United States, (b. 1952)
Some Cool
- Animals are the latest decorating craze.
- This little piggie went to market.
- This little piggie stayed home.
- It’s a matter of taste.
- I have this string of pig lights for the tree.
- Each hog is rendered into darlingness,
- rendered in the nerve-dense rose
- of lips, tongue, palm, sole. Of the inside
- of the eyes and nose.
- They wear green bows.
- Driving home these bitterly Michigan nights
- I often pass the silver bins of pigs
- en route to the packing house. Four tiers to a trailer.
- A massive physical wish to live
- blasts out the slits
- as the intimate winter streams in.
- A dumb mammal groan pours out and December pours in
- freezing the vestments of their skin
- to the metal sides, riddling me
- with bleakness as I see it. As I see it,
- it’s culturally incorrect to think
- of this when stringing pig lights on the tree.
- It’s chronic me.
- Our neighbor, who once upon a life
- hauled pigs to slaughter,
- said they are confined in little iron cribs
- from farrowing to finishing.
- Said steel yourself
- this might be unpoetical and spoke
- about electric prods and hooks
- pushed into every hole.
- About: they cried so much he wore earplugs.
- While trimming the tree, I stop to give thanks
- for the gifts we’ve received,
- beginning with Elvis’s Favorite Recipes.
- I’d like to try the red-eye gravy –
- bacon drippings simmered with black coffee…
- “Some had heart attacks. Some suffocated
- from others stacked on top.
- They were pressed in so tight –
- hey, what kind of poetry you write? Well.
- They suffered rectal prolapse, you could say.”
- Why not spend Christmas with Elvis?
- Invite your friends
- to bring their special memories if the King.
- Put a country ham in the oven and some of his songs –
- White Christmas to Blue –
- About: somehow a pig got loose. A sow
- fuzzed with white like a soybean’s husk.
- It was August and she found some cool
- under the truck. When he gave her a Fig Newton
- her nose was delicacy itself,
- ticklish as a lettuce pushed whole into his hand.
- Are You Hungry Tonight?
- I speak from the country of abundance
- curdled brightly in the dark,
- where my ethics are squishy as anyone’s, I bet.
- I’d like to buy the enchanted eggnog fantasies.
- Instead I’m rigging the tree with grim epiphanies
- and thinking myself sad.
- For a gut level of comfort,
- close your eyes, smell the pork chops frying,
- put on “Big Boss Man” and imagine
- the King will be coming any minute.
- “At the packing house, some bucked like ponies
- when they saw the sun. Some fainted
- and lay there grunting to breathe.
- Drivers hooked the downers to the winch
- and tried to pull them through a squeeze.
- Their legs and shoulders tore right off.
- You’d see them lying around.
- After the showers, they turned a hysterical
- raw rose. They shone. The place seemed lit
- by two natural lights, coming from the sky and hogs.
- Pigs are so emotional. They look at the man
- who’ll stun them, the man
- who’ll hang them upside down in chains.
- They smell extinction and try to climb
- the chute’s sides as it moves.
- At the top, the captive bolt guy
- puts electrodes on their heads
- and sends a current through.
- I’ve heard the shock could paralyze
- but leave them conscious, hanging
- by their hocks from the conveyor
- until their throats are slit.
- Pigs have an exquisite will to live.”
- After eight months he quit
- and got a job screwing tops on bottles
- of Absorbine, Jr.
- Now when people ask what kind of poetry I write
- I say the poetry of cultural incorrectness –
- out of step and – does that help?
- I use my head
- voice and my chest voice.
- I forget voice
- and think syntax, trying to add
- so many tones to words that words
- become a world all by themselves.
- I forget syntax
- and put some street in it. I write
- for the born-again infidels
- whose skepticism begins at the soles
- of the feet and climbs the body,
- nerve by nerve. Sometimes I quote
- “At mealtime, come thou hither,
- and eat of the bread,
- and dip thy morsel in the vinegar.”
- Sometimes I compose a moaning section,
- if only for the pigs.
- Like surgeons entering the thoracic cavity – right,
- the heart’s hot den –
- I’ve heard we could slip
- our hands into the sun’s corona
- and never feel a thing.
About the Poet:
Alice Fulton, United States, (b. 1952) is a poet and author of fiction and nonfiction. Fulton is the author of more than eight books, including The Nightingales of Troy, a collection of linked stories (2008) and Cascade Experiment: selected poems (2004). Contributor to magazines, including New Yorker, Poetry, and Georgia Review. Author of short stories, song lyrics, and critical essays. In addition to these, Fulton has written essays and criticism and has been widely praised for her finely crafted and emotionally powerful short fiction.
Fulton has been the George Elliston Poet at the University of Cincinnati, the Roberta Holloway Poet at UC Berkeley, The Michael M. Rea Visiting Writer at the University of Virginia, and a Visiting Professor at UCLA, Ohio State University, the University of North Carolina and Cornell University. [DES-10/19]