Carnevali, Carnevali,
poet of the resistance
you never could resist
your shameless love for the grave
and your beloved hunger for truth.
Oh Gentle Brother to Beauty,
Oh Shameless Sister to Passion
you never did care to resist
that slow blue fate
so common to every angel.
You who loved Rimbaud
could not be saved by him.
You who worshipped Whitman
swallowed his voice deep into your heart and wove his beard upon your soul
but could not, dear Carnevali, be saved by him.
Death cursed your name
and how happily you pissed in his face.
Seizures terrorized your body
but your mind would not relinquish
the wealth of your clairvoyant love.
A young general too impatient
to avoid the front lines
you ordered us to keep language
intense and alive, to prevent
oppression from carving truth
into a coffin, and poetry into a corpse.
Carnevali, Carnevali,
poet of the resistance
magic-eyed muse to the geniuses of your time.
You: who dared to scold Hemmingway and Joyce and Williams.
The shimmer of your spirit still warms horizons
decades beyond the fury of your passage,
resisting the casual chill of obscurity,
declining the sentimental courtesies of tragedy.
(from I Made My Boy Out of Poetry)
Aberjhani