Authors: Tom Sleigh
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into reactions of horizon-shrouding dust whipped by the hot winds of contingency.
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Books by Tom Sleigh
POETRY
Station Zed
Army Cats
Space Walk
Bula Matari/Smasher of Rocks
(Limited Edition)
Far Side of the Earth
The Dreamhouse
The Chain
Waking
After One
ESSAYS
Interview with a Ghost
TRANSLATION
Herakles by Euripides
Graywolf Press
Copyright © 2015 by Tom Sleigh
This publication is made possible, in part, by the voters of Minnesota through a Minnesota State Arts Board Operating Support grant, thanks to a legislative appropriation from the arts and cultural heritage fund, and through grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Wells Fargo Foundation Minnesota. Significant support has also been provided by Target, the McKnight Foundation, Amazon.com, and other generous contributions from foundations, corporations, and individuals. To these organizations and individuals we offer our heartfelt thanks.
Published by Graywolf Press
250 Third Avenue North, Suite 600
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55401
All rights reserved.
Published in the United States of America
ISBN 978-1-55597-698-9
Ebook ISBN 978-1-55597-900-3
2 4 6 8 9 7 5 3 1
First Graywolf Printing, 2015
Library of Congress Control Number: 2014948532
Cover design: Kyle G. Hunter
Cover photo: TJ Blackwell,
Sulaymaniyah City Limits, Iraq
. Used with the permission of Getty Images.
For Sarah
A Short History of Communism and the Enigma of Surplus Value
“Let Thanks Be Given to the Raven as Is Its Due”
The Animals in the Zoo Don’t Seem Worried
From the Ass’s Mouth: A Theory of the Leisure Class
Party at Marquis de Sade’s Place
Songs for the End of the World
Let the smells of mint go heady and defenceless
Like inmates liberated in that yard.
Like the disregarded ones we turned against
Because we’d failed them by our disregard.
Seamus Heaney, “Mint”
I’m driving past discarded tires,
the all night carwash dreams
near Green-Wood Cemetery where
the otherworld of Queens
puts out trash—trash of Murder, Inc.,
trash of heartbeat
in recycled newspapers where
Romeo and Juliet meet.
So much thorny underbrush,
so much ice overgrowing
my windshield until frost shields a buck
behind a billboard forest
selling someone’s half-dressed daughter.
She melts into the defroster
roaring like the rich guys’ helicopters
at the Wall Street heliport,
rotoring down through skyscrapers
where torchsong lipstick smears
onto a handkerchief and starched collar.
But in my face snow blizzards
up from sixteen-wheelers and
three crows clot against limbs
downswooping, omen of the augurs
that steers the desperate lovers
to a crossroads, right here. And where mobsters
and suicides lie buried
and the radio breaks into a ballad
of Mary Hamilton’s fair body,
but who’s tied it in her apron
and thrown it in the sea,
I’m the quake and shortlived quiver,
the laughter and fractured tale
of her night in the laigh cellar
with the hichest Stewart of a’.
Oh, she’s washed the Queen’s feet
and gently laid her down
but a’ the thanks she’s gotten this night’s
to be hanged in Edinbro’ town.
I’m sitting behind the wheel
of our mutual desire
when the heel comes off her shoe
on the Parliament stair
and lang or she cam down again
she was condemned to dee:
but the instant the news comes on
and drones spy down
on our compulsions, her hands
under my hands wrestle
on the wheel as my foot taps
the brakes, her foot the gas
when out of the gliding dark
I spot his velvet rack.
Last night there were four Toms,
today they’ll be but three:
there was Tom Fool, Sweet Tooth Tom,
Tom the Bomb, and me.
My grandfather on his Allis Chalmers WC tractor, a natural Communist
who hated Communism, is an example of Marx’s proletariat,
though nothing near in his own mind what Marx meant by the masses—
musing in his messianic beard, Marx intuited the enigma
of surplus value that my grandfather understood
from a cutter bar and threshing drum driving into the future
as the combine harvester, thus increasing the bushels
he could harvest each hour, thus increasing his hourly productivity
for each minute expended of muscle foot pound power—
but Marx didn’t foresee, exactly, that the tractor
would develop into a techno Taj Majal, complete
with safety glass cab, filtered AC, a surround sound system
that could rival Carnegie Hall or blast Led Zeppelin
at decibels that left your ears dazed, easily drowning out
the invincible tractor’s roar—and the hydraulics, so swift
you could lift the discs with a touch—and all this,
in the old man’s mind, contrasting with the tractor
he put me on to learn, a four stroke with a crank you had to turn,
cursing and turning until it shook itself and shook itself
like a drunk with the DTs, until clearing the mystification
of its hallucinated roles, the tractor refused to sing the song
of its own reification and hiccuped and lurched into the real.
I’d climb onto the iron seat with a threadbare pad
that made my ass sweat, a jug of iced tea wrapped in burlap,
a bandana knotted to keep dust out of my mouth, goggles
snapped onto my face like an ideologue’s dream so that I saw
the fields foursquare as I contour-plowed acre after acre
unfolding before me with such dialectical rigor
that the ground of being would hold still forever, never blowing
into reactions of horizon-shrouding dust whipped by the hot winds of contingency.
Such a theory Marx made to argue the enigma into sense—
and not just for himself but for the eponymous masses!
But my grandfather’s big nose and wary drinker’s eyes keep breaking through
the mask and posing an alternative enigma: what if his surplus value
led him not to solidarity with the worker but made him into a Kulak
who must be killed? So the locomotive pulls out
of the Finland Station, so the colors red and white
make uniforms for themselves: Lenin. Trotsky.
Moth-eaten Czar Nicholas. Technicolor Rasputin.
The ones who stood in front of Kresty Prison
for three hundred hours. But the colors saw them coming—
and wore the ones who wore them to rags.
But fast forward a hundred years, my grandfather dead for fifty,
and there, in a window on Fifth Avenue, the enigma
hides itself in the headless, sexless torso of a mannequin
as a fly lands on its finger, the window shattering
to a thousand windows in the lenses of its eyes.
And all the while the enigma, like the embalmed body of Lenin,
keeps on breathing through his waxworks face.