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SUBURBAN VAMPIRE - THE SONNETS OF MANFRED CLOOTIE
(Reluctantly transcribed by his amanuensis, Sancho
Leperello, who dissociates himself from the author's grandiosity).
I Manfred Clootie, alias Dracula, leech Of the soul, I'll ransack your poor head Until there's nothing in it. I will bleach Your skull, extract your marrow, and unthread Your knotted bowels - none of this in malice, But because it is my nature to x-ray And vivisect. I seek to fill my chalice With your life's blood, and then to walk away Bearing within me that which once was yours Alone, and is now mine. You'll not be aware That your essence now drips from my ample jaws, You'll never know I've eaten you, or care. Your life has meaning now, you may relax; For I've embalmed you in my own syntax. Left to myself I'd lie in bed all day And dream of food that nobody would bring; Whistle sad songs to shoo bad thoughts away And give myself up to remembering; But I am not alone. Quick-spurred by needs Of others up I get, dishevelled, lurch To table; someone pours my tea and feeds Me as I might feed a parrot on a perch. And I go forth, unfruitful, multiplying Hours by coins, compelled to spend my days Divorced from being, endlessly trying To glean, to gather ... There must be other ways For demon poets to guarantee the dinners Of those who see them only as bread-winners. They say I think of no one but myself; But were this true I'd call myself a sage, For everyone, it seems, from giant to elf, Is cursed by altruism; this new age Has gripped their throats. Note the unwillingness To be alone, to tolerate silence; See how they hate the soul's untidiness. They deny death, yet revel in violence. Take me, they say, and make me what you will; Ask me no questions, tell me who I am; Ease my mental ache with a coloured pill. So, if I am all self, then you should not damn But praise me, Manfred Clootie, proper gent, Pickpocket, poet, lecher, heaven-sent. She, my first typewriter, shook and rumbled As she worked, and I yielded to her ways. We fashioned fictions. Frequently she grumbled, And never offered me the slightest praise. She died, I stored her corpse in the garage. My next was like a Siamese cat, bored, Aloof, sleek. We sought to fence the mirage, Bind the rainbow, mechanise the word. Her body now lies next to number one. And they commune in silence while my newest Masters me, soft, silent, strict paragon, An electronic paramour, the truest. I age, she endures, pedantic and terse, Amanuensis, mistress, wife and nurse. My seventh decade looms, and I have reams Of unregarded paper here as spoil; These flat white bones embody all my dreams Enduring as I fade, mocking my toil; Are inkspillers doomed to marinade at last In Satan's vats? That fate is not too stern; For well behind us killers and pederasts, Footpads and frauds must wait in line to burn. We are the very cream of sinners, we Steal from Father Adam himself the right To name; our god is vocabulary. We wallow in a lexical delight. But six long decades! Isn't it the truth That in our dotage we misspend our youth? I remember how lean and dry it looked, The street I lived in, the mean and furtive Houses, the plane trees clawing sky with hooked, Arthritic fingers, lopped for neatness. Forgive Us, they said, prune back our vivacities. But I can neither forgive nor forget. Life's all vendetta against enemies Long dead and buried, gardeners who set Forks in my flesh and tried to fertilise The already fruitful - I'm out to strike Them. Although they're gone, I can victimise Their progeny, but not with axe or pike. Such clumsy hardware looks to me absurd. My weapon is the deadly poisoned word Return to the home page of the Eastern Writers Group |