The Dearth of Communism
On the telly, hundreds of Moscow denizens
are pulling down the statue of Felix Dzerzhinsky,
the father of the KGB, while an American reporter
intones that what we're seeing
is the Death of Communism celebration,
that great day when the Russian people found out
that nobody owns history.
I thought I was the only one
who was mourning for Communism; then I
talked to Larry Fagin as we walked through
Coldwater Canyon Park;
and he said that he mourned too,
and so did his wife, Susan Mustard. It was the last good
and great idea,
the last time we brought credit to the species,
that we could shake off our shackles,
and our mind-forged manacles
and let the good times roll.
Karl Marx at his table in the
reading room at the British Museum, poring through a stack of lit,
probing for the pulse of history, the instant that we wrote the words:
"From each according to his means, to each according to his needs,"
did he already see in his mind's eye that some day his formula
would be swept away?
Now we live in the Corporate state;
and we better not get used to it.
According to our patrons, from here on out
it's dog-eat-dog. The Peruvian miner
and the Detroit engine worker will be
at each other's throats; sleeping in their Dodge RAMs
out beyond the shadows the gas flares throw
into the defeated dust,
waiting for those with the wherewithal to dine
to toss off a scrap of food.
By the time Dzerzhinsky founded
the Bolshevick secret police,
Communism was dead already
and lying in state.
Maybe that's why it feels like there's
such a dearth of Communism around here tonight;
there's not enough love
to make our world go around.
Copyright Credit: Lewis MacAdams, "The Dearth of Communism" from Dear Oxygen: New & Selected Poems 1966-2011. Copyright © 2011 by Lewis MacAdams. Reprinted by permission of Natalia & Torii MacAdams.
Source: Dear Oxygen: New & Selected Poems 1966-2011 (University of New Orleans, 2011)