Monday, February 12, 2018

Arabesques on the Statue of Liberty


A rapist on the Staten Island Ferry lusts after the Statue of Liberty. On Canal Street, a Chinese wife makes a break for freedom. And then King Kong and the Statue of Liberty switch places. A new revision of an old New York poem.



1
Bad Dingo rides
the Staten Island ferry
dusk till dawn,
clinging to rail,
nestling an all-night
tumescence,
hard at the sight
of the robed lady,
vast,
unapproachable.

He’s stalking her,
biding his time.
Some night
there’d be a fog,
a power failure.
He’d come up behind her,
prodding the small
of her spine
with his imperious knife,
jostling her bronze buttocks
with his ardent flesh prod.
She’d drop the tablet;
the torch would sputter.
He’d push her off her pedestal.
Bad Dingo would give it to her good
the way he did to all the white ladies
in parks and stairwells and subway cars.
This would be the rape of all rapes,
the pinnacle of his career,
the ultimate boast
See that toppled goddess
in the harbor--
she ain’t so proud now
since someone had her,
made her moan.
Bad Dingo had her,
stuck it to the Statue,

white-lady Liberty!”

2
In Chinatown,
Mrs. Wang mounts
a quiet rebellion
against the ways of the elders.

She has done all
her mother asked her:
married the boy
the matchmaker ordained,
bore sons and daughters
in regular order
burned joss and incense
at every altar,
sending ghost gold and peaches,
phantom cars and televisions
Hong Kong Hell dollars
to the teeming, greedy dead.

Now her husband travels,
has mistresses, won’t talk
about his gambling.
Her children are gone,
married to foreign devils
Her round-eyed grandchildren
won’t learn Mandarin,
will never send joss riches
to her when she is dead.

Now she becomes a whirlwind:
She sells her jade and porcelain,
cleans out her savings account,
buys an airline ticket
for San Francisco —
from there, who knows?

She pawns the statuette
of pearly white Kuan-Yin,
the Goddess of Mercy
whose only blessing
was endless childbirth
and washing and ironing,

On a whim she buys another
to take its place at her bedside:
a foot-high Statue of Liberty
with batteries and glowing torch.

She leaves it for her husband,
her wedding ring
on its spiky crown.

3
Today two New York titans
switch places.

A grumpy Green Liberty
strides up Fifth Avenue,
crushing pedestrians in verdigris.
Her sandalled feet
send buses flying,
kiosks shattering.

Her great head turns
among the office towers.
She reaches in,
pulls screaming executives
through razor edge panes,
undresses them
with her copper fingers,
discards them one by one
to the pavement
twenty stories below.

The man she wants
is not among them. He’s got
to be a real American,
one of those Arrow short models,
blond, and a screamer,
a yielding but unwilling male
under her stern metallic nails.
The more he cries out, Put me down,
the more she likes him.

Uptown, she finds him:
a tousle-headed messenger,
scooped up from his bicycle.
She cups him in one palm,

drops her tablet,
rolls up her sleeves,
and starts the painful ascent
of the Empire State Building.

Downtown
on Liberty Island,
King Kong wields a torch,
incinerates all passing freighters,
capsizes the passenger ships.
He hurls great boulders skyward,
picks off incoming airplanes one by one.
He is guarding the harbor now.
He is a real American
and he shouts his slogans:
America First.
Stay out.
Go home.
No foreigners allowed.



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