2 Poems by C.M. Barnes
Hydrocodone in Seven
1.
The jar: plastic pearl
The sill: gateway air
All morning rubbing raw,
one compressed tendon
demanding and the spit
cup seeks plummet, seeks
the jar. All morning
been fearing fissure, been
holding thoughts like
robin’s eggs—the mind
a nest, one’s hand
a warning to take only
as needed. The answer:
to hold thoughts like
a serve, to spring
a self-offensive.
The spill: lip-to-jar.
The fire: hand-to-hand.
Laid out on bath-
mat, thinking please
drip sense into me.
2.
All morning self drifts
exeunt stage right.
Lies of a beautiful script.
Keel out the throat
like a fish. Wrap
the gills in sultry plastic.
The documentary: right-wing
The gibbon junkie: far-left.
It catches one supine
and prone, thinking
blow me up and
over. The vision
gone hoary as
a vision gone
flower whiskey
.
3.
The tissue: body bag.
The descent: handy ghost.
Who is my little
Popearino, my little
Grand Wizard? by land or
by sea, am coming,
by air or by space. This
existence best described as
peninsular, a pursuit of
the mind’s warm water
ports. All morning
have taking as needed.
All morning have huffed
blossoms scruffy on four
cycles. Am now uni-
cycler, circular. Am
now the granular self.
4.
Am now the tinsels
linear. Am now
a magpie projector
burning ash. Can
swallow glass like
can swallow eggs.
Birds consumed
always as needed.
Could just fly off—
hand-to-bird, a
swelled tinsel wing, a
squalled salt solution
always shooting up.
The documentary: a van.
The dusk: spring-a-ling.
5.
Jazz stream to cup.
Spit cup/drink cup
confusion. What say
you, Mr. Phineas
Newborn Jr.? Mr.
Monk Bird Django?
Mr. Mingus Dizzy
Parker? You sound
wet in my jar, a little
too on the nose all
morning, a confiding
whip crack of plot
points: to see:
Breathless. To see:
Apocalypse Later. I will
be your art monster
if you be my dishes,
will be your baby
teeth if you prune
my gullet, will be
your contrapuntal
loves of p in the v,
of p in the a, of v
on the v, p on p,
crisscrossing flesh
acrostics will be
your fulcrum (if you
be my pendulum).
6.
Anesthesiologist’s nectar
flowers. An archeologist’s
soiled grin. Am now
bitter sweet as ice-
come. To touch:
the skin. To taste:
lymphoidic
tissue all happening
like a good time
disguised as bad, but
always as needed, as
the bicyclers churning
below, tonguing
spandex four stories up,
collecting robin’s eggs,
transmitting them,
blue-eyed, to jar.
Play it, Mr. Mulgrew!
Play it, Mr. Art!
7.
Books of law.
Books of art.
Spines cracked and pages
fluttering. I am
missing your infection
nesting on my tongue,
some blue-blood canker
splitting my lips, glitzing
my throat, some Brob-
dingnagian moth
splayed open across
the incised throat.
All morning
been chanting wives.
All morning
been taking as needed.
All morning
been carrying on
in the face
of almost certain.
Five Monographs
1.
In the first instance, I am Heraclitus
trying to linearize the accretion jazz
that is Logos into a unified whole.
I am bent over some type of proto-
globe that shouldn’t exist yet, clasping
my twisted digits in a desperate plea
for mankind to see all
things are one, unified, inter-
locked, and inter-
disciplinary in the ecumenical sense.
That this should fail to be
apparent to my fellows is troubling—
especially the everlasting fire
that melts everything down
into all things one and the same.
I call this the law-like interchange
of elements, which should be re-
assuring. Yet, I get nothing
but blank-faced expressions
conducive to only more
hectoring on my part.
2.
In the second instance, I am Marcus
Aurelius suffering a second coming
of child death. How many more
must I lose before I am proved
invulnerable to that which doesn’t suffer
my control? This is the key
dichotomy, what keeps me
going (and so on and so forth), that pain
absent exterior forces, is only a function
of insufficient internal fortitude. The Teutons
are rebelling again. The Franks become
uproarious. I am surrounded by
fools who know not their own natures.
Cripple my leg already. I am nothing but
an emperor wrapped in rare
purple robes—just mere flesh and
bone doomed to disappear into that eternal
Logos fire. What need be there
to fear? The gods are not practical
jokers. They would not subject us to
that which we cannot bear. (Would they?)
No. They are logical.
3.
In the third instance, I am Catherine
the Great, divine-righted ruler of
the Rus with a desire for
modernization. Thus, I have summoned
Diderot to my insular
kingdom to discuss surf usage. He
thinks they should vote, or some such
business—not that I resent
his implication that the average man is wise
enough to rule himself. It is everyone else
I’m worried about, plus
the machinations of the boyars
and my blood-thirsty palace guard
always one little water away from flinging
all the sicklier cousins off the balcony.
(They would squirm red on pikes.) Also,
everyone’s beards are growing back pubic,
and my imbecilic
husband just wanted to play with a toy
soldier until the Samovar melted down
to the size of a consumable Baltic state.
He’d dead now. Most people are, statistically
speaking. I am a German and very practical.
I have no desire to horse fuck.
4.
In the fourth instance, I am Joseph
Stalin underlining Bible passages—
the ones that justify
my particular need for Lebensraum—
not my own,
you understand. I have all the space
I need, but for that of other peoples
busily hustling the Jews around.
I find a lot of good textual
justification in Leviticus, also some
in Numbers (six million or so,
to be precise). I am anything but
precise. A hundred-thousand hectors
quality wheat land is nothing to me.
My bread basket is endless,
my soup is the soup of a god
replenishing itself endlessly under a mortal
spoon. Pass me a potato
and I will chew you a steel ingot
so heavy cities will be renamed to lift it.
While I wait, I’ll harass Dmitri
Shostakovich via Pravda
.His tongue will noose the gloss
of my Crimean leg. I am large.
I contain multitudes of dead men
all of whom are spouting confessions,
professions, men of iron constitutions
doing what must be done to redden the trees.
5.
In the fifth instance, I am George
W. Bush vacillating in Texas
over whether or not to opt for
fuchsia in my portrayal of a veteran
raising up resplendent from a hospital
bed. It’s a loaded, topical
portrait subject. I am aware
of this, and yet
I resent how people assume I paint
because of some subconscious
sludge I am working out
as opposed to the pure satisfaction
of applying color to canvass, hue
to white (and so forth and so on).
People think I am stupid. I am not
stupid—at least not in the way
they think I am. I am only a thwarted
artist ruler in the great and bad history
of thwarted artist rulers, a type
whom should never be granted the levers
of power but whom sometimes get placed
behind the wheel going into the wrong
turn anyway. Yes, I think I’ll go with
fuchsia. Fuchsia will do fine.
C.M. Barnes holds an MFA from the University of Montana and lives in Colorado. Barnes’ work has appeared in Phoebe, Literary Laundry, Booth, and more.