Zoo

A butler opens the door

After having arranged the furniture just right.

The cooks are in the kitchen

Picking at their pots

Grinding spices.

The Viscount and Lady

Are speaking in the Drawing room

As the servants all listen carefully

To see if the turf was rolled out just right

The little tree swings placed just right—

I’m sorry, the carpets cleaned and couches plumped.

 

Everything must be just precise

For the engagement to be cheerful.

One mishap,

A little too much savory in a dish

Or a little too much thyme in a soup

Could ruin the evening

And therefore ruin the courtship patterns

Of these dignified beasts.

 

Understand, this is not communist literature.

It is, rather, a fact that every butler,

Cook and personal servant might enjoy.

Shoulders

In daily life

Cultures kiss on the cheek.

Cultures shake hands.

Cultures hug.

 

Though, there is one form of address

That is perfectly acceptable in all cultures.

A hand shake, and firm grasp on the shoulder.

Nothing is quite so loving as this gesture

Found throughout human civilization;

Westerners can interact with completely isolated tribes

With this gesture, and it is still understood.

Most likely because the shoulder and hand

Are the least vulnerable parts of the body.

A hand can fight

And a shoulder is like an armor plate.

 

A man who knows too much fighting might disagree

But I would recommend him to find any place

On the human body that is less vulnerable

Than the shoulder or hand.

It is why our war hand extends in hand shakes

And our hands touch shoulders.

Of course, in violent cultures

Anything you extend to your neighbor is vulnerable

To attack.

Perhaps we should consider this

A warning, how shoulders are vulnerable

Only in a culture where we all feel vulnerable.

 

So, perhaps a culture that doesn’t even allow

Shoulders to be touched

Or a culture where shoulders cannot be touched

Is a culture that one can suspect ill or wrongdoing.

 

Gestures such as cupping a hand over another’s

Shaking hands, or shoulder touching

Are good, because it builds trust in a community.

Those who say, “Don’t touch me,”

Do not trust you.

Rather, they hate you

Because they themselves feel vulnerable to attack.

 

With that said, shoulder grasping and hand shakes

Are perfectly reasonable touching spots

In civilized society.

There is nothing more without sex than a shoulder

Being touched by a hand.

Nothing less offensive, for the gesture

Cannot be construed intimate

As, like I said, the shoulder is our least vulnerable place.

 

And frankly, America is a place where

It is inappropriate to touch shoulders.

It might be why I do not like it.

A Whole Wall is Filled

Poetry is in high demand;—

A whole wall is filled.

Mine, mine, for my own foolishness

Are not there.

 

A family telling me I am wasting my time…

Everyone telling me I have no future.

Already giving up on me as lost

Because I took a calculated risk…

I dared to have what everyone else could.

I begin to believe them

And on the eve of every success

I threw down my reigns

And halted the course.

 

I cannot make it too easy.

Am I Jude or a Prince of Tyre?

Metaphorically speaking

I could be neither nor both.

I could be living out a vision—

About to get the success

I dare not even covet…

 

No, I rather dread success.

But, to eat from this labor…

Sorrows nary found—

A few humble devotees

To my religion of Christ

Who do not believe in my Fairy Tales…

Rather I would want them to have the peace

I have when listening to The Silmarillion.

 

Rather, the trauma from the trenches

Forced his mind into strange places.

Broke him… sweat and blood

Bayonets and fractured bones

Bullets. Heads splitting

Arms severed, entrails gorged by lead.

All there in those miserable trenches

Of World War One—

The war we’d rather forget—

Where Tolkien wrote his first stories.

 

For me it was much the same.

Though I hadn’t fought in any war.

No… rather, it was a car accident.

Bloody it was. It set me on this course.

The violence tasted

Needed to come out.

 

It was asked by my friend J.D.

“I don’t know what God would say about

“This Silmarillion.”

There it is, in words beginning like John’s Gospel.

 

My mind jumped to a thousand metaphors…

Melkor, I have a hunch, was as much Tolkien as

Any of his other inventions.

The dark secrets of such violent fantasies

Is that violence needed to be purged.

There, a man as intelligent as him

Had to use his mind for something

Or else it would break.

Creativity is a gift from God

And MUST, in the life of every genius,

Be exerted to its fullest for Christ.

 

Regardless, I would hope that my reader pleasantly

Sees in my words

The same kinds of things I see in The Silmarillion.

Not that Tolkien or myself were inventing new religions

But rather, must have made something for our minds

In that gorgeous texture—

To occupy, and therefore, make sense out of this violent world.

A world where friends could be taken at a minute’s glance…

 

Everything else that could be said would disturb my current peace.

 

 

Extraterrestrial

What if there were an alien species

Who had religion?

The religion was fine,

It taught them how to get along right.

Say, there was also a primitive race

That was about like the Neanderthal

That never went extinct.

Say it would eat these creatures.

 

The aliens had an advanced moral law

Accompanied by beliefs

That kept them from doing what was morally wrong.

Then, say, one got too caught up in studying pheromones.

It discovered the ripe pleasure of the pheromones

The seemingly endless pleasures.

And, it decided that the religion they created

Suppressed the pheromones.

So, it systematically started wiping out the religion.

Because, to it, the religion was a thought that impeded

Their race.

Therefore, they began to systematically wipe out the religion

Along with their dumber, yet stronger, adversaries

From their little floating disk.

 

Down the line, they began to regulate thought

They began to regulate discussion.

It became a crime to speak

Because it could possibly convince someone,—

Unintentional, but unwanted by the alien society.

The mere fact of persuading

Was a crime, the mere attempt at persuasion was considered force.

