is an Honours English BA, and I am a card-carrying member of Mensa so I think that I possess cetain standards of discernment. This is a SUPERB piece by a man who understands his art, and a piece which all but the most base of cretins would enjoy.
Posted by: FauxSweet | Feb 2, 2008 1:57:10 PM
Brilliant poem!
Posted by: shivya | Dec 6, 2008 10:34:42 AM
I tried to write this poem once myself. I couldn't. I'm so glad someone else was able to, and so beautifully as well.
Posted by: A Fellow Writer | Dec 7, 2008 12:44:33 PM
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