Self-Portrait with Critic
by Ira Sadoff
One idiot took me for a Vietnam vet.
“You have that tattooed damaged look.”
Other descriptions? Jaded, pent-up,
wrathful, loyal, swerving toward hysteria.
Anyway, that’s how she put me together.
She was a polyp in the clandestine tale
of what holes we are, what a factory
of piecework, stitched together
with bad wardrobes and bartered expressions.
To look at me, I hurt seems past tense,
synthesized into a gaze that drifts toward stable.
But passing is nobody’s business, who you are
is a secret to everyone, that’s American
as being an exception, believing in
your own invention, tinkering around
in a minor key, since no one’s listening.
And inside, let’s not make it pretty,
let’s save the off-rhyme and onomatopoeia
for the concert hall, let’s go to the wormy place
where the problematic stirs inside his head,
something’s jumbled inside the cells,
something chemical sticking to the walls
where the doctor looks down your throat,
down the tunnel where you sleep and wash up,
where you can’t get over how dogs spar
with their masters, how Contras could tear
a newspaper in two and then bury the nuns.
Anyway, you can see how a sentence
might tear the heart out of someone,
closing in on and looking down at the mess
from some trim square of property
that’s busily employed and invested
in making things work, with an ardor
and intensity that slips away into the ethereal,
all the while reciting some butchered version
of The Ancient Mariner, humming in your head
The Pavanne for a Dead Princess,
because you lean toward the luxurious,
the artful, the second-hand, once-removed.
A recent Guggenheim Fellow, Ira Sadoff is the author of six collections of poetry, most recently Grazing (University of Illinois Press, 1998). His work has also been widely anthologized, such as in Norton's The Body Electric and Harper's American Literature. (2001)

