THE EXHIBITION
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THE EXHIBITION •
‘Cosmic Suggestion Box’, ‘SNAFUBAR’, ‘Public Transit’, ‘Partygoers’, ‘In Rubens’ Umbra’ & ‘Toulouse-Lautrec at the Moulin Rouge’
Brandon Marlon is a writer from Ottawa, Canada. He received his B.A. in Drama & English from the University of Toronto and his M.A. in English from the University of Victoria. His poetry was awarded the Harry Hoyt Lacey Prize in Poetry (Fall 2015), and his writing has been published in 300+ publications in 33 countries.
Cosmic Suggestion Box
Sometimes the world seems like
a rough draft that never got revised.
Yet what might humankind propose
on its own behalf to the divine playmaker
who scants all knowledge of His nature
among beings yearning yet benighted?
With all due respect, in all humility,
perhaps for starters one could recommend
the nullification of evil and free rein,
whose marriage guarantees injustice
and mocks the assumed goodness of the great?
One could, modestly, advocate
a swift end to natural disasters, cataclysms
indelicately termed by insurers
acts of God, who is, after all,
ultimately responsible even if not culpable.
I, for one, could readily do without
meaningless and undeserved suffering,
meaningless and undeserved struggle,
and the bitter misery these engender.
But, admittedly, it occurs to me that
we ought to refrain from passing judgment
on what we can’t begin to comprehend;
should we not give the benefit of the doubt
to the One from whom we seek the same?
Sometimes I wonder whether the one thing
that the Creator can’t possibly know
is what it’s like to be only human…
SNAFUBAR
It seems to us unexampled, though we know better,
even as we huddle in household bubbles,
ensphered in comforts as denizens of the Great Indoors.
Nightly on the tube the newscast leads with mortality tallies
parading death, the original and ultimate product recall.
Out of doors, amid the Bewilderness, seekers of natural light
stroll paths with circumspection and sidle as they near
one another, partly courteous, partly paranoid,
inly speculating of whether a virus symbolizes
the foretold return of the repressed.
Across the canal, in tumble-down downtown,
I note a colourfully fenestrated house of worship
once a hive of humanity, lately suffering a dearth of habitués,
nowadays a makeshift mass clinic
where the masked queue for mRNA jabs
like well-mannered junkies in need of a fix.
This indeed is a collective déclassé,
humankind made to bend the knee.
I wonder of the future, suspended and inexplicit;
at times I'm tempted toward prayer,
though I question how pervious heaven
would be to pleas from the skeptical and aggrieved.
Surely, in the fullness of time, this moment
will be deemed a challenge to the conscience politic,
a mandatory opportunity to confute self-centeredness,
to walk each other home in the spiritual sense,
to inhale as we contemplate the ultimates
and, like those uniformed seraphs
dedicated to the relief of misery,
to strain every sinew toward grace,
at once the least and the most any might attain
while yet among the living.
Public Transit
Suspicious passengers give each other
the stink eye, certain there lurks among them
a perpetrator odious and opprobious
because culpable for befouling their midst
with a lactic and noisome fetor, some casually
self-indulgent (and evidently lactose-intolerant)
miscreant worthy therefore of the reprobation
of fellow travelers now lunging for windows,
desperately gasping for fresh air in lieu
of suffocating fumes, and even as the feeble
and elderly swoon then collapse
the durable rue the routine contretemps
and crudities commuters encounter
while crammed together, seated or upright,
their hands grasping dangling straps,
their nostrils pressed into unfamiliar armpits,
a mass of wearied individuals normally lost
in thought else attuned to blaring earbuds,
though just at the moment universally
hypervigilant if not downright Sherlockian,
hounds sniffing hither and thither,
keen to detect the culprit and definitively solve,
please God, now and for all time, The Case
of the Unprovenanced Flatulence.
Partygoers
Behold the hall, elaborately decorated,
host to ebullient celebrants indulging
in hors d’oeuvres and spirits as they swap
exaggerated facial expressions
and embellished anecdotes between
mouthfuls of herbed cream cheese and crust.
At the open bar, the unattached but hopeful
sip from vinous glasses, appraising prospects;
by the dessert table loiters a man of appetites,
prone to fondling a woman with one hand
and a pastry with the other.
It seems all the world in miniature is here,
spruce clotheshorses flaunting their finery,
praters blathering despite unsubtle eye rolls,
prepossessing belles clad in sard
necklaces and diamantine bracelets,
suitors employing japery or cajolery
to leave a favorable impression,
belly laughers and gigglers alike.
Bless them all, I say; long may they
animate one other and vitalize shared days
while their journeys and fortunes unfold,
while time and chance conspire.
In Rubens’ Umbra
An adolescent prodigy, he enters the reigning
master’s studio in the heart of Antwerp
—as an assistant, mind you, not as a student—
and anon astounds with seemingly effortless skills,
a God-given gift not even his father-rival figure
enjoyed in his own less precocious youth.
He gleans composition techniques
from Europe’s greatest living artist,
a renowned painter-diplomat whose
charmed life reads like a catalog of triumphs,
in whose shade he shivers despite a talent
(if not an education or imagination)
matching his mentor’s.
Only with the exemplar temporarily aside
on official embassies at the monarch’s behest
can the mentee emerge and flourish;
with the field to himself and room to breathe,
he garners attention and comment, befitting
his magisterial abilities with brush and canvas.
Favored and self-assured, he bristles at being
reduced to portraiture (little better than still lifes!)
instead of braving historical scenes, with rare
exceptions evincing his command of that mode;
he limns the master’s young wife, apparently
a protégé’s tribute, though it stokes
rumors of illicit romance, which perhaps,
as he strokes his Van Dyke,
he prefers to neither verify nor refute.
Alas, there was nothing for it but to fly the coop;
heeding the call of his passionate patron,
Charles of England, he migrates to Albion
to become court painter and knighted,
then flatters the vanity of royal sitters,
beautified by specious brushstrokes.
Upon the master’s demise, to Flanders
he repatriates (now phlegmy as well as Flemish),
defiant in his refusal to finish commissions
commenced by his illustrious forerunner,
thereby blemishing his twilight with ingratitude.
Toulouse-Lautrec at the Moulin Rouge
Semi-crippled by stunted legs, the draughtsman
roams the Champs de Mars and, naughty boy,
peeks up the skirt of the wrought-iron lattice tower
rising skyward as dusk cues his return
and he saunters back to his stomping grounds,
Montmartre, to haunt its cafés, cabarets,
nightclubs, and bars, becoming such a fixture
in the pleasure palaces of le gai Paris that he seems
a part of the furniture, drawing as he drinks,
while the floorboards of gaslit stages groan
and creak beneath high-kicking cancan dancers.
By day he hobnobs with Van Gogh or Degas,
but nightly he gulps and observes fellow sensualists
indulging in the bohemian life, bon vivants
who share his taste for the demimonde
with its tempting strumpets and hard liquor;
his fetish for auburn-haired sirens impels him
to frequent brothels until soon he inhabits one,
a strange arrangement easing his urge to befriend
its denizens, which comes at the cost of syphilis.
Wild living can’t keep him from his craft and fame
will be his thanks to pioneering poster work,
though he dreams of the theatre, opera, circus,
arenas of spectacle, fora of imagination,
each better still than the booze that afflicts him
with delirium tremens; at length he finds himself
quivering behind locked doors at a mental hospital,
brushstroking his way to freedom, and senses
his end, nearing and premature, grateful to be
relieved of wracked body and mind, sorrowful to bid
adieu to what have proven to be, at least in his case,
the solacing excesses of La Belle Époque.