New York City 1970

I

How do you spell change like frayed slogan underwear

with the emptied can of yesterdays’ meanings

with yesterdays’ names?

And what does the we-bird see with

who has lost its I’s?

There is nothing beautiful left in the streets of this city.

I have come to believe in death and renewal by fire.

Past questioning the necessities of blood

or why it must be mine or my children’s time

that will see the grim city quake to be reborn perhaps

blackened again but this time with a sense of purpose;

tired of the past tense forever, of assertion and repetition

of the ego-trips through an incomplete self

where two years ago proud rang for promise but now

it is time for fruit and all the agonies are barren—

only the children are growing:

For how else can the self become whole

save by making self into its own new religion?

I am bound like an old lover—a true believer—

to this city’s death by accretion and slow ritual,

and I submit to its penance for a trial

as new steel is tried

I submit my children also to its death throes and agony

and they are not even the city’s past lovers. But I submit them

to the harshness and growing cold to the brutalizations

which if survived

will teach them strength or an understanding of how strength is gotten

and will not be forgotten: It will be their city then:

I submit them

loving them above all others save myself

to the fire to the rage to the ritual scarifications

to be tried as new steel is tried;

and in its wasting the city shall try them

as the blood-splash of a royal victim

tries the hand of the destroyer.

II

I hide behind tenements and subways in fluorescent alleys

watching as flames walk the streets of an empire’s altar

raging through the veins of the sacrificial stenchpot

smeared upon the east shore of a continent’s insanity

conceived in the psychic twilight of murderers and pilgrims

rank with money and nightmare and too many useless people

who will not move over nor die, who cannot bend

even before the winds of their own preservation

even under the weight of their own hates

Who cannot amend nor conceive nor even learn to share

their own visions

who bomb my children into mortar in churches

and work plastic offal and metal and the flesh of their enemies

into subway rush-hour temples where obscene priests

finger and worship each other in secret

and think they are praying when they squat

to shit money-pebbles shaped like their parents’ brains—

who exist to go into dust to exist again

grosser and more swollen and without ever relinquishing

space or breath or energy from their private hoard.

I do not need to make war nor peace

with these prancing and murderous deacons

who refuse to recognize their role in this covenant we live upon

and so have come to fear and despise even their own children;

but I condemn myself, and my loves

past and present

and the blessed enthusiasms of all my children

to this city

without reason or future

without hope

to be tried as the new steel is tried

before trusted to slaughter.

I walk down the withering limbs of my last discarded house

and there is nothing worth salvage left in this city

but the faint reedy voices like echoes

of once beautiful children.