It has been a pretty busy day. Church stuff in the morning. Poetry Editor stuff in the afternoon (I had to meet with a colleague to go over some submissions for the university's magazine). Now it's blogging stuff. Then dinner stuff. Then grading stuff. Then sleeping stuff.
It's warm today. Sixty degrees. My world is full of drips and running streams. The snow is quickly dwindling. Looking out the window, I see kids in shorts, swinging on the playground. Windy and bright. It feels more like late May. And, in keeping with the weather, we're having hot dogs and bratwurst tonight, with watermelon for dessert. I will probably eat about a dozen brats, my favorite. (I'll leave it up to you to decide whether I'm exaggerating or not.)
Today's episode of Saint Marty first aired five years ago. It contains a poem that I vaguely remember writing. It's not the greatest poem in the world, but this post makes me miss my pastor friend. We used to get together on Thursday night. Sometimes we'd eat and write. Sometimes we'd just eat.
Saint Marty needs to go do some bratwurst stuff now.
April 8, 2010: Saint Agabus
For those of my readers who've been wondering what has happened to
Manly Man Poetry Night, it went on hiatus for a couple of weeks. On the
fourth Thursday of every month, I host a book club at my house, and the
Thursday after that was Maundy Thursday. Needless to say, my pastor
friend was otherwise engaged that evening, and so was I. But, never
fear, loyal and faithful poetry fans (there has to be at least two of
you out there). Manly Man Poetry Night has reconvened, and all is right
with the world. The muses are at work, and the onion rings are on the
plate.
So, this Thursday, my pastor friend and I met
for dinner. Now, for those of you that think dinner refers to lunch, let
me correct you. You're wrong. Lunch is lunch, and dinner refers to the
third meal of the day, generally eaten after 5 p.m. We met at Big Boy at
6:30 p.m., and, since neither of us had time to eat, we both ordered
meals.
I ordered a great farmer's omelet with ham and
cheese and onions and peppers. It was served on a bed of hash browns
with a side of rye toast. My friend ordered the club sandwich, I
believe, with a side of onion rings (of course), plus the soup and salad
bar. After we sat for a while and complained about the snowstorm
shaking the windows of the restaurant, we moved on to our poetry for the
night.
We used the same tabloid exercise that we used
at our previous meeting a few weeks before. (For those of you that
missed that posting, check out March 18 on Saint Alexander. Also, try to
keep up better.) Now, as before, I tried to kill two birds with one
poem. I wrote about both the tabloid headline and the saint for the day.
If you couldn't tell by my recent entry that made use of Star Wars,
I will confess to you right now that I am a bit of a science fiction
geek. When the original Star Wars was released in theaters, I saw it 27
times. (I'm not talking about the bastardized version Lucas released
prior to ruining the series with Jar Jar Binks. I'm talking Alec
Guinness as a flesh-and-blood Obi-Wan, and the kiss between Luke and
Leia before it became yucky and incestuous.) So, it should come as no
surprise that the headline I chose to base my poem on was "Martians
Monitor Middle East Violence," which has echoes of War of the Worlds (both Spielberg's and George Pal's versions) and The Day the Earth Stood Still (the original with Michael Rennie, not the dumb Keanu Reeves remake with locust clouds of alien fleas).
The
saint for the day was Agabus, a contemporary of the twelve apostles and
probably one of the 72 disciples. Agabus' story is pretty much like
the stories of all the disciples. He wandered the deserts and towns,
spreading the ideas and words of Jesus, working a few miracles along the
way to keep people talking. Agabus had the gift of prophecy. He
foretold the coming of a famine in the Roman Empire, which took place in
42 to 44 A.D. He also prophesied the imprisonment of Paul, which is
referred to in Acts 21.
So, I have a New Testament
prophet, Martians, and the Middle East. Add some onion rings, a few Diet
Pepsis, and a weekend of revisions, and you get the following poem:
Martians Monitor Middle East Violence
Pile-8 met Agabus in a desert
In Palestine, came down in a wheel
From the stars, came from the blood planet
On a quest for truth about Earth's children.
Agabus, fresh from Roman famine,
Called Pile-8 an angel, a winged
Servant of God, waited for the visitor
To deliver a message from the one
Agabus called peace's prince.
Pile-8 blinked his olive black eyes,
Kept silent, wings folded, waited
For a sign to unleash death's ray
Upon the hairless, sand ape.
Agabus filled Pile-8's eight ears
With words of love and forgiveness,
Words of a son of the universe,
Whipped, torn, spiked, speared.
Agabus talked of this son
Rising, shaking off the tentacles
Of death like a great, blue whale,
Flooding the world with oceans of light.
Pile-8's stomachs quivered into fists
When the ape called the one who rose
The lord. The savior. The way. The truth.
Like his cousin did for Ezekiel, Pile-8
Took Agabus into his wheel, probed
The grey matter of his skull
For fragments, pictures of this truth
Giver. All he found were dreams
Of deep wells filled with sun,
Cups pressed to thirsty lips,
Baskets spilling thousands of silver
Fish into dry, empty lake beds.
And bread. Bread steaming. Bread white.
Bread dark. Bread yellow as honey.
Bread red as Pile-8's home.
After days and days of this bread,
Pile-8 returned Agabus to the sand,
Then ascended back to sky, to stars,
To black space, to his planet of war.
Pile-8 couldn't rest after that time,
Always felt hollow. He watched
Earth for two thousand solar cycles,
Watched as the brothers and sisters
Of Agabus whipped, tore, spiked,
Speared each other, over and over,
Acted as hungry, thirsty as famine, drought.
More than once, Pile-8 aimed his fire
At the deserts, almost rained apocalypse
On the warring children of this world.
But, always, the dreams of Agabus
Stopped him, filled his four bellies
With a need he couldn't name,
A need for more than the cold, killing
Rocks of Mars. A need for wells
Full of light. Bottomless cups.
Fish multiplying exponentially
From baskets. And bread.
White as polar caps. Dark as mud.
Yellow as citric fruit. Red
As his mother's deep womb.
Confessions of Saint Marty
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