Monday, May 12, 2014

Klonopin, Beer, and a Big Raspy Brrrr of Lip Music (To Thee & Thine)

Dr. Moore

(c) 2014

I.

Tired as I am
Afraid to seek newer worlds
Lest they betray me as the coward
That I am

Not really a coward, just a dissatisfied tyrant
We know

When Dante found himself at the tail-end of hell
When Virgil recommended him to Beatrice

Such things hold no voice in the loud world of our lives

We are alone

~ Edward Moore

Many people claim to love a resounding success story. But what the majority of our sadistic fellows really enjoy is a pitiful downfall from dizzying heights of success and/or happiness (the two not always being concomitant, but that's another topic). When I told my best friend recently about an old love that had (so I thought) come back into my life, he said, "Damn! That's awesome. Let's go grab a beer." However, when the thing fell apart, when the ship went down, my friend was all ears; he couldn't wait to hear all the details of my shattered emotions, my disappointed hopes, my complete loss of confidence in my ability to judge those inscrutable 'signs' that set so many lovers adrift in a sea of pseudo-amorous logoi. I say pseudo-amorous because this lady rightly pointed out that I was, so to speak, in love with an earlier version of her -- of about twenty years earlier. No amount of sound reasoning can allay the onset of violent emotion; no level of insight is capable of kicking the rational principle in our soul into high gear ...

Idealized woman is as old as Homer. In Dante's Commedia, Beatrice was the very pinnacle of femininity deified; the lure of the sexual was entirely absent, for she was (to Dante) a being beyond his ability to possess. Eve, in Milton's unequaled masterpiece Paradise Lost is, besides Satan, the most human; she is, however, overtly sexual (especially in Milton's description of her luscious untamed hair) -- and when she drops the little crown of flowers that Adam made for her, we feel our hearts go out to the poor adoring sod ... and we witness, in the finest poetry ever written, the shattering of the heart that lost or irrevocably altered love can cause ...

Yet at the end of Milton's poem, Adam and Eve walk, hand-in-hand, out into the barren world, where they must endure, together. And we know the rest.

But a question that struck me the first time I read Paradise Lost was: Do Adam and Eve ever recapture anything, even a flitting ghost of a symbol, of their paradisaical love? Genesis, of course, is no help. Milton, as only the greatest of poets do, leaves us to our own imaginings ...

Of course, in the Septuagint translation, we get (in Gen 4:25) the phrase sperma heteron in reference to Seth. The Gnostics made much of this, since heteros can mean "other" or "different," but also "alien," in the sense of absolute other. Sethian Gnosticism owes much to this passage. Our modern sensibilities, which lead us to wonder just how much Adam and Eve loved each other, simply get left to the whirling dust of ages past.

The 'success' of the great epic comes much, much later, with the advent of Christ and His Passion, etc. ... But at the level of merely human life (by which I mean the lives of those of us who seek a warm body to embrace at night, with a mind capable of enduring a bit of Orff's Carmina Burana before the final drooling snuggle of slumber) there is little edification in the Genesis narative.1

A retreat, comforting as it is, into past literature(s), sometimes sets the pained soul at ease, knowing through echoes from the past that others have (if not actually experienced) at least imagined the sufferings that we endure on this very day. Alone.

Sometimes, however, when a hurt, a lacertation, an emotional scourging, is too great to bear, we blacken a pure white screen with words meant for someone we know will never read them.

II.

Serene will be our days and bright,
And happy will our nature be,
When love is an unerring light,
And joy its own security.

~ William Wordsworth

In Alcoholics Anonymous the "Serenity Prayer" is said, constantly. It irritates me to no end. The refrain from The Beatles' song "Across the Universe" ("Nothing's gonna change my world") is far more fitting for lost souls, languishing amidst a beauty they cannot possess. 'Accept the things I cannot change'!!! Bullshit. I then become a machine, processing "life on life's terms" (another favorite saying of those cultish barbaroi) without any 'input' of my own, other than mute acceptance and an impotent humility that turns me into a uniformed officer of the Court of Sobriety. So what then?

Love lost, denied, or given briefly and then taken away ... These are the worst punishments this pathetic life has to offer, especially the latter. Love is no "unerring light," it is an obligation, one that allows the other to make demands upon the weaker partner, by whom I mean, the one who is most in love. Equality, there is none; companionship means nothing more than sharing material burdens. Sex is a relief from stress, not a commingling of two bodies sharing one soul. The beloved has an ethical responsibility to the lover: not to destroy, dishearten, nor even to disappoint. Love raises us up from the level of beasts. But all around me, I see just that: ugly, ignorant, stunted abortions. I severely insulted one of them today, dug deep and even threatened violence ... And I am happy about it!

.....

Happy marriages are simply the result of years of mutual acculturation. How well do I know the one with whom I share my body? A ticklish spot here, a cute little dimple there ... But what of the soul?

