Friday, February 1, 2019

The Exhumation of Goethe


by Brett Rutherford

East Germany, 1970


By all means do this at night, while Weimar
sleeps, while even those whose job it is to watch
the watchers, sleep. In merciful dark,
the third-shift silence when the local electric plant
shuts down for the Good of the State,


take a cart — no, not a car,
a hand-drawn cart —
dampen its wheels so your journeys to,

and from, and back
to the foggy graveyard are soundless.


Do not awaken the burghers!
Here are the keys to the wrought-iron gates —
mind you don't rattle them.
The crypt has been purposefully left unlocked.
You need but draw the door.
The cart will just squeeze through
(Engineer Heinrich has measured everything!)


Open the sarcophagus as quietly as possible.
Watch the fingers! Don't leave a mark
on the hand-carved cover.
Be sure it's Goethe, the one with a "G."
We don't want his crypt-mate Schiller
(too many anti-People tendencies).


Lift up the whole thing gently.
The bones will want to fly apart.
Only the shroud, and some mummified meat
keep him in the semblance of skeleton.
Just scoop the whole thing up
like a pancake, then into the cart.


Here's a bag for the skull. Don't muss
those ash-gray laurel leaves.
We plan to coat them in polymer
after we study that Aryan skull
whose brain conceived Faust,
Egmont, and sorrowful Werther.

We're going to wire the bones together,
strip off that nasty flesh,
maybe bleach him a little,
make a respectable ghost of Goethe.


Who knows, if he looks good enough,
in a newly-lined sarcophagus,
we could put him on display.
Come to Kulturstadt!
See Goethe's body!
Even better than Lenin!
(Can we say that?)


It will be a world attraction.

We'll pipe in lieder and opera.
Tour guides will be dressed as Gretchen.
Maybe a fun-house
with Mephistopheles,
a sausage-fest at Brander's Inn.


Ah! the cart is here! The bones,
yes, the bones. Unfortunate, the odor.
We can work on that.
The colors, mein Gott,
(excuse the expression)
they will not please —

over there, Klaus,
     if you're going to be sick —

It's such a little skeleton —
was he really so short?

The books said he towered
over his contemporaries.
So much for the books!
And the shroud — that color —
not at all what we imagined.
Perhaps the opera house
could make a new one.


Watch those ribs —
so many little bones
in the fingers.

Things are just not . . .
holding together.


I can't do this.

The project is canceled.

Poets are just too — flimsy.

Put this mess back
where it came from.
Next time let's exhume a general,
Bismarck, the Kaiser,
someone with a sword and epaulets.
Armor would be even better.
The People want giants!


*** ***
Selected from my collection, Things Seen in Graveyards. 
 Photo from Wikimedia Commons, contributed by Charlie1965nrw.


https://www.amazon.com/dp/0922558884/ref=cm_sw_em_r_mt_dp_U_KOmvCb0YWWTEQ
Buy a copy while you and I are still above ground!



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