nthposition online magazine

on the question of which thefts are justified: a series of poems after the Tang poet, Meng Jiao

by Kit Kelen

[ poetry - may 08 ]

on plagiarism or on the question of which thefts are justified

the Book of Rites cautions against gnawing bones
you'll notice with dogs how the solitary mutt
thus engaged can make the others greedy

consider the case of babies
they can keep sugared peaches
in the mouth for quite a while

as time passes the flavour goes
but lacking reinforcements they'll
hang on to the thing they've got

watch an old man on his rope bed
reading silently ˆ that's quite a feat

in the Zhuangzi do you know that passage
about 'travelling freely'?
it too needs to be rewritten

in the end words go
they're clean that way
they won't make a gentleman of you

 

the poet feeling sorry for himself

all my heart to copy these poems
for others to read, to hear

sad that the old styles
fall out of fashion

that poems aren't what people want
even the peasants mock poetry

words like snow falling
mind bright as mirror

I hold ice in my hands
not drinking, not even that

cross legged like the Buddha
o where is the way?

see how art must suffer for me
not a single new line today

 

self-exile

I've thought this through
and I've decided to
beat them at their own game
banish myself
why not?
look how it's been

dawn comes
I'm still at the books
even the ghosts start to worry for me

they're dozing off and I'm still at it

heart/mind, the body: what discord

failure tortures the soul till death
only a moment of pain there is
for those who choose the shortest journey

in cassias there are no straight branches
how green the river
how perfect obscurity

 

free ride

twice in my dreams tonight
to Chang'an

I sigh and I sigh
dreams won't take me home
that's just too far
for the sleeper to travel

tears fall uselessly
won't water flowers

perhaps if the morning comes
I'll set out