mad, m y throat’s in ribbons, just hanging streaks o f meat, you
can feel it all loose, all cut loose or ripped loose in pieces as if
it’s kind o f like pieces o f steak cut to be sauteed but someone
forgot and left it out so there’s maggots on it and it’s green,
rotted out, all crawling. Some one o f them offers me money
and I make him sorry, I prefer the garbage in the trash cans,
frankly, it’s cleaner, this walking human stuff I don’t have no
room in m y heart for, they’re not hygenic. I’m old, pretty old,
I can’t take the chance o f getting cancer or something from
them; I think they give it to you with how they look at you; so
I hide the best I can, under newspapers or under coats or under
trash I pick up; m y hair’s silver, dirty; I remember when I was
different and these legs were silk; and m y breasts were silk; but
now there’s sores; and blood; and scars; and I’m green inside
sometimes, if I cut m yself something green comes out, as if
I’m getting green blood which I never heard o f before but they
keep things from you; it could be that if you get so many bad
cuts body and soul your blood changes; from scarlet to a dank
green, an awful green; some chartreuse, some Irish, but
mostly it is morbid, a rotting green; it’s a sad story as I am an
old-fashioned human being who had a few dreams; I liked
books and I would have enjoyed a cup o f coffee with Camus in
m y younger days, at a cafe in Paris, outside, w e’d watch the
people walk by, and I would have explained that his ideas
about suicide were in some sense naive, ahistorical, that no
philosopher could afford to ignore incest, or, as I would have
it, the story o f man, and remain credible; I wanted a pretty
whisper, by which I mean a lover’s whisper, by which I mean
that I could say sweet things in a man’s ear and he’d be thrilled
and kind, I’d whisper and it’d be like making love, an embrace
that would chill his blood and boil it, his skin’d be wild, all
nerves, all smitten, it’d be my mark on him, a gentle mark but
no one’d match it, just one whisper, the kind that makes you
shiver body and soul, and it’d just brush over his ear. I wanted
hips you could balance the weight o f the world on, and I’d
shake and it’d move; in Tanzania it’d rumble. I wanted some
words; o f beauty; o f power; o f truth; simple words; ones you
could write down; to say some things that happened, in a
simple way; but the words didn’t exist, and I couldn’t make
them up, or I wasn’t smart enough to find them, or the parts o f
them I had or I found got tangled up, because I couldn’t
remember, a lot disappeared, you’d figure it would be
impressed on you if it was bad enough or hard enough but if
there’s nothing but fire it’s hard to remember some particular
flame on some particular day; and I lived in fire, the element; a
Dresden, metaphysically speaking; a condition; a circum-
stance; in time, tangential to space; I stepped out, into fire. Fire
burns m em ory clean; or the heart; it burns the heart clean; or
there’s scorched earth, a dead geography, burned bare; I
stepped out, into fire, or its aftermath; burnt earth; a dry, hard
place. I was born in blood and I stepped out, into fire; and I
burned; a girl, burning; the flesh becomes translucent and the
bones show through the fire. The cement was hot, as if flames
grew in it, trees o f fire; it was hot where they threw you down;
hot and orange; how am I supposed to remember which flame,
on which day, or what his name was, or how he did it, or what
he said, or w hy, if I ever knew; I don’t remember knowing.
O r even if, at some point; really, even if. I lived in urban flame.
There was the flat earth, for us gray, hard, cement; and it
burned. I saw pictures o f woods in books; we had great flames
stretching up into the sky and swaying; m oving; dancing; the
heat melting the air; we had burning hearts and arid hearts;
girls’ bodies, burning; boys, hot, chasing us through the forest
o f flame, pushing us down; and we burned. Then there were
surreal flames, the ones we superimposed on reality, the
atomic flames on the way, coming soon, at a theater near you,
the dread fire that could never be put out once it was ignited; I
saw it, simple, in front o f m y eyes, there never was a chance, I
lived in the flames and the flames were a ghostly wash o f
orange and red, as i f an eternal fire mixed with blood were the
paint, and a great storm the brush. I lived in the ordinary fire,
whatever made them follow you and push you down, yo u ’d
feel the heat, searing, you didn’t need to see the flame, it was
more as if he had orange and burning hands a mile high; I
burned; the skin peeled off; it deformed you. The fire boils
you; you melt and blister; then I’d try to write it down, the
flames leaping o ff the cement, the embodiment o f the lover;
but I didn’t know what to call it; and it hurt; but past what they
will let you say; any o f them. I didn’t know what to call it, I
couldn’t find the words; and there were always adults saying
no, there is no fire, and no, there are no flames; and asking the
life-or-death question, you’re still a virgin, aren’t you; which
you would be forever, poor fool, in your pitiful pure heart.
Y ou couldn’t tell them about the flames that were lit on your
back by vandal lover boys, arsonists, while they held you
down; and there were other flames; the adults said not to
watch; but I watched; and the flames stayed with me, burning
in m y brain, a fire there, forever, I lived with the flames my
whole life; the Buddhist monks in Vietnam who burned
themselves alive; they set themselves on fire; to protest; they
were calm; they sat themselves down, calm; they were simple,
plain; they never showed any fear or hesitation; they were
solemn; they said a prayer; they had kerosene; then they were
lit; then they exploded; into flame; and they burned forever; in
my heart; forever; past what television could show; in its gray;
in its black and white and gray; the gray cement o f gray
Saigon; the gray robes o f a gray man, a Buddhist; the gray fire,
consuming him; I don’t need to close my eyes to see them; I
could reach out to touch them, without even closing my eyes;
the television went off, or the adults turned it off, but you
knew they were still burning, now, later, hours, days, the
ashes would smolder, the fire’d never go out, because if it has
happened it has happened; it has happened always and forever.
The gray fire would die down and the gray monk would be
charred and skeletal, dead, they’d remove him like so much
garbage, but the fire’d stay, low along the ground, the gray
fire would spread, low along the ground, in gray Saigon; in
gray Camden. The flames would stay low and gray and they
would burn; an eternal fire; its meaning entrusted to a child for
keeping. I think they stayed calm inside the fire; burning; I
think they stayed quiet; I mourned them; I grieved for them; I
felt some shadow o f the pain; maybe there was no calm;
maybe they shrieked; maybe it was an agony obscene even to
God; imagine. I’d go to school on just some regular day and