THE ICONOCLASTS
For Sidney F.
Words flow out of their mouths like tropical birds
crisscrossing in a steamy arboretum. An erudite
host holds forth, Chivas-Rigal on the rocks tinkling
to the 12 tone harmony, melody and counterpoint
of the musical imagination of Ernst Toch.
Fellow-thinkers and fellow-feelers struggle
like sweating Sumo wrestlers with a question:
How do I live the right life?
In impassioned all night arguments esoteric
dissidents flout the conventional aesthetic,
preferring Dadaism and surrealism to the
monotony of the stereotyped images of the day.
Plagued by the wretched of the earth
their disputations search for answers:
they examine the Upanishads and Unamuno,
reject Krapotkin, Bakunin and Trotsky,
puzzle over Reichian orgones, delight in the
Tropics of Henry Miller, and the naked
honesty of Molly Bloom’s soliloquy
and are in awe of the genius of Paul Goodman’s
radical vision of the good life, a 20th century Thoreau.
Utopianists, rebel outsiders longing for communion
and community, finding new ways to honor the individual
in the quest for Goethe’s “mellow wisdom.” World reformers
hoping to harness the spirit of Summerhill, and Black Mountain,
to change the mind-numbing deadness of schools stamping
out a mass of men leading lives of quiet desperation, where
men in suits sit with glazed eyes transfixed by screens,
howl for coffee or coke, waiting for long Sunday afternoons
to sop up beers glued to the athletic confrontations of
the underclass, modern day gladiators.
Like crocuses in a morning March light, soul-destroying
schools as prisons can blossom overnight. A transformation where
killing stops, and the dazzling spectrum of consciousness allows one
to become more fully human. As slender fingers of the sun seep
into their chamber, the majesty of Verdi’s Nabucco can be heard
as they solemnly tread home knowing the struggle to awaken
a moribund culture has only begun.
M.P. Ehrlich