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A young boy sat on the beach on one of the last days of summer.
The air was stagnant and the sand on which he sat
Was dense with trapped seawater.
The adults, the boy’s parents and their two married friends
Stood much further down the shoreline,
Walking shrouded by a nebulous mirage of static heat.
All that the child cared about were the coins and bits of polished glass
And pink seashells he was uncovering from a shallow oblivion
With sweeps of his pale arm.
He was almost ten years old, but his dark eyes
Held some intrinsic pain, some preternatural worry that was ageless.
Momentarily abandoned on the coastline,
He closed his eyes
And within himself he saw the essence of the human condition
And watched a renaissance of future realizations
Flood his mind and stand embossed,
Burning in imagined red light, on his consciousness.
He was attuned to all sounds around him, and he saw
With three hundred sixty degree vision
The life that he was about to live.
He wanted to change it.
He knew he would only live once.
He wanted to touch the hands of real sages and emperors
And he wanted to burn in a fiery crash and he wanted
To experience true love and survive his own bodily death and wander
To the edges of a plateau to hear his own voice’s stentorian echo
And he wanted to write on the sides of mountains with his own blood
And speak to the gods and to live tragically
Like a king and yet as free as a beggar
And he wanted to shoot an arrow through someone’s heart
And feel the pain of a million enormous stones
Falling upon him
And he wanted to play Russian roulette
With his own suffering and his own fate
And with the very idea of Fate all at once
And he wanted to be deified and to disrupt
The very order of all mankind
And to burn all the wealth in the world
In a blaze of glory
And he wanted to feel the Arctic wind on his naked scarred back
And he wanted to make all the cars
On the freeway stop with one word
On the idea of man’s predestined freedom
And watch them leave their idling cars and walk the Great Divide
And he wanted to know for sure that some things are sacred and if
Nothing is sacred then why in this prosperous age
Two dreams do still exist in the collective mind
Reincarnation the ancient vision
And instant gratification the modern belief
Of televangelists and the rapt subculture of commercial prophets
And he wanted to be murdered for his imminent convictions
And he wanted to find the most beautiful seashell on the beach
And throw it from a cliff into the deepest part of the ocean
And he wanted to lie on the bottom of the ocean
And see the ethereal light of heaven
Reflecting on the backs of silver whales
And he wanted to unravel the secrets of time and mysticism and solipsism
And the meaning of corporate egos
And he wanted to kill the man who would advise him to
Stop running into the reddest sunset
For it is unreachable
And he wanted to touch a comet
And live to the point of tears and to thrust his
Everlasting last words
Into the atmosphere of the fibrous splintering social paradigm
And to shower compliments on the rebels
And the holy men of obscure beginnings
And to whisper a serpent’s wishes onto the cold side of a sand dollar
And he wanted to flout even the most fair and equitable laws of nature
Such as the arrow of time
And he wanted to engender the mathematics of mass lobotomy
So the average man may shrug off the burden of his
Troublesome hopes and dreams
And he wanted to experience in Technicolor
The Creation and the birth of the universe
And the Dawn of Man and the Resurrection
And he wanted to tell all his future lies in one breath
Right now
So that he could speak the painful hurtful truth for the rest of his life
And he wanted to release all the animals from the zoo
And he wanted to speak the language of underground thieves
And he wanted to cut out the heart of a saint
And watch it flow and founder
In the fine sand of the desert
And he wanted to tear down a brick wall
And find behind it
A grassy field that stretches to infinity in every direction
And he wanted to set fire to the
Morally questionable emblems of our predecessors and he wanted to trap
All of man’s primeval guilt and all of the indignity and agony
Of the younger generation in a glass bottle
And cast it into a river that will find no ocean
And he wanted to relive the Great Flood and he wanted
To tramp like a troubadour
Blindly in valleys
Where castles are few and far between
And he wanted to play a song on a weathered church organ
That could start a war and provide
The ever-absent purpose for humanity and existence
And he wanted to die a Christian death
And he wanted to shoot stars out of the sky and make asteroids
Come to a halt in their unremitting harmonious trajectories
And he wanted to have out-of-body experiences
During the tolerated ennui of the morning commute
In taxicabs and he wanted
To be subjugated by tyrants and by the perpetrator of a vast fascist hoax
And he wanted to write his stories in the dark
On the finger-scratched walls of a forgotten cell
In an abandoned subterranean prison
Where all the other inmates are either arsonists
Or poets but all are forever
Shadow-boxing with fate
And he wanted those catacomb excavators
Who would unearth the prison and
Dust the walls with feathers centuries later
To envy the romantic nostalgia of his stories
And he wanted to dissociate hatred from the human condition
And forget whatever representations of society
From which man derives dispassion and dishonesty
And he wanted to sleep under a veranda in a hail storm
And he wanted to die for Christ’s sins
And he wanted to tell the biggest lie
And tell the smallest truth that could make a bodhisattva lose faith
In enlightenment
And he wanted to transmogrify himself into a dimensionless point in space
And he wanted to orbit like debris around a satellite
In a yet-undiscovered galaxy and he wanted to prove
Every lie ever spoken in vain to be true
And he wanted to kneel down and press his lips against the ground
And taste the salty quintessence of his own pious tears
And he wanted to live simply and to be completely free
From any source of control be it political or supernatural
And he wanted – more than anything –
In his naïve heart he wanted to experience
True love and let it never lose its luster
Or that aura in which every moment
That his life may intersect with another’s
Could be spent in eternal strokes of time but he knew
Deep down
In his lonely core of world-weary intuition
That all life was just a futile game
In which infinitesimal disappointments are summed
Over a period of “too soon”
And realized into a grandiose meaningless failure
In which born men are relegated to that nadir of humanity
In which free will is a frivolous ambivalent privilege
Not a right
And where all endeavors are ultimately forgotten
Amidst the somnambulant pursuit of visceral pleasures and
Lost time that was never really there in the first place
And where all the living are doomed to travel
In the most tortuous path to their own demise
Forsaken by even their truest friends who are only doomed to do the same.
He knew all of this and sat solemnly still.
His eyes opened; he appeared dispassionate
But as he disembarked from this contemplative place
The tears came silently.
He did not even feel emotions,
And he knew that the tears were somehow separate from him,
That they were Man’s tears
And he was only chosen as the source of their springing forth.
That it might be private, shaded and shrouded by mirage
From the judging glances of passersby.
The tears speckled the already-moist sand,
Polished the already-shining coins and mollusk shells.
As inconsequential as they were silent.
The summer day remained stifling,
As much by stillness as by heat,
And the adults in the distance still slowly walked
Through the tranquil foam of waves, oscillating.
The tide rose to meet the boy’s fingertips,
Still palm-down and covered with sand from his idle digging.
He had not forgotten what he had seen,
The ephemeral integration of his senses
That was focused like laser light toward the potential future.
Life would never be the same from now on.
The sky seemed bigger now,
And all that could be found in its condensing grayness
Was the suspicion that nothing