When we were working on Shocking and Awful, my neighbor, poet Jeanine Vega, said she had an Italian friend who had given her a film he put together from images that he and others had shot in Iraq, before and during the invasion in 2003. He had tried to get it shown in the US, to no avail. I said, well it sounds like something we could include in the Shocking and Awful series. Dario Bellini sent it and it is the last of the 12 part series. Elvira posted a section of it on YouTube and it has had 11,900 viewers and generated a great deal of emotional response. You can see the comments on the YouTube site.
But ya tell me Over and over and over again, my friend Ah, you don’t believe We’re on the eve of impeachment.
Rummie is cryin’ “Waah, I want my Momma!” Hillie’s wastin’ time racing black Obama. The Supreme Court ruled and jacked up the election With politics first… but justice second- There’s Karl Rove and Jeffrey Gannon in Lincoln’s bedroom closet neckin’!
And ya tell me Over and over and over again, my friend Ah, you don’t believe We’re on the eve of impeachment.
Cheney’s blood clots are coagulatin’ Chicken hawks are still escalatin’ Fox is in the hen house, there ain’t no regulatin’ And Nancy Pelosi won’t start investigatin’ And marches alone don’t stop the devastatin’ The evidence is just too damn incriminatin’ Bring the troops back home to our Americanation!
But ya tell me Over and over and over again, my friend Ah, you don’t believe We’re on the eve of impeachment.
Gonzales is lyin’, so is Scooter Libby They’re droppin like flies because of all their fibbies Abramoff, Delay and Kenny Lay are frightened Who is next in line to get an inditement? Bush is readin’ “My Pet Goat” gonna miss all the excitement. The poundin’ of the gavel, Republigoons are sweatin’ Armageddon sick and tired of all their Armageddon.
Yetcha… tell me over and over and over and over again, my friend Ah, you don’t believe We’re on the eve of impeachment. Mm, ya better believe We’re on the eve of impeachment.Dove Cottage by Janine Pommy Vega (for Margaret & Peter)
In 1800 the busy life of the newborn middle class with neighbors dying as they crossed the mountains at night in winter and the eldest daughter seeking out a cloak from the next door neighbor, to search for her parents, thrust at eleven into the adult business of survival
Amidst poets walking eight miles to see if you had another stanza to that poem, or he had an idea, or if she did walking in company around the mere on a cloudy dry day with the robin singing extravagantly the thrush with his head cocked listening for nightcrawlers under the earth in the quiet garden
pulls one out and slams it this way and that against the ground, another tiny murder in the bucolic life When the child workers sleeping inside the cogs of wheels in the machines were let go, no longer needed, someone pointed to the village across the estuary, There, there’s your home, and as the tiny band trooped out the tide rushed in
The middle class supported not by a king but their own consequence Wordsworth writing for his life the populace eating oatmeal bread and hasty pudding the wide view over the lake lending itself to contemplation, a consciousness connected to particularities of nature
particular lemon thyme on the stone walls lady’s smock and lady’s slipper the blue-eyed jackdaw and black headed oyster catcher, until somebody points it out you may not see it The sister and brother, Dorothy and William, love companions busy about survival in the wet cold weather he focused on a thought in mid-air, she papering the bedrooms to keep out the wind,
come at last to this: a daffodil reflecting inner light, the shout of laughter from a dusty couch in a dark room, the singularity of spirit reflecting a totality reverberating like guitar strings at the door
The becks and hows and fells and tarns and crofts and meres of another time leapfrog through literature to the present, the ancient people busy about survival with one syllable place names, geographical landmarks a history of galloping consciousness
wild things brought back to the garden heckberry blossoms, buttercup and orchis brassy rhododendron and azalea taking root under the watchful magpie, the finch and raven the black lambs bleating at heaven’s gate Derision of these people at one’s peril
who opened chinks in the wall of the everyday, who insisted on their visions grew sick for the lack of them persisted in them, eyes far-distanced and heavy-lidded with laudanum, who pursued the dandelion of common prayer. Grasmere, Cumbria, England, May 2007.