War of the Foxes. Richard Siken

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War of the Foxes - Richard Siken

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man there, solid on his feet, on solid ground, in

      a field fully flooded, enough light to see him clearly,

      the light on his skin and bouncing off his skin.

      He’s easy to desire since there’s not much to him,

      vague and smeary in his ochers, in his umbers,

      burning in the open field. Forget about his insides,

      his plumbing and his furnaces, put a thing in his hand

      and be done with it. No one wants to know what’s

      in his head. It should be enough. To make something

      beautiful should be enough. It isn’t. It should be.

      The smear of his head—I paint it out, I paint it in

      again. I ask it what it wants. I want to be a cornerstone,

      says the head. Let’s kill something. Land a man in a

      landscape and he’ll try to conquer it. Make him

      handsome and you’re a fascist, make him ugly and

      you’re saying nothing new. The conqueror suits up

      and takes the field, his horse already painted in

      beneath him. What do you do with a man like that?

      While you are deciding, more men ride in. The hand

      sings weapon. The mind says tool. The body swerves

      in the service of the mind, which is evidence of

      the mind but not actual proof. More conquerors.

      They swarm the field and their painted flags unfurl.

      Crown yourself with leaves and stake your claim

      before something smears up the paint. I turned away

      from darkness to see daylight, to see what would

      happen. What happened? What does a man want?

      Power. The men spread, the thought extends. I paint

      them out, I paint them in again. A blur of forces.

      Why take more than we need? Because we can.

      Deep footprint, it leaves a hole. You’d break your

      heart to make it bigger, so why not crack your skull

      when the mind swells. A thought bigger than your

      own head. Try it. Seriously. Cover more ground.

      I thought of myself as a city and I licked my lips.

      I thought of myself as a nation and I wrung my hands,

      I put a thing in your hand. Will you defend yourself?

      From me, I mean. Let’s kill something. The mind

      moves forward, the paint layers up: glop glop and

      shellac. I shovel the color into our faces, I shovel our

      faces into our faces. They look like me. I move them

      around. I prefer to blame others, it’s easier. King me.

      I cut off my head and threw it in the sky. It turned

      into birds. I called it thinking. The view from above—

      untethered scrutiny. It helps to have an anchor

      but your head is going somewhere anyway. It’s a matter

      of willpower. O little birds, you flap around and

      make a mess of the milk-blue sky—all these ghosts

      come streaming down and sometimes I wish I had

      something else. A redemptive imagination, for

      example. The life of the mind is a disappointment,

      but remember what stands for what. We deduce

      backward into first causes—stone in the pond of things,

      splash splash—or we throw ourselves into the future.

      We all move forward anyway. Ripples in all directions.

      What is a ghost? Something dead that seems to be

      alive. Something dead that doesn’t know it’s dead.

      A painting, for instance. An abstraction. Cut off your

      head, kid. For all the good it’ll do ya. I glued my head back

      on. All thoughts finish themselves eventually. I wish

      it were true. Paint all the men you want but sooner or

      later they go to ground and rot. The mind fights the

      body and the body fights the land. It wants our bodies,

      the landscape does, and everyone runs the risk of

      being swallowed up. Can we love nature for what it

      really is: predatory? We do not walk through a passive

      landscape. The paint dries eventually. The bodies

      decompose eventually. We collide with place, which

      is another name for God, and limp away with a

      permanent injury. Ask for a blessing? You can try,

      but we will not remain unscathed. Flex your will

      or abandon your will and let the world have its way

      with you, or disappear and save everyone the bother

      of a dark suit. Why live a life? Well, why are you

      asking? I put on my best shirt because the painting

      looked so bad. Color bleeds, so make it work for you.

      Gravity pulls, so make it work for you. Rubbing

      your feet at night or clutching your stomach in the

      morning. It was illegible—no single line of sight,

      too

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