Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Some more (hopefully not awful) poetry

Suits

Mine;
Ruffled about my elbows,
Still creased to previous owner’s shoulders,
Mother-tailored, thread not quite matching,
Loose in the waist, old belt over draw
Ballooning out the legs.
Only $50 dollars at the thrift store.

Across the cold and dark table,
Theirs;
Slim, fitting, immaculate.
Made in Italy, Genoa, France, Singapore,
Anywhere but here.
Pressed and Dry-Cleaned.
They begin:
“So what are your qualifications?”

AJM

Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Some (hopefully not awful) Poetry

The World’s Great Scab

Cutting itself deep
world’s blood drawn
land blackened, hard
Never healing

Moans, grunting
flakes tear at one another
Wails, shrieking pink flesh
bared raw

Congealing bleeding hardening bleeding again
tirelessly, the great scab claws at its self
starving, depleting the world
Never healing

Blessings gifts, regretted
Stars’ tears boil
on backs of the scab
it roams spreads virulent

Billion legged, toothed, fisted beast
self mutilating, plaguing all the earth
Were that God never spoke its name,
Adam.

Karaoke Night

Ice cubes dance in brown and clear liquors
Beneath faces shadowed by overdrawn collars.
Deafening off key lyrics reflecting
shimmering like broken glass,
Fist clenched she bellows a eulogy
To the may haves and never were.
Wrung out melodies unmasked by the dim lighting.
Wraiths, shadows of memory, dance on the walls
Jubilations reserved exclusively for these
Beings of the past,
Mocking the living statues cemented to the bar
A final wail beneath the decrescendo
The music dies.
The absence of applause.


A moment of silence for the departed.

Seven Deadly Sins? Nay, Shakespeare Needs Only One: Jealousy, Iago’s Poison and its Abstract Implications

The immense and hadean world of literary villains is rife with irresistible personalities full of complexities and unanswered questions; however, there is no villain that has so captured the imagination of the world as Iago. Iago shows himself to be a heavily nuanced Machiavellian protégée whose schemes so are encompassing that even the audience falls victim to his wit and guile and whose motivations are so cast in shadow so as to only further damn his nature. However, possibly the most compelling aspect of this luridly deceitful man is just how he causes all that he does, how he causes the death of four people, the wounding of three others, the complete destruction of a man’s soul, and his own descent into madness. One might think that to engineer such a disturbing and varied set of results there would need to be a multidimensional and equally varied scheme; however this is not the case. Iago masterfully engages a single human emotion to bring about all of his ends, but he is only able to do so because of the raging agony of which that same emotion has caused within himself. Like drawing water from a poisoned well, Iago’s uses his own caustic jealousy to envenom nearly every character in the play; consequently, “Othello” and Iago specifically is an exploration of the corrosive nature of jealousy at the self, interpersonal, and communal levels which reveal Iago to not only symbolize jealousy but rather to embody it, prompting implications for an abstractive reading of the play. In order to properly engage these arenas, it is best to begin with the outmost and move towards the personal in much the same way one might trace the epidemiology of a disease.
The first analysis of jealousy working through and in Iago on the communal level comes in his exchange with Barbantio. At first glance this interaction may not seem to be any different than any of Iago’s exchanges, but when analyzed carefully it becomes obvious that Iago’s ploys go beyond that of a single person against another person but rather of a community against an individual. In act I, scene I, lines 108 – 110 Iago says “you’ll have your nephews neigh to you; you’ll have coursers for cousins and jennets for germans” taking the insinuation to a level beyond the immediate family and into a larger perspectives. Again then in the same scene only a few lines down in line 115 in response to being called a villain Iago throws Barbantio’s attention back to his place in society saying “You are a senator.” In each of these cases Iago is crafting Barbantio’s fury not in relation to the moor’s association to his daughter but in the context of a community in which he will be seen in a relation to a moor and the jealousy that is engaged by Iago in Barbantio of Othello’s having robbed him of his rightful place in society, a place that his peers will occupy without his company.  This theme is further carried through in act I, scene III, where it is settled in front of gubernatorial body, a prefecture of community. Iago is most silent during this scene, which if one accepts him to be a symbol of jealous is a demonstration of the omnipresent but hidden jealous present within society and communities. In the next arena of jealous, it is obvious to see Iago playing a more active role.
The most familiar theater of jealousy is interpersonally. This is also the most evident throughout the play, being most obvious and fully developed in Iago’s interaction with Othello, but also taking place with Iago’s interactions with Cassio, Rodrigo, and Emilia. Prime examples of Iago functioning as the interpersonal symbol and agent of jealous occur in act III, scene III, lines 93 when Iago prompts “Did Michael Cassio, when you wooed my lady, know of your love?”, again in line 208 of the same scene recalling Desdemona’s initial deceit of her father, and in such prevalence throughout nearly every seen that it would be tiresome to note them all, rather it is better to note the conditions of each. In every instance of these interpersonal encounters with Iago, he always is pitting the gains or supposed gains of one against the reciprocal loss of another. In the case of Othello it becomes less about the loss of Desdemona as it does about her being taken by another man, the same is true for Iago, even Emilia is jealous of losing Iago’s attention and it being displaced elsewhere despite her knowing where or why. In this way Iago embodies jealous as a sort of universal scale to which all the characters are bound and by which the weigh their own value. This leads inevitably to a question of how could the same emotion, jealousy, function entirely within one’s self where there is no counter weight to judge by. For the answer again one returns to Iago.
When taken in isolation Iago is at the very least a mysterious if not entirely obfuscated figure. The plays offers flimsy and conflicting motives for Iago’s jealousy, both of which are only presented by Iago himself and neither of which would elicit the degree of malice that he unleashes in a rationale human. Iago jeopardizes his career, life, and reputation in order to achieve his revenge. Even in this extreme and maniacal internal strife Iago fulfills his symbolism and embodiment of jealousy. Jealousy, when taken in isolation, is not rationale, it is extreme, and its origins are often unclear and contradictory. Jealousy takes no account of anything except its satisfaction. In all these ways Iago mirrors jealousy exactly. This close relation and near perfect embodiment of jealous at every metaphysical level leads to abstract conclusions that begin with asking the question, could the play progress as it did without Iago.
If one considers, given the near perfect embodiment of jealousy that Iago has generated, that Iago does not embody jealousy, but rather in fact is jealousy, the abstract implications begin to unfold and the evidence for such begins to become clear. If Iago were not a physical character in the play but rather the abstraction of jealousy present in the community, interpersonal relationships, and selves of all the other characters in the play and they all were to fall victim to their own jealous inclinations, just as they do to Iago’s lures, then the play could progress as it does without fail. For isn’t it true that the desperate conclusions to which all the characters attend are drawn to by themselves and their own mental steering or in Iago’s own words in act II scene III, “and what’s he then that says I play the villain, When this advice is free I give and honest, probal to thinking.” Another avenue of evidence for this abstraction of Iago is his long addresses to the audience, which implies his ability to function both within the play and outside its boundaries, something no other character can do.

A critical review of “Othello” allows for the discernment of the depth of interconnectivity between Iago and jealousy. It becomes clear that Iago is a character composed of, driven by, representing, embodying, and possibly even abstractly existing as jealousy in the communal, interpersonal, and personal levels as a hidden omnipresent force, universal scale of worth, and mysterious incorrigible innate emotion. It is a testament to the ability of Shakespeare to so masterfully compose a character that absolutely embodies a single emotion without explicitly stating it and confining it entirely within the human experience.