Rage
by James Graham
Posted: Friday, January 6, 2012 Word Count: 285 Summary: Some curiosities here, especially in the second part. |
Rage
1
A poet should know
how to compose world-rage
into a Guernica.
Rage against the money-game
that makes children, long past crying,
live short, sick lives,
rage like the subtle workings
of slow arsenic: put into verse,
it should become fibre.
A poet should feel better.
I once threw a clock that wouldn’t go
against a wall and smashed it. Its giblets
all fell out. Two reasons why:
I couldn’t make it go,
and Tony Blair. It should
be better, though, to write a poem.
The trouble is: the archives of iniquity
are full of heavy-footed prose. And numbers.
Injustice doesn’t go andante.
2
640 million children are without adequate shelter.
That’s eighty-seven Londonsful.
(Fly over London, see how small it is.)
The world’s billionaires — just 497 people (approximately 0.000008% of the world’s population) — are worth $3.5 trillion (over 7% of world GDP).
Rob all four-hundred-ninety-seven of them,
leave them enough to pay the rent. Then give.
$4 trillion is currently held in offshore banking centres from the Cayman Islands to Vanuatu.
Take it
Give it
3
cries the soap-box speaker to the empty street.
Whatever, says the silence, Barnard’s Star
is 30 trillion miles away, the Universe goes back
13.75 gigayears. These mega-numbers are all Greek.
Who will take? says the silence. Who will give?
They take from mega-banks and give to banks
that are poor and hungry and sleeping rough.
Poets are heard by people with world-empathy.
They hear the command to care, and they obey,
but cannot obey the order to take and give.
It’s a poor poem this. Still, I won’t smash anything.
But empathy is strong and very feeble,
and love cries out in a starless age.
1
A poet should know
how to compose world-rage
into a Guernica.
Rage against the money-game
that makes children, long past crying,
live short, sick lives,
rage like the subtle workings
of slow arsenic: put into verse,
it should become fibre.
A poet should feel better.
I once threw a clock that wouldn’t go
against a wall and smashed it. Its giblets
all fell out. Two reasons why:
I couldn’t make it go,
and Tony Blair. It should
be better, though, to write a poem.
The trouble is: the archives of iniquity
are full of heavy-footed prose. And numbers.
Injustice doesn’t go andante.
2
640 million children are without adequate shelter.
That’s eighty-seven Londonsful.
(Fly over London, see how small it is.)
The world’s billionaires — just 497 people (approximately 0.000008% of the world’s population) — are worth $3.5 trillion (over 7% of world GDP).
Rob all four-hundred-ninety-seven of them,
leave them enough to pay the rent. Then give.
$4 trillion is currently held in offshore banking centres from the Cayman Islands to Vanuatu.
Take it
Give it
3
cries the soap-box speaker to the empty street.
Whatever, says the silence, Barnard’s Star
is 30 trillion miles away, the Universe goes back
13.75 gigayears. These mega-numbers are all Greek.
Who will take? says the silence. Who will give?
They take from mega-banks and give to banks
that are poor and hungry and sleeping rough.
Poets are heard by people with world-empathy.
They hear the command to care, and they obey,
but cannot obey the order to take and give.
It’s a poor poem this. Still, I won’t smash anything.
But empathy is strong and very feeble,
and love cries out in a starless age.