My Four Fetishes to Keep Away the Evil Spirit of Capitalism
Last edit: February 13, 2023, 10:03 am ET
One:
a dried up old lemon
on a plate
in the living room,
a daily reminder
of what I must
at all costs
not become,
a small talisman
to prevent
the scarcity of love
from shriveling
my natural sensuous soul.
Two:
a reproduction of a Renaissance painting
of two pinch-faced
penny-pinching
money lenders,
a reminder
of how ugly my puss will become
if I give in
to just making a living
and fall prey
to commercial seductions
and stop aspiring and aspiring
to contribute my best
to the liberation.
Three:
a photo of my dead father
who, outraged,
protested the prejudice
faced by proletarians,
and the Negro people,
and who,
for my lullabies,
played scratchy old records
of Bessie Smith
and Billie Holiday,
and who took me as a kid
on picket lines,
and Labor Day parades,
and to secret meetings
of pinko subversives
who violently advocated
overthrowing
racial prejudice
and poverty
and fascism
and the power of the propertied,
and who told me exciting stories
about unionizing
Hearn’s Department Store
on 14th Street
and about the agitation-propaganda theater
of the 1930s,
and who made the life of grown-ups
sound like such a great adventure
(yes, I've taken up your red flag, daddy).
Four:
two photos of Bertolt Brecht
hanging on my kitchen wall
(the appropriate place),
the young B.B.
jaunty-capped,
self-satisfied,
egotistical,
ignoring me,
the old B.B.
smiling
ironically,
sadly,
wisely,
looking right out at me,
his eyes comforting,
his poems,
spare,
simple,
economical,
his intent:
to play some small part
in the destruction
of private power,
in the construction
of our control --
an artist,
a revolutionary,
an example.