Elegy Upon Hearing Of
The Death Of Superman-“With Batman vs. Superman: Dawn Of Justice” (2016) In
Mind
By Seth Garth
[Perhaps only a person,
a man in this case, like Seth Garth who can trace his forebears gaggle of
poets, bandits, stone-cold junkies, whores, whoremongers, whoremongers’ wives, midwives,
witches, odd-ball aficionados, troubadours, minstrel singers, blackguards going
back to medieval times in ancient France, going back on his mother’s side it is
said and which explains a lot of things to the bandit/troubadour/poet exiled in
his own land François Villon. Back to France when it was all cut up into pieces
with little castles and moats and the world too. Only a guy like that could
write a prosaic elegy without tears for a legendary figure like Superman, a
super-hero whose time had passed. Site manager Greg Green]
t
Signpost: December 7,
1941 for those who squeaked by the Great Depression hunger and cold that
provoked and pervaded the land and who still charged forward slogging through
the muddy beaches and forests of World War II, or waited breathlessly at home.
Signpost: November 22, 1963 where every schoolboy and schoolgirl knew exactly where
he or she was when the news came through the PA systems of a million schools portending
I have a dream Martin death and seek a newer world Robert one too to end
Camelot children dreams and Summer of Love drugs, sex and rock and roll.
Signpost: 9/11 no year needed yet when everybody learned that in this wicked
old world that there were people, there were unchecked forces who sought end
time, sought the garden without regard. Signpost: March 26, 2016 the day when a
candid world first heard that super-hero for the ages, an other-worldly guy, an
alien of a different sort, Superman, had finally cashed his check.
Who knows how it
happened, how it could possibly happen when all the world figured he was
invincible, was always to be with us. The world became far shorter than by a
head when he laid down that beautiful head of his. (Now laid out in white cross
National Cemetery to be wreathed at Christmas time, flagged on Memorial Day and
Armistice Day after boom-boom salutes).
Man of steel, man of
steel, man of steel, man of maximum steel.
Not born of woman, a
stranger in our midst, churning cornfields into flapjacks, odd duckling in a
hero-less world in desperate need of heroes. Nameless except silly earthling
name horn-rimmed glasses wimpy goof Clark Kent, a dweeb, nerd, and every other
foul name tyrant editor Perry White could lay on him when he came up with some
of the lamest stories in newspaper history to cover his tracks, running ruses
around who he was and who had deposited him pod-like in Middle America corn-fed
fields of dreams.
Mild-mannered, mild
mannered, maximum mild-mannered
Caped crusader in a world
filling up with vermin, with the dregs, with oceans full of flotsam and jetsam
robbers and robber-barons. Filling up too with a crowd of would-bes, would be
super-heroes like they could come off the assembly line ready for action. Ready
to fight the creeps, the crooks, the fixer men, the gay guys who worshipped him
in silent vigil rooms. Junkie-fixer men crying hero, hero worship me unto the
end days, unto the return to the garden. Every sullen batman, ironman, wonder
woman, black widow, hulk, thor, and a million other hucksters and hustlers, con
artists claiming king or queen-ship. Looking for the man chance.
Able to leap tall
buildings, able to leap tall buildings, able to leap maximum tall buildings.
Made young boys weep for
their inadequacies, cowering in corners waiting to be saved, to be born again.
Made grown women wet with his bulging muscles and his devilish ways. Little did
they know that timeless he was winding down, had lost a step or two, told that
he was losing some of his brain power by respected John Hopkins doctors and
Walter Reed medics like many aliens do when they hit the American shore and try
to turn to vanilla.
Faster than a speeding
bullet, faster than a speeding bullet, faster than a speeding maximum
bullet.
I, I who hear the great
world moan death attendant, I who speak for the unwashed masses, I who sing the
great Whitman America we are your sons song, got caught off guard, didn’t know
that he had had more than a few run-ins with the law, was selling high grade
ammo to nefarious parties, was getting a few more people angry every time he
took to the cape for a caper. Worried and angry since the collateral damage, a
new term unfamiliar to him that he told Lois Lane one pillowy night, he didn’t
give a damn about as long as he got one bad guy less to the notched world
wasn’t over-shadowing the ratio. Was getting so people were calling for his
arrest and exile back to Pluto or wherever they thought he was from (so hungry
for a savior in a Daily Planet survey inspired by that brute Perry White only
one in ten could name his planet of origin-sad)
Kryptonite, kryptonite,
maximum kryptonite.
Had missed in my
plainsong that Superman had turned junkie and was selling himself to the
highest bidder, toying with a holy goof named Lux Luthor who had more than one
screw loose, who had a stable of poor boy super-heroes to unload on an
unsuspecting world. Had a guy named batman wound up so tight that he was ready
to take the caped crusader on one on one for cheap money and a shot at Lois
Lane if Wonder Woman was already spoken for. Beat the bejesus out of Superman
on the quiet one night and Clark Kent was AWOL for days around the Daily Planet nobody thinking it odd.
More powerful than a locomotive,
more powerful than a locomotive, more powerful than a maximum locomotive.
The way the story went
around, went after the coppers fucked around with the truth and the media
bought the damn thing hook, line and sinker, was he was an orphan bastard of
some Krypton mutant seeking revenge, seeking his death, since his mother
shipped him off to joyride Earth. Ceremonial bitch father had a kryptonite-edged
blade and rammed the thing straight through the kid, gone in a minute, done,
cooked shamrock green from what they told on the 6 o’clock news.
It’s a bird, it’s a
plane, its Superman, it’s a bird, it’s a plane, it’s Superman, it’s a bird,
it’s a plane, it’s maximum Superman.
Yeah, it was a sad world
day the day that guy laid down his head, the day we heard Superman had finally cashed
his check.
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