In Goya’s Greatest Scenes We Seem to See . . .

written by


« Reload image

In Goya’s greatest scenes we seem to see
  the people of the world 
  exactly at the moment when
  they first attained the title of
  ‘suffering humanity’ 
  They writhe upon the page
  in a veritable rage
  of adversity 
  Heaped up
 groaning with babies and bayonets
  under cement skies 
 in an abstract landscape of blasted trees
 bent statues bats wings and beaks
  slippery gibbets
 cadavers and carnivorous cocks
 and all the final hollering monsters
 of the
 ‘imagination of disaster’
 they are so bloody real
  it is as if they really still existed

  And they do

 Only the landscape is changed

They still are ranged along the roads 
  plagued by legionnaires
 false windmills and demented roosters
They are the same people
  only further from home
 on freeways fifty lanes wide
 on a concrete continent
  spaced with bland billboards 
 illustrating imbecile illusions of happiness

                       
 The scene shows fewer tumbrils
 but more strung-out citizens
 in painted cars
  and they have strange license plates 
 and engines
  that devour America

© Gaius Valerius Catullus