Some Poems
Mendel's Dominant
C binds to G, A binds to T
rope binds to hands.
Only make this journey
if you think free will a parlor trick of the starry-eyed philosophers;
like ethics, appealing, but ultimately useless.
If you breach the cytoplasm,
draw your sword to stave marauding lysosomes;
with fortitude, and gifts of simple sugars
you may survive to reach the citadel
wherein the double helix wears her crown.
Supplicate,
and beg the question:
Am I tall or dark or fair or
programmed to self-destruct?
May I eat this raspberry cheesecake, flaunt it in the face
of myocardial infarction? Or will you send
clots of avenging erythrocytes to bring me to my knees?
These are the questions that haunt
scientists grown pale from existing under a fluorescent sun.
Will my children bear my blue eyes?
Will they be stronger, brighter,
less prone to nervous attacks and brittle nails?
The scientists are up too late again,
eating things that do not exist in nature
from vending machines,
while chemical revolutions surge on chocolate agar slides.
With no other deity so visible, we unravel genomes
like pig entrails cast across the snow;
prognosticate,
tell me my destiny.
Psychostasy
Lay your heart upon the scales, says the jackal god.
The accused was once an attorney,
but now his mute meat fails to elocute.
In the secrecy of his mind he wonders
if the autopsy room doctors felt a draft
a sharp agitation of wingbeats rising
when sternum or skull was laid open.
Aloud he says, my heart is an organ,
a vivid lump of flesh
shot through with tiny neuropeptide receptors
to make me feel.
He looks down and sees it already in his hands,
streaked white
like a poor cut of beef.
He says I tried, I tried to order the salad
but it was so tasteless.
Remembering his circumstance,
he says to the black-faced jackal:
Return to myth, I have no use for you.
and the god says once more,
Lay your heart upon the scales.
Choice is beyond him now, if ever it wasn't…
he would far rather entrust it to cold steel,
but the scales are gold, the feather
from some bird of dreams.
What's the balance of a soul denied?
As the scales tip and the heart shatters into nothing
an autopsy room doctor looks up
alight with wonder, a child once more
as white feathers rain down like nuclear snow
with weight to crush the world.
Worldview #1
We are God's dice
Snake-eyed and probabilistic
principled in our uncertainty
and free as white rabbits on holiday from the lab
set loose in the forest
to play.
We are fallen images who lack the grace to shatter on contact
with solid ground.
Obtuse to metaphor,
at right angles with every toppled idol
we must now do our taxes and quietly die of truth.
We have put corn in everything but we are far from the earth
and who among us would deny
that the saddest day of our lives
is when we look in the mirror and know our own eyes.
We like ghost stories about zombie cats
and math poems about everchanging light
but we cling to our chains like a child on a playground swing
who cannot make the leap
and trust that gravity will not betray the arc,
defect to chaos and leave him weightless forever.
Like insects in honey we have no desire
to cross that golden sticking point of noncontradiction
but neuroplastics make it possible to see the eternal truth
that everything begins and ends in Copenhagen.
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