Residual Karma
I search for
the ripening remains of what were once desires,
Circling the
place where I forgot some great event
Long ago, when
my wings weren’t black.
The body lives
but the soul is carrion.
In the Aztec
eschaton
To reach their
ultimate annihilation,
The dead must
journey a hard journey
On the other
side of the grave.
I pace that
stony road before the furnace,
A dung beetle
rolling his own corpse.
Well,
Not being is
nothing to be concerned about:
There’s no bad
weather in that abyss,
And lots of
interesting company:
Heroes,
philosophers, saints,
Achilles,
Immanuel Kant, four-sided triangles,
Rabbit-ducks,
Hopping and
paddling through lakes of clover,
Things red and
green all over,
Virtual
particles in perpetual motion,
And even the
edifying notion,
Which should
end this lament.
All these
things aren’t and will be my companions there,
But it’s the
death I live that oppresses me.
Somebody forgot
to turn the lights off.