[Followers of my work may know that I ‘have a thing’ about ‘plane coming into land’ poems. To my mind these are the modern versions of the railroad-track poems and songs of the early to mid-20th century or of the ‘fear of shipwreck’ motif in the erotic poetry of Ancient Rome. Different from railroad poems, however, which tend to follow a highly predictable rhythm, ‘plane coming into land’ poems veer from cacophony into eerie calm, with unexpected line breaks and cross-cutting shifts of rhythm, before thrillingly but anti-climactically touching down. It is, therefore, much harder to get them right.
Fortunately, I am helped in my latest outing into this nascent subgenre by my beautiful invented assistants—Zhenya and Kseniya—in particular, Kseniya, who provides a little added in-flight turbulence with her mock rendition of Emma Lazarus’s iconic Statue of Liberty poem. Apologies to anyone who may be offended by this.
I am letting these mischievous characters get the better of me a little and take control of ‘my’ poem. But I am very happy to cede to their will. I like trying to write in voices that are not entirely my own. ]
Kseniya’s Song to Liberty
‘Our wingéd legs span oceans’
Kseniya opines, as pilots
turn the engines off
and they descend
graceful in air
over the statue raised to liberty
into the airport named for the slain
president. Kseniya refuses
to belt up, or take her seat,
or take the miniature
of vodka from her mouth.
“Here stands a bitch on heat,
a mother-fucking mother of all
orgasms achieved
across the seas.
My headlight eyes look up
to you and roll
in swoon that’s fake
and snare your storied deeds,
with copper and aplomb,
dumbed voice and puckered lips.
From fabled ancient lands, weary,
impoverished and breathless,
we set foot on your fertile over-
peopled soil to suck the life-blood
from it and breathe our poisoned breath
over your young, our way
lit by your horny lady in the harbor
and the smoldering torch she bears
to tempt the huddled sailors,
sirens, slaves,
far from their homes
to tempt the seas and dash perhaps
their hopes and limbs on rocks
that are no more their own.”
*
Zhenya stirs from sleep.
She’s slept the whole flight through.
“You got that memory stick?”
Kseniya: “Course I do.”
[…] Section 10 – Hymn to Liberty […]