The cage of myself clamps shut.
My words turn the lock.
I am the jailor rattling the keys.
I am the torturer’s assistant
who nods & smiles
& pretends not
to be responsible.
I am the clerk who stamps
the death note
affixing the seal, the seal, the seal.
I am the lackey who “follows orders.”
I have not got the authority.
I am the visitor
who brings a cake, baked
with a file.
Pale snail,
I wave between the bars.
I speak of rope with the hangman.
I chatter of sparks & currents
with the electrician.
Direct or alternating,
he is beautiful.
I flatter him.
I say he turns me on.
I tell the cyanide capsules
they have talent
& may fulfill themselves someday.
I read the warden’s awful novel
& recommend a publisher.
I sleep with the dietitian
who is hungry.
I sleep with the hangman
& reassure him
that he is a good lover.
I am the ideal prisoner.
I win prizes on my conduct.
They reduce my sentence.
Now it is only 99 years
with death like a dollop
of whipped cream at the end.
I am so grateful.
No one remembers
that I constructed this jail
& peopled its cells.
No one remembers my blueprints
& my plans,
my steady hammering,
my dreams of fantastic escapes.
& even I,
patiently writing away,
my skin yellowing
like the pages of old paperbacks,
my hair turning gray,
cannot remember the first crime,
the crime
I was born for.