Michael Simms: Swamp Thing
I wanted to tell you How I grew up outside Houston, the edge Of the suburbs, wandering the woods And bayous, following the railroad tracks Deep into the sugar cane fields, but I kept thinking Of Swamp Thing, a monster, An amalgam of mud and water lilies, Vines and cattails, a dripping thing In human shape living in the swamp, Protecting plants and animals, And I was remembering the deep woods Of oak and sycamore where pools of water Were alive with frogs and minnows, And how if you stood still long enough The frogs sang ohm like an army Of Buddhists and one Sweltering afternoon I watched Two older boys with a net skeining A pond and pulling out fish and Netting a turtle which they beat With sticks until the shell Cracked and the naked turtle writhed And the sun dried its flesh, a wanton Unspeakable crime. And I went home To read my comic book The Swamp Thing in which Dr. Anton Arcane And his nightmarish Army Of Un-Men sought the evil ones Who murdered his wife, and in the middle Of the night my father caught me With a flashlight under the covers, And said we had to talk, and he Accused me of talking back to my mother And when his fist hit my belly I felt it sink deep all the way To my spine, and when he pulled it out I thought I heard a sucking noise Like a boot pulled from mud, And I knew he could no longer hurt me. * The next morning I rode my bicycle to Wolf Corner where coyotes and dogs were Hung on a wooden rack to discourage coyotes From stealing calves, and the story was That Comanches hung scalps There to scare the whites, but The whites came anyway and stayed And my Irish-Cherokee ancestors Ranched there, and later I lay in the dark and thought Of the snapping turtle the boys killed, How it could take off a finger, and An alligator gar, a monster Left over from the dinosaurs, Could rend flesh if you Weren’t careful, but it wasn’t violent. It was almost tender. To show me It didn’t hurt, he did it to himself, Slipping the table knife Into his anus. I was eight. He was the older boy next door. He was my best friend and all I knew of love. Afterwards I went into the woods alone And sat on a log beside the bayou, Watching the slow water with The mud and rotting vegetation, Deer coming to the water’s Edge early in the morning, The possums and foxes, the wild dogs That lived in the woods, free From the leash and chain link fence. I imagined myself a swamp thing, Guarding the trees and animals. But over the next few years, the trees Were toppled and burned In huge bonfires, and Scarlett O’Hara Mansions and Roy Rogers haciendas And Frank Lloyd Wright knockoffs Rose in obscene excess, the stream Channeled through cement pipes To invisibly carry sewage underground. * I mourned for the trees, The possums, the gars, and the turtles. And I lay in the dark defiantly reading With my flashlight under the covers Of Swamp Thing, one of the Elementals Born when a being dies in flames And merges with the Earth, The Elementals became protectors Of plants and animals throughout history, Eventually joining the Parliament of Trees, A group mind of former Elementals. Over time the membership grew with beings Such as Eyam -- a trilobite, Swamp Knucker – a dragon, Bog Venus -- a medicine woman, Ghost Hiding in the Rushes – A 3rd century Chinese sorcerer, And of course, me, Swamp Thing --An early 20th-century scientist. Until recently, the Parliament Was stationed in a grove In Brazil, south of the Tefé River, While our minds dwelled In the realm of the Green. And lying in the dark, with My anus bleeding, throbbing in pain, I imagined myself, one Of the elementals, able to Transcend pain and defend The children. And once United with the Parliament Of Stones, we set out to destroy Humankind for their sins against The Earth. We had to fight off The fungus-based Grey, Invaders from another world Who preached peace while Actually helping humans with Their lies. Our allies were The heavenly power called THE WORD which passed on All their power to Swamp Thing, Me, who refused in the last Second, giving humanity another Chance, a few good people, Mothers and children who Survived the massacre at The hands of THE WORD. And the Parliament of Trees Is now eternally burning In the realm of the Green. -----Copyright 2019 Michael Simms
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A brilliant, stunning poem conjuring the abhorrent, dazzling complexity. It reaches into me to find tenderness. xj
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Hauntingly powerful. Thank you, Mike. This is one of those poems I will keep returning to.
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Thank you, Andrea! I admire your work as well. I’m so glad you’ve continued publishing with AHP. You’re a valuable member of the team!
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I’ve just skimmed Parliament of Trees, and will return to it when I have time to read slowly enough to do it justice.. But WOW … I think you have a brave masterpiece here! Thank you for sharing!!!
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Thank you!
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Sad and wonderful.
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Thank you, Arlene. I admire your poetry a great deal: the precise language, the sad nostalgia, the wicked sense of humor.
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