Monday, January 20, 2014

"Night Gleam"

Over and over thru the dull material world the call is made
over and over thru the dull material world I make the call
O English folk, in Sussex night, thru black beech tree branches
the full moon shone at three AM, I stood in under wear on
the lawn --
I saw a mustached English man I loved, with athlete's breast
and farmer's arms,
I lay in bed that night many loves beating in my heart
sleepless hearing songs of generations electric returning in-
telligent memory
to my frame, and so went to dwell again in my heart
and worship the Lovers there, love's teachers, youths and 
poets that live forever
in the secret heart, in the dark night, in the full moon, year
after year
over & over thru the dull material world the call is made.


16 July 1973

from Mind Breaths, by Allen Ginsberg



The Road Was Dark

THE ROAD WAS DARK, even at six in the evening, and if it held any wonders aside from the odd snug house or the stubble field, she couldn't have said because all that was visible was the white stripe of heaven overhead.  Her horse was no more than a sound and a presence now, the heat of its internal engine rising round her in a miasma of sweat dried and reconstituted a hundred times over, even as she began to feel the repetition of its gait in the deep recesses of her seat and that appendage at the base of the spine her mother used to call the tailbone.  Cousin Robert was some indeterminate distance ahead of her, the slow crepitating slap of his mount's hooves creating a new kind of silence that fed off the only sound in the world and then swallowed it up in a tower of vegetation as dense and continuous as the waves of the sea.  Though it was only the second of October, there had been frost, and that was a small comfort in all of this hurt and upset, because it drew down the insects that a month earlier would have eaten her alive.  The horse swayed, the stars staggered and flashed.  She wanted to call out to Robert to ask if it was much farther yet, but she restrained herself.  She'd talked till her throat went dry as they'd left town in the declining sun and he'd done his best to keep up though he wasn't naturally a talker, and eventually, as the shadows came down and the rhythmic movement of the animals dulled their senses, they'd fallen silent.  She resigned herself.  Rode on.  And just as she'd given up hope, a light appeared ahead.


from the short story "The Doubtfulness of Water: Madam Knight's Journey to New York, 1702"
Tooth and Claw, by T.C. Boyle

Prospect Hill Cemetery, Washington, DC

Monday, January 6, 2014

The "right" Answer

I recall my classes at Harvard.  Some of my students used to regard public policy-making as a matter of finding the "right" answer to a public problem.  Politics was a set of obstacles which had to be circumvented so the "right" answer could be implemented.  Policy was clean--it could be done on a computer.  Politics was dirty--unpredictable, passionate, sometimes mean-spirited or corrupt.  Policy was god; politics, a necessary evil.

I'd spend entire courses trying to disabuse them.  I'd ask them how they knew they had the "right" answer.  They'd dazzle me with techniques--cost-benefit analyses, probability and statistics, regression analysis.  Their mathematics was flawless.  But--I'd ask again--how did they know they had the right answer?

They never did.  At most, policy wonks can help the public deliberate the likely consequences of various choices.  But they can't presume to make the choices.  Democracy is disorderly and sometimes dismaying, but it is the only source of wisdom on this score.

Next to the policy wonk who presumes to know what is best for the public sits the pollster who presumes to be able to tell what the public wants.  The pollster's techniques are just as flawed, and his conceit is no less dangerous to democracy.  The public doesn't know what it wants until it has an opportunity to debate and consider.  Engaging in a democratic process is not like choosing a favorite flavor of ice cream.

Politicians must lead; they must try to educate and persuade.  They must enter into an ongoing dialogue with the public.  No one can discover the "best" policy through analytic prowess; nor is the "best" policy that which happens to be the most popular on a questionnaire.  Democracy requires deliberation and discussion.  It entails public inquiry and discovery.  Citizens need to be actively engaged.  Political leaders must offer visions of the future and arguments to support the visions, and then must listen carefully for the response.  A health-care plan devised by Plato's philosopher-king won't wash.

-Robert Reich, Locked in the Cabinet

The Lincoln

Saturday, January 4, 2014

The Blackbirds Are Rough Today

lonely as a dry and used orchid
spread over the earth
for use and surrender.

shot down like an ex-pug selling
dailies on the corner.

taken by tears like
an aging chorus girl
who has gotten her last check.

a hanky is in order your lord your
worship.

the blackbirds are rough today
like
ingrown toenails
in an overnight
jail--
wine wine whine,
the blackbirds run around and
fly around
harping about
Spanish melodies and bones.

and everywhere is
nowhere--
the dream is as bad as
flapjacks and flat tires:

where do we go on
with our minds and
pockets full of
dust
like a bad boy just out of
school--
you tell
me,
you who were a hero in some
revolution
you who teach children
you who drink with calmness
you who own large homes
and walk in gardens
you who have killed a man and own a
beautiful wife
you tell me
why I am on fire like old dry
garbage.

we might surely have some interesting
correspondence.
it will keep the mailman busy.
and the butterflies and ants and bridges and
cemeteries
the rocket-makers and dogs and garbage mechanics
will still go on a
while
until we run out of stamps
and/or
ideas.

don't be ashamed of
anything; I guess God meant it all
like
locks on
doors.

-Charles Bukowski

Washington, DC