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KINGDOM OF RATS
Home is where I want to be
But I guess I’m already there — ‘This must be the place’, Talking Heads Everyone hates a bore Everyone hates a drunk Everyone hates a sad professor I hate where I’ve wound up. — ‘Sad professor’, REM
Father, I have my kingdom of rats.
In some rented room — the basin stained like a smoker’s teeth — in its crawlspaces where I hunt, in cupboards I root, there is first the unmistakable smell of rat. They scatter royal droppings and flout their despised life. When I stagger through sleep to piss in dream, a rat clatters or drags its belly and disappears God knows where down holes gnawed against hope through hardboard, mortar, stone. And all is still. Then it is morning, or evening. The sky, diesel. Summer. But the homeless burn plastic against the cold. They circle and mutter below my window. Impeachments float up to me, drift as if through sleep, fade then rise, and rise, then are still. But tomorrow, father, tomorrow an accusation will rise again, an acrid reminder flung at the world from a fight between husband and wife who every day below my window salvage dinner from garbage. Father, I do not care now how easily irony comes to me; do not care to hesitate and turn from statement; do not care to embrace nuance, the difficult art of infinite politesse; or the wry, powerful indifferences that beckon as our lives grow small and sad each night, our minds hardwired for and bristling at the least drop of an inflection, and gurgling at the quotidian of our Cape Town we shore up — hope against all hope that it is the least bit monument to our silence, our intellects founded on hesitancy, on the heroic gaze turned from the breasts and cocks washed at streams along our Sunday walks * * * From my neighbour below, the indiscriminate thump of R&B 20 years old, or a brash, ignorant new music. And the heaving approaching orgasm as she fucks another man today. I wish for her voracity, her abandon. Or his sinecure. And grip myself in a lounge without thought where slow comes a death as I fry my brains on chatter: televison, the drug of the nation. Father, try as I do, I can give no full tongue to this verse: a stingy square where Yeats and fucking Eliot still ricochet from walls and stone. These aridities. Where no one will enter for rest, my verse no garden. No sound of the autochthon. No tourist destination offering roast peacock and all the other scars of curios frozen in their craze. * * * Autumn perhaps. For weeks I leave anti-coagulant. The poison disappears and I measure out more and more, as I imagine I feed a colony of rats melting from the inside until they are no more but stain and fur. Underneath my room, father, lines of maggots advance and the catacombs expand. One hot day there is a rat fighting off its death, blood smears on the linoleum, the thing sluggish and cowering in the right angle where a cupboard meets the floor. I write this as it mewls behind me, counting quatrains until I’ll lift it with a spade and feel its cold tail draw one last shiver as it curls weakly at my wrist. * * * Weak light. In Cape Town’s failing sun, pied crows wheel and dip, dart at and cajole each other, then fall fast behind a sheen of leaves — tall bluegum that now ready themselves to suck in in imperious draughts, still slow in coming, winter’s rain. One crow shoots into sight again then tumbles, a stray, black barb against the impossible blue sky. So the birds play out autumn, dusk falling fast each day. Along a wall some form of ivy plays its role in turning red. This city that will not be my own. Father. Comrade. Whomever you are unlikely interlocutor, how many exiles will the heart endure? And Ambition? When no line is ever equal to this or to that? To the suburb lost under fog; to the hush of cars under soft rain; to the impossible green of the oak leaf wet with rain or the clarity in summer smudged by wind and dust; no line equal to the blood warmth from a dead rat’s cavity breathing to anyone who cares its terrible soul. No line ever equal to what is said or remains unsaid as every night a million scabs harden, and the poison thins and retreats. No measured tone ever solace or equal to impossible angers. No line no line ever father antidote as everyday I am poisoned by the startled look the clutch at a bag the acid of fear; in every quotidian day obliterated — one more of a kingdom of rats. * * * At the mouth of the subway close to my block, I hesitate at a garbage bag, discarded and torn, the promise only of pages I find in my own hand – junkmail, the rot of food. And a rat that darts into the brush past a pile of rank human shit. I heave my rucksack up, clutch at groceries and walk through, glad to be home, glad for rest, for sleep, or night’s huddle over a desk doing nothing calming the world’s oldest anger. Or I cook or buy chickens and throw them out, throw out loaves of bread, half full bottles of wine knowing I feed no one and nothing but the bitter — that face I dare not lose, for I am harsh. * * * My house decays, my mind grows squalid. Squalid. And heaped with the news of the world from last year, unclipped, unread. My gut fat with comfits, it knows no poverty. And father, God’s Avenger, you swoop through my dreams and turn it to nightmare. Always. I wake and curse God for this dread heavy as an indictment, a debt to and dread of the world. * * * Grime thickens in the corner, cats’ hair, rat’s ear, a dry gecko hunted and gutted a year ago and left uneaten by the cats; collections of bottles collecting patina, film, crust. I freeze between kitchen and lounge, not knowing why I came here, to this room or that corner, thinking now of adjectives piling up behind me: unrealised promise; aspirant of fourteen years; choked; piss-stained crotch. I’ll half look behind me, shrug and brush ash from my shirt, pick at dried fat from last night’s meat wolfed down: lust, then guilt. These years. All these years father, is the cancer eating at you, and the time bomb ticking, are these my heirlooms? * * * And who now will be my comrade? Accept this dry aloe of verse, everyone weaned on talkshows? And turned from the world to care in neat rooms for personal accounts well-cut and quaint as an English garden, delighted in a cube of sunlight? I know the tumour, have watched its protozoan crawl, its slow ambition. Know its law: negation. I abandon myself to its wiles. But, father, I still want it all, for all. And want to eat not inherit the earth. To deny bitterness is no release, for the knife that cuts the cancer, brings its own. |
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© 2008, Rustum Kozain Publisher: First published on PIW, |
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