Joy is nothing but a myth dreamed up by miserable old folks watching their grandchildren play, and pretending that these brats will grow up to change the world, for the better. Only the leg- and arm-bearing spermata do not. They carry guns and wear uniforms that displace their personality with ideological symbolism, of which most of them know nothing. If I see a yellow ribbon on your SUV, or a "Support Our Troops" bumper sticker, I'm going to cause my old friend the red to flow ...

Great job, you breeders. You've filled the world with sacks of piss and shit, with intellect occupied by sports, vehicles, and bad music ... oh, and gadgets. Let us not forget gadgets.

Security? In the depths of my own mind, especially after some booze and pills.

III.

Grow old along with me!
The best is yet to be,
The last of life, for which the first was made:
Our times are in his hand
Who saith, 'A whole I planned,
Youth shows but half; trust God: see all, nor be
afraid!'

~ Robert Browning

My ex-wife once told me of a vision she had of the two of us, walking hand-in-hand along the path of eternity. But some drunken ramblings of mine, some blackouts, a bit of the old spitter-spatter, caused her to abandon me, as so many others have done since then.

But God listens. And some time ago, in the deepest despair I have ever known, I said a prayer, in which I handed myself over to Him. I recanted almost immediately. Sincerity, however, is powerful. God doesn't want fearful beings for His world. He wants courageous, self-accepting, loving, idealizing, persistent, intellectual, soft and gentle, compassionate, humorous, lovers of this world ... the glory of which will never pass away. For our memories are eternal. This coming from a chronic alcoholic, who should be dead by now. Thank my Lord that I am typing right now, as angry as I am at ...

She knows.

Notes:

1. Unless one makes the intellectual adventure into Harold Bloom's and David Rosenberg's The Book of J (New York: Grove Weidenfeld 1990). Rosenberg's translation/rendering of Gen 4:28: "Now Adam still knew his wife in the flesh; she bore a son, called him Seth -- [and in the voice of Eve] 'God has settled another seed in me ...'." (p. 68). That, to me, is indescribably beautiful.

Act 17

He seemeth to be a setter forth of strange gods

~ Acts 17:18 (KJV)

I.

Act 17 of a battered life, bestrewn with emotional destruction, an emulation of certain 'greats' notwithstanding an unpleasant vapor exudes from the fabric of my spiritual clothing ... a fine and dandy cloth clothing the self ... torment of the closet ... the space in which the PROSOPON is donned for the sake of those (the royal) we seek to impress (pun intended) ...

Presumptuous ties to another life whisking itself away beneath our tobacco-infused nose ... Streets opening onto a promise long ago drained of significance.

The school at night, a hall, a lack of responsibility and there it was: rip it out, tear it out, take it easy ... There's more where that came from. Brown hair encasing me, there was infinity ... No one expected that morning would bring a hung-over breakfast ...

Rumpled clothing is sexy on a goddess ... Talk of Burgess and the Malayan trilogy ... My eggs came late ... she did not ... Exasperated by the beauty of early morning with momentous appeal ... We danced in the rain on the way home, just to enjoy something ...

I worried about my silk polo, but she did not ... and it went ...

To be placed in an arena of conflict, lovingly, bestrewn with roses on a silk-sheeted bed, rising to the occasion with words taken from several poets and being told 'speak in your own words' and then trying, failing, getting a smile, an embrace and more ... No calloused indifference to personality ...

Speaking in nadsat after reading A Clockwork Orange together ... Not the most romantic of texts, but undeniable evidence of her uniqueness:

JENNIFER

My world, my life, my love ... so long ago ...

A little Edward there might have been. That is over. Hope has departed these lands.

II.

"April is the cruelest month" ... Thus spake Eliot. Sure, it rained a lot. Down went my ship, and with it the hope of renewal, revision, visionary sharing ...

... how lovely to the eyes, lively to the mind. To [the] fruit she reached; ate, gave to her man, there with her, and he ate.

Things have been shared with me: nothing of importance. DEBORAH. Blastings of mouth and muscular ripplings of legs (she ran a lot) ... MARILYNN. Tired requests for massages, 'Did you bring in the mail?' ...

Meanwhile, as the 4th Brandenburgh Concerto played, I donned heavy gloves and saved a poor bat, trapped in our country home ...

III.

Yes, I am a saint ... a saint who drinks, fucks, intimidates the weak, uses big words against the strong -- and thrives.

I linked myself with a pretty little sublunary deity simply because of her boppy blonde curls and efflorescent blue eyes (and slinky body) ... Oh! to my detriment ... LISA.

And I wonder why She (the authentic, autarchic SHE) doesn't love me ...

Who would? I am a draconic riled up purposeless mess of a man seeking nothing but no gainsaying of my proclivities ...

BARBARA. Life, liberty, and the pursuit of loneliness. I remain, however, seeking a hand in mine ... But,

What good woman would give me that?