"Art, like morality, consists of drawing the line somewhere."
--G.K. Chesterton
"The man's body is sacred and the woman's body is sacred.../Each belongs here or anywhere just as much as the well-off, just as much as you."
--Walt Whitman
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According to the Buddha, right speech is a statement that is timely, true, kind, helpful (connected to liberation), and spoken with a mind of good-will. Let us all try to observe this precept.
Read him. Break him into stanzas. Give him a pet albatross and a bon voyage party. Glue archetypes on his wings with Elmers, or watch as he soars past the Slough of Despond in a DC-10.
Draw wrinkles on his brow with eyeliner until his beard turns as white as forgiven sin. Explicate him. Call him "Love." Translate him into Norwegian. Examine original manuscripts for proof of his kinship to Shakespeare.
Make him rhyme, Cram him into iambic pentameter. Let him read War and Peace ten times and give a book report to third graders. Edit out references to sin and insert miracles. Award him a Nobel Prize.
Then, after you've published him annually in The New Yorker for thirty years, crucify him. Proclaim it a suicide.
Part II
Let him whirl through your veins like a hurricane until your cells gyrate, until you salivate at the sound of his breath. Let him bristle your nerves like cat hairs and laminate your limbs. On All Saints' Day, meditate and wait patiently. Then, he will come, then, he will twist your tongue, pucker your skin, spew out his life on the page.
Read more selections from Maddox's collection Weeknights at the Cathedral (WordTech Editions, 2006) here. Read a review in Arabesques Press here.