The invention of the assembly line,
The conveyor belt, the repetition
Of a single simple task by one man,
Produces all that is useful and fine.
Let me push the button of ignition
On armor as heavy as a tin can.
No bullet can penetrate my new skin,
Sleek and silver and exquisitely thin.
I'm so perfect now a parade of me
Runs past the smokestacks of the factory.
I'm joined by a smart, lock-loaded army;
As we march, everyone behind his hood,
Goose-stepping, bright phalanx of right for good,
We stare down the decadent and swarthy.
Zealotry of Guerin: Poetry and Fiction by Christopher Guerin
The sonnet sequence, "My Human Disguise," of 630 ekphrastic poems, was begun February 2011. It can be found beginning with the January 20, 2022 post and working backwards. Going forward are 20 poems called "Terzata," beginning on January 27, 2022. Fifty Terzata can be found among the links on the right. A new series of dramatic monologues follows on the blog roll, followed by a series of formal poems, each based on a single word.
Friday, March 21, 2025
Parade
Thursday, March 13, 2025
The Spy (Cold War Mini-sub), Sonnet #632
Like a sty in the nation’s eye,
He’s a hiding-in-plain-sight guy,
A cataract of the blind lie —
People still believe him, though why
Is as mysterious as Pi.
A carnival barker, though sly,
And a connoisseur of the small fry
He munches either moist or dry.
He beckons the bucks from on high.
They all trot up to him and sigh.
He has a mantra: I am I.
There’s no disputing that, just try.
There are some who think he's a spy.
We know he’s set the world awry.
Note: The number Pi is considered
mysterious due to its irrational and
transcendental nature.
Thursday, March 6, 2025
The Fireside Angel (Max Ernst), Sonnet #631
If you dare to tell him he can’t
The monster starts his dancing rant.
The noise blasts an half-empty House
Where nothing stirs, not even a louse.
His legs lift just so high and pound
And pound the ground like myriad rounds
Aimed to shell the foundations
Of once allied loyal nations.
(He makes of enemies his friends
For obvious and evil ends.)
His confused shrieking grows louder,
Anger eloquent as gun powder.
When dance and rant become one
The work of dictatorship’s done.
Thursday, February 27, 2025
The Undone Thing
My body's naked decay
illuminates a room of mirrors,
themselves reflections, years
compressed into a backward look.
That was flat bone, that, my eye,
that, hard skin, sharp spine.
As number shapes itself,
we all gradually freeze
into the markless prism
of each day: One. Attention!
Two. Prayer! Three. Reach out!
Thus, the count approximates me.
The caliper and the scale
exact a shade of difference
between mole and melanoma-
sensations bought and sold:
a faceless, Ernstian torso,
odalisque sans ottoman,
I beckon like blue oblivion.
Afloat in a dusty tearpool
with feathers, stone, and pigment
peeled from unsized canvas,
mine is the life of reclining truth,
with plump breasts pointing up.
Thursday, February 20, 2025
Excavation (Willem de Kooning), Sonnet #630
There is an universal tendency among mankind to conceive all
beings like themselves...We find human faces in the moon and armies
in the clouds. David Hume
The anthropomorphic follows me around —
In carpets, tree bark, and abstract paintings.
“If I am the figure, what is the ground?”
Each face whispers, “or am I just feigning?”
Or am I the pretext for pretending,
I reason, a message I am sending
To cohere around the inchoate
Only I can look at and recognize?
These flickering (blinked) images sate
My comprehension, if not my eyes.
“My face will melt if you don’t look at me,”
These ghost images say repeatedly.
I too unseen uncertainly erase —
Though an unreal painting could take my place.
Tuesday, February 11, 2025
Music
How can sound mean to me?
A note, chord or melody,
Or an invisible bird’s song,
Even the long ringing of a gong,
Is merely an evanescence
To the most fleeting of senses.
It’s only in memory that sound
As music turning round and round
Can deliciously endure
Until distilled and rendered pure.
Thursday, January 30, 2025
Tiger Emerging From Bamboo (Kano Tsunenobu, early 18th century), Sonnet #629
Zen tiger — imaginary,
None living in Japan — just pelt
From which to construct a kitty —
No sharp claws and jaws, no fear felt.
It slips between stands of bamboo
On silently pillowed paws,
A denizen of our thought-zoo
Who will blink out science’s laws.
It rubs against ungiving grass
And under the shoots’ fingers purrs.
It hides as other animals pass,
Having no taste for flesh-filled furs.
Like time the tiger emerges
And as quickly all things purges.