Therefore, all talk was regulated.

For, ideas were like a cancer

So therefore, only the carnal mind

Could be legal.

Only the sanctioned and uniform ideas,

Formed by their social engineers,

Could survive.

 

It was a curious little thought.

Such a creature wouldn’t have come from anywhere

But hell.

The Earth and Twenty-Four Worlds

Jesus, on His throne,

Saw upon Earth Broom Crown New

Who sad, lonely,

Needed something edifying

With which to occupy

His troubled mind.

For like Tolkien—

Who had feasted on wordcraft—

By witness of great evil

Thoughts of disturbance were found

When evil first was tastdt.

 

Therefore, Jesus gave Broom his story

Of the Thirteen Kings,

And of the Nethanim

Who would do them battle.

 

All know of Milton’s Paradise Lost

Whom after the fall of Satan’s rebellion

The demons were sent to hell

And took the names of heathen abominations.

However, Thirteen captains were among them

Whom, sent to hell by Jesus,

Sought to return, and, therefore, spread the blood

Of mankind by making seas blood,

To make rains pour down blood,

And to turn the Earth into a bitter hell.

 

These were the Thirteen:

[…]

 

The thirteen led their war against

Men

By working their way back onto the Earth

To, because of Jealousy,

Destroy the Sons of Adam.

 

For twenty-four worlds these thirteen had

Waged their wars, sending many to hell.

Gog, Magog, and Mammongog, so with the twenty-one others—

Lands of Giants beneathen

Our Earthen plane, where the circle of the earth hovers.

Each Earth was saved by Elijah when he came

Until the twenty-fifth,

Where The Word Himself had to come

To accomplish salvation for all mankind.

 

Men, woven through infinite orbs of light—

Each soul with infinite folkstems and infinite earths

Upon the one circle plane of the Earth—

Found themselves attacked by Giants

Of Gog, Magog, and Mammongog

All aught else of the Giants’ lands,

Leagued with the Thirteen Kings

And their hordes of Orcs, Skeletons, Elves, Fairies and Dragons.

These had created their own worlds

The plexes, upon plexes within the Galaxy Rings,

The lifeorbed currencies of Gog, Magog and Mammongog

From which came the Starflesh

And from which came aught wars upon the Earth.

 

Therefore, on this true Earth

Great heroes of mind are risen up in Broom Crown New’s

Fictional Stores— Great metaphors

To defeat the Thirteen,

And their hordes of wicked devices.

 

For the realms of the Twenty-four worlds

One enters is Aesthetic—

One of beauty at match with what is foul.

For created here in Broom’s Secondary Belief

Is a road map for others to follow;

To believe on Christ not because of wisdome

But because of beauty and chastity.

To arm the mind with the weapon of Belief

Against all science, math and vain notions of philosophy,

So that all mankind can know

What beauty is

And on what firm foundation Christ stands,

Who is established by the mere consistency of thought—

That one man can know what another man means

And what is his sense—

By this we know Christ lives

And that without Him,

There can no longer be what is beautiful.

“Why Christ”, A Creed

The LORD repented when He made man.

Satan, fresh from being cast down from his bench—

So the old Fables go—

Came through the abyss to frustrate God’s Creation;

Jealous of us, the LORD’s creation. To kill us.

And, being that we were new, and like little children

The temptation was put forth.

We, who are made in God’s image

Bearing the likeness of God the Creator Himself.

 

We like children staring at a burning torch

Were tempted to place our fingers on the wick.

Place we did, and it set us ablaze.

God saw that we had sinned…

That the sin had wrought death

And God, fashioning His living clay,

Forged the Law through Moses.

Yet, that law was insufficient.

It had been so

That every man, woman and child were condemned to death.

For Satan was too formidable a foe

And men had not faith enough to beat him.

 

Therefore, after marring the clay—

For we are clay worthy of God to fashion

A lump with which He can forge,

A free and worthy lump for God to fashion

Into beings fit for a kingdom—

Yes, after marring the clay,

The LORD took upon us a new lump,

The New Creature,

The New Creation,

The New Man,

And fashioned us after His Son

The Word Made Flesh.

For God, seeing that Satan was too formidable

Must needs now fashion a lump

Himself, and place His Son upon the potter’s wheel

Not we, but He, Who submitted to the fashioning hands of the

Most High Living God.

And fashioned, we now are represented by the Son of God

So our souls can have reconciliation with the Living God.

 

Why do the heathen, then, say,

“Why Christ?”

When Satan is too formidable a foe for each of us?

Each of us, against a Prince,

When we were but slaves.

How can we resist a Prince?

Only through another Prince;

For Satan is the Prince of Thieves

And Christ is our Prince of Peace.

We, now, choose our Prince.

And in choosing,

All are conformed into one of two images.

Either the lump which God had marred

In His faithful hands, and was worth nothing

Or the lump of the Son of God

Which God had fashioned for us

To bear a body worthy of Eternal life

Which cannot sin.

For, we are all sinners, and cannot but sin.

This was the woeful part of God’s design

That men cannot but sin

Because of temptation;

Therefore to resist, Christ was needed.

 

What was a great, and wonderous creation

Was marred by us, and marred by Satan

So that it could not be enjoyed to the extent it was meant to be.

Therefore, we must be conformed into the new man

The Imagebearer of the Christ,

And therefore, be like God

Sinless, which only Christ can be.

For we all sin, but have been fashioned a body

Where Christ was our clay

And that body we take for ourselves

As a crown, should we simply hold onto the confession

Of the Faith in the LORD Jesus Christ, Alpha and Omega,

Amen.