Thursday, December 22, 2011

Seek the Cougar but fear the Alligator


It was the twilight of the iguana:

From a rainbowing battlement,
a tongue like a javelin
lunging in verdure;
an ant heap treading the jungle,
monastic, on musical feet;
the guanaco, oxygen-fine
in the high places swarthed with distances,
cobbling his feet into gold;
the llama of scrupulous eye
the widens his gaze on the dews
of a delicate world.

A monkey is weaving
a thread of insatiable lusts
on the margins of morning:
he topples a pollen-fall,
startles the violet-flght
of the butterfly, wings on the Muzo.

It was the night of the alligator:
snouts moving out of the slime,
in original darkness, the pullulations,
a clatter of armour, opaque
in the sleep of the bog,
turning back to the chalk of the sources.

The jaguar touches the leaves
with his phosphorous absence,
the puma speeds to his covert
in the blaze of his hungers,
his eyeballs, a jungle of alcohol,
burn in his head.

7 comments:

blake said...

Good advice.

I think.

The Dude said...

Pablo Neruda. Google is my friend.

Trooper York said...

Bingo.

He has some good stuff.

For a commie.

Harsh Pencil said...

Damn commie.

(translation)

To be men! That is the Stalinist law! . . .

We must learn from Stalin
his sincere intensity
his concrete clarity. . . .

Stalin is the noon,
the maturity of man and the peoples. . . .

Stalinists, Let us bear this title with pride.
Stalinist workers, clerks, women take care of this day!
The light has not vanished.
The fire has not disappeared,
There is only the growth of
Light, bread, fire and hope
In Stalin's invincible time!
In recent years the dove,
Peace, the wandering persecuted rose,
Found herself on his shoulders
And Stalin, the giant,
Carried her at the heights of his forehead. . . .

A wave beats against the stones of the shore.
But Malenkov will continue his work. . . .


(end poem)

and so Pablo Neruda was never called an asshole.

chickelit said...

...not in New York.

The Dude said...

All I want to know is will this produce a briefcase?

ndspinelli said...

When I played baseball in my youth the holy grail was kangaroo spikes. I got my first pair when I was 14.