Home Planet News

a journal of literature & art

10-Used

Used, Good Condition

They’re more fables than stories –

he keeps referring to “the Tyrant”

and “henchmen.” The characters,

all very small-town, seem to want to

walk on all fours, if that’s

what Aesop creatures do, and talk like them,

naturally,

univocally. They cheered

the Tyrant, but that’s all in the past;

now nuclear weapons

a few miles east and west

of the village keep them honest.

(Some strangers appear, presumably

the heroes; seem human, don’t talk much.)

One or two critics

at the time spoke of kitsch, but

the guy who wrote the intro

dismisses them; he mentions all the right

Parisian names.

What bothers me, beside the brown and brittle

pages, is that everything is past –

in both text and intro

the Tyrant and his henchmen won’t

be back. A laundress, the blacksmith

say “guilt” at one point but

what’s going on is innocence. A sort of

fog seems to settle

over the words; the spine flakes.

So – back where it was

for more dust? It isn’t Ionesco or Beckett,

and one has to cull

before everything goes. Sometimes I browse

my own shelves without wanting to read.

Frederick Pollack

Home Planet News