Floating Up The Yangtze*
*The following is my revision of my non-traditional sonnet, “Lizards Wear Clothes.” I’m updating my Poetry Book for print and this piece seems relevant twenty years later, unfortunately.
The Emperor forgot to wear his clothes.
Constituents fell into clouds of Fools
when steaming golden leeks cooked in the pot
burned black. Heavy water boiled off sticky
temple tangled sentences with empty
words, while lowly interns kissed the Lizards
of crossly Knights. Monkey shouted, “Lizards
get some air and our leader back in cloth!”
Monkey gave up yelling at the empty-
headed lights, floating up the Yangtze. Fools
don’t sense danger as their brains are sticky
cells of grey glop. They smoke a lot of pot,
and anyway, the garden’s gone to pot.
Bunnies chewed the carrots and the Lizards
Back-o-gammoned, while the imps drove sticky
G-cars on a search for royal clothing.
In looking high and riding low, the Fools
spaced out and now the gas tank is empty.
The Naked Monarch screams, “Get me empty
land! We need to piss, Rum; Christ, where’s my pot?”
Rum Man blames the Monkey who blames the Fools
who always blame Bunnies riding Lizards
who eat Cajun AHEEE, wearing silk clothes
from Barneys on Madison. Rum Man sticks
Stiletto Dolls on TV stoking Fools,
then buys the Dolls gold houses made of sticks
and bones—legends from the mist that Lizards
believe. Until the telling time empties
all trash, all waste into the sacred pots,
the Monkey wants the Emperor in clothes
now, before the crispy-fried Fools empty
all the golden pots of sticky treasure
into pockets of Lizards wearing clothes.
© 2004
