[Here, finally, is the final Epilogue section of 64. The first part returns briefly and somewhat comically to the wedding reception. The second is a Song of the Fates, echoing Catullus’s original poem, which I have already posted as a free-standing poem entitled The Rope on this blog. The third, perhaps most difficult part of the poem, is a dour prophecy (still in the voices of the Fates) regarding the future of Peleus’s son (Achilles in the original and the murder of the Trojan princess Polyxena). The fourth part flashes forward to the ultimate fate of Peleus and Thetis and they disappear. In the fifth part, as in the Catullan original, the tone changes completely, introducing a pastoral flavor, albeit interspersed with dark themes from the preceding sections. The last part constitutes an ‘epilogue within an epilogue’ and attempts to present the moral of the tale.
I have mixed feelings about this poem that I have spent a good 20 years or more of my life working on but is very different from most of my other work. I feel an odd mixture of pride and shame: proud that I have finally finished the damned thing, but also somewhat ashamed that the unrelenting nastiness of it reflects negatively, but somehow necessarily, on myself and on the times in which I have lived. Catullus, coming out of a long period of brutal civil war into a new supposedly more stable order based on tyranny must have felt much the same.]
EPILOGUE
(30)
HANGOVER
The wedding-guests wake with horrible hangovers,
slumped over sofas and armchairs or bunched up
more closely together than usual in sleeping bags
on the living room floor. The pools of puke
in the deep-pile carpet will take some cleaning out
and various domestic ornaments that may have held
some sentimental value lie shattered. Someone cries “Fuck!”
as they cut their foot on a shard rushing for the loo.
The best man is still comatose in the bathroom, people banging angrily on the door.
Some have done vaguely remembered things they vaguely regret.
Lawsuits, family feuds and courses of antibiotics for STDs
may well ensue. The Fates, like family-court judges, oversee
the proceedings with looks of unsurprised disdain.
(31)
The Rope
Clotho binds the thread; Lachesis pays it out;
Atropos sells it on to the handyman, builder, soldier,
cowboy, sailor, slaver, torturer, executioner
with her winning sales exec smiles and seductive ways…
& the various types of fella are roped in
and pegged out like dirty laundry
hung out to dry on a washing line:
joker, wheeler-dealer, ladies’ man, the silent type; Jack the ripper
Jack the lad, diamond geezer, Johnny lunch bucket, family man;
incorrigible bachelor, perfect gent; head-butting nutter, upper class twit;
harmless drunk, helpless nerd, boy band reject, dumb jock, seven-stone-weakling, nervous wreck
salt of the earth; wife batterer, drug addled waif; self-lover, self-loather alike,
every neighbor who mows his lawn in shirt sleeves every sunny Sunday afternoon….
Give ‘em all enough rope
& sure as eggs is eggs
Sure as night follows day
Sure as hell, in the end,
the scissors or the dump or the drying out clinic
will find them out and reel them back in again.
The Fates have a single eye between them
that you can borrow when you watch TV
through which you see their work in rosy light
and feel assured that all is right.
(32)
The Fates poke about Peleus like urologists,
boney fingers fingering his prostate and prick
& predict a son…
“A nasty foul-tempered piece of work,
with a weakness for war for pay and young girls,
Sonny-boy will set her hair alight
and laugh as his boys rape the princess,
and by way of a grand finale,
conclude the proceedings
with a sharp knife-stroke across the throat,
mercy of sorts,
and will toss her atop the bonfire
of other burning bodies
in the charred vanquished village,
an Elvis-style snarl on his lips,
and will wipe the blood from his medals
and move on his troops.
*
‘What did Daddy do in the war, Grandpa?’
a wide-eyed granddaughter will one day inquire….”
(33)
Death plants her scythe on the stone floor,
scraping the rusty blade back and forth across the flagstones
& tapping a single impatient foot,
scissors snipping like gypsy castanets,
waiting for them to heed her Siren call…
Peleus won’t go…
Long since lost to a stroke,
Thetis dribbles
and wets her wheel-chair.
No longer with us anyway, poor dear.
(34)
Back in the good old days, when hearty fun
could be had by cowherds splashing water on giggling smocked girls
from the water trough or the bucket drawn from the well,
and dirty children’s feet dangled in clear streams
as summer sun cast a golden hue over the growing corn,
all was well. Till the wars came
and the boys came back in pine-boxes
or with condoms and nylons and sticks of gum in their pockets,
PTSDs and a thing about guns,
whistling at the legs of passing Penelopes
put to work in the munitions factories, GI brides
too impatient to wait for their heroes to come home.
Any passing yank will do.
And then the Bomb with its grim exclamation point of a cloud
saying “What the fuck!” “Everybody’s going to die.”
“Best drop out, get stoned and laid.”
And the workers turned out of factories and pits
by robots, outsourced child labor, global warming,
hopped up on prescription drugs to ease their pain,
riot now and then and are beaten down by police.
Things go from worse to worse, No bottom lies in sight.
Only ourselves to blame. We do nothing to avert the decline.
(35)
No wonder then the gods
don’t drop in on our wedding feasts
that often these days, don’t much fancy
being seen hanging out
with the likes of us,
bar the occasional dream.
[…] Epilogue Parts 30-35 […]