Anti-Faust by Charles Gullans
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You by the fireplace, your glass of whiskey
Set on my mantelpiece, a little frisky
As you are speaking of your long success
And probing in my depths of idleness,
Smooth talker, you, you Shakespeare of men’s hearts,
Now turned Catullus of the nether parts,
I hear the offer you are making me,
As crude and brutal as pure sex would be
Without the love that should attend it. You,
First Author of Conversion, know how true
And vulgar images engage weak sense,
Consuming us with promise of the intense
And promises of power. But that’s a lure
I can resist. Why not try something sure
And obvious that no one could refuse,
An endless wallet, say? And I could use
Something much rarer, Father of Alcohol,
A bar companion I could stand at all,
A waiter who refuses tips, a cop
Who calls me sir, an honest body shop.
I should not ask, instead I should be thanking
You for what you have given, Father of Banking,
Father of All Insurance, Uncle Tom’s
And Aunt Jemima’s, Father of Uniforms,
And Dum-Dum Bullets, and Close Order Drill,
And Gatling Guns, you Eater of All Swill.
The gifts I need, I may find yet in time,
And I may not. Yours have their birth in slime
Father of Napalm. Turn away your face,
Finish your drink, and leave my fireplace.
From “Letter From Los Angeles: Poems” (John Daniel: $8.95; 72 pp.; 0-936784-79-2). Gullans, professor of English at UCLA, is the author of several books. His poems have appeared in many literary periodicals, including Poetry, Michigan Quarterly, Paris Review and others. 1990, Charles B. Gullans. Reprinted by permission of John Daniel and Company.
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