Sunday, October 25, 2015

Jack the Ripper's Star

"Every man and every woman is a star."
                                      Aleister Crowley

As the Earth's population continues to swell
Toward the tipping point of its axis,
The showers of stars spraying out like diamonds
From the fingers of creation multiply as well;
The Universe is constantly expanding.

As new suns illuminate the heavens
Old shining orbs flicker out and die,
Becoming cold desolate chunks of stone
In lifeless solar systems.

The Star of Shug, the inventive cave-dweller
Who first fashioned wheels to lighten his load
No longer gives off any radiant light.

The Star of Swack, the brave nomad
Who shaped the first spear that successfully
Pierced the hide of a wooly mammoth
Has dimmed to darkness as well,
As have myriads of generations of suns
Of those who lived and died unremembered.

Red dwarves, red giants, even supernovas
Such as the beacon of Bethlehem that led
The Magi to the manger behind the inn.
They had their moments, then expired,
Just as Jack the Ripper's star will as well.

A hate-filled unrepentant psychopath to the end,
Saucy Jack, the sex-crazed stalker, fervently hopes
That when his star finally does give out,
It explodes with a resounding  "BANG!"

He's hoping it bursts like a swollen seed pod
Hurtling forth lethal asteroids of extinction.
He envisions one cutting its way through the void
Like a finally-honed surgical knife
Until it slices into some smug little world,
Severing the carotid artery of its existence
As if it were some old whore's neck, nothing more.




Sixteen Blinks from the fall of the Blade

It was as though those who held the scales of justice
Felt that they had to whet the blade of the guillotine
By bathing it in blood.  Snarling like rabid dogs,
Teeth bared, foaming at the mouth with class hatred,
They wished to destroy anyone who had risen above them.

Membership in The Academy of Science was suspect,
A liability in a society where ignorance held sway.
Antoine Lavoisier, the Father of Chemistry,
Was arrested, brought to trial, and convicted
By the bloodthirsty brigands who were "The Republic" now,
Vindictively flexing its power over those who before
Had oppressed, vexed or simply had intimidated them
By reputation and ability, by sentencing them to death.

Lavoisier, a nobleman, had pleaded not for mercy,
But for time to complete an important research project
That he insisted would benefit and bring honor to France.

"The Republic has no need of scientists, Citizen,"

Was the curt rebuff uttered by the judge, who instead,
Had him hurled into prison to contemplate his end.

Eyes wide open in horrified terror,
Mouths gaping, blade-stifled in mid-scream,
A severed head held aloft by its gory locks
While a bloodthirsty mob cheered and applauded.
Apparitions of execution, terrifying wraiths
That his imagination had conjured forth to dwell
In his mind's charnel house of death and cold stone.

A visit in prison from a trusted friend pulled him
From that maelstrom of morbid contemplation
Threatening to pull him down to drown in madness.

"What could Science learn from your final moments?"

His friend asked him.  They discussed Charlotte Corday,
The brave young woman who had stabbed Marat,
A crime that left the same mob howling for her head
That now demanded his.  Supposedly, after the blade fell,
The executioner held up her head and then slapped her face
To demonstrate his personal abhorrence of her crime.
Witnesses said that her face flushed red with anger,
Not blood, and that it wore an indignant expression.

Accepting his lot with stoic resignation, he resolved
To determine how long a brain could still function
After the body, its source of blood and oxygen,
Had been severed from it.  He vowed to his friend
That if he could do so, by sheer force of will
He would force himself to blink continuously
As long as his brain could command that function.

When the scientist's turn came to face the blade,
The mob's favored form of barbaric justice,
Lavoisier's colleague later swore that he counted

Sixteen blinks.

What force of will, what concentration
Must it have taken to surmount such pain.

 Sixteen blinks.

One

Pain

Three

Fear

Five

Rage

Seven

Self-Pity

Nine

Despair

Eleven

Regret

Thirteen

Light

Fifteen

Release

Sunday, October 18, 2015

A Prairie Storm

The wind has picked up, and the weather is tense
With the anticipation of coming rain.
Dark clouds billow, bulging and flexing their biceps,
Muscles of the storm, rippling with power, taut
With energy that's roiling to be unleashed.

Lacking inspiration in the flat landscape, the artists
Of the plains paint portraits of the people;
Their faces weathered as ancient mounds, furrowed
Like plow-torn fields, their eyes squinting at a sky
That can bring moist salvation to their crop,
Or the hail that can mean its destruction.

With flash and thunder the dark grey biceps
Pummel the window, their wet fury unleashed.
The man moves to pull aside the curtain, his face taut,
When he's moved to speak, his voice is no longer tense.
"We're lucky, Anna," he whispers.  "It just looks like rain."

Another Cynic

You've heard the tale
Of Diogenes, the Cynic,
Who walked the streets of Athens
In daylight, clad in a dirty toga,
Carrying a lamp.

When he was asked
"Why?"

He responded
"I'm just looking for an honest man."

Meet Rich Hanson, the Cynic.
He's just looking for "hope."

Weathering

The scent of antiseptic sterility,
The hard steel exam table, morgue cold
To the touch, left me feeling none too bold.
It tends to shrivel one's vitality,
This search for rogue cells that can kill a man.
The refrain, "my body, it's been a good friend,
But I won't need it, when I reach the end,"
From Cat Steven's Tea for the Tillerman
Drifts through my mind; the scan is reality,
A jolt, a reminder of one's mortality.

Like a stray dog the years dog our footsteps,
Impervious to our kicks and curses.
Youth cocksure becomes age that rehearses
Humble prayers and turns to sacred texts
To prepare for an audience with death.
The inexorable onslaught of time
Testifies as mortality's witness
As endurance ebbs to shortness of breath.
As if being wracked for some crime unknown
Strong limbs with arthritic stiffness groan

Volcanic passion thrust forth an island
Of sea-defying smugness, basalt proud.
Time-weathered now, a reef on which gulls crowd.
Presaging a water-shrouded shoal of sand.
If we could just choose to halt time's ravage
Of our island at some youthful time of desire,
Our proud landmark outcrop that waves savage
Could rebuff them to harmless spray and aspire
to an eternity.  But perish we must.
Time's relentless waves beat us into dust
Just as islands to sand, and iron to rust.