April 29, 2009

Stink-foot, or A Statue of Philoctetes

This poem(s) and diatribe is dedicated to the still smoke-free Michael Andrew Kicey, who shares my name but only in the middle. It comes, of late, from an as yet unfinished sequence entitled, for the moment, "sonnets then." It's number 9:

9. stink-foot

his stinking foot, his festering wound—-ed pride
gets him into troubling shipwreck armies;
mythology and martyrdom he’s writ-
ing on his face and on his pedestal
of Doubtless-Carved-by-Good-Praxiteles
sometime in the second century B.C.

this statued Philoctetes’ tragedy
has one performance, never-ending, played
upon the harpies’ chord—-the harpsichord?
no: played on iridescent surfaces
of people’s eyes, like oil on puddles fract
among the sev’ral sequences of sun,
while all the eyes and noses mumble that
stink-foot reeks of antiseptic cleansers.

This poem has a companion piece, re: Diogenes of Sinope, that, given its clunkiness and persistent imperfection, I won't impose on you. But the poem that follows, a (very) loose adaptation of the Heart Sutra, I will. I have of late, as a means of avoiding "real" hermeneutic traditions like, say, the Christian one after Augustine or the philosophical one after dudes like Schleiermacher and Dilthey, become interested in various "esoteric" hermeneutic traditions: Mahayana, Waite's symbological method of tarot divination, Bacon's inductive "interpretationes," etc. What these less and more mystic traditions have in common is a certain faith in chance, that in the process of living with objects of interpretation in a disciplined but somewhat haphazard way, eventually something will "click" in the mind and lead one toward some general principle that unites disparate elements. The poem, "perficting," isn't really about that.

10. perficting

no wisdom, no attainment of—-because
no wisdom no attainment of, Guanyin
preferred perfiction’s total Wisdomness,
obstruction not of incidental Mind:

obstruction not, no fear of Mind—-because
obstruction not no fear of Mind, Guanyin
should pass imagination mystified
for misty Heart and heartier deceit:

this trap me in imagination conned
of self in solipsism, to arrogate
my ignorance as absolution of
my sinning error signs its namelessness

on pride, on beauty, on beatitude
so shallow it will long to kill itself.

There's something self-destructive about the allusive and the esoteric; it seems ill-defended against the ignorance (read "tendency to ignore") of others and their often persistent capability to see past what it is you want them to see. Perhaps that is the virtue of the esoteric and allusive: they don't have to be there if you don't want them to be.

2 Comments:

At 10:48 AM, Blogger Mass Death Momma said...

After a year of teaching in the South, I am convinced that the thing my students have a tendency to ignore is me. How do you explain this since I am neither allusive nor esoteric?

 
At 4:06 PM, Blogger water said...

Doctor T,

You are funniest whenever you write a poem on Mike. Is it that your wit is best brought out by the misfortunes of your best friend? Of course, I turned to Wikipedia to find out about Philoctetes' stink foot.

Liked the second one too. though I don't get exactly what you are saying, it is fun to read it aloud.

where are your crowning pictures?

 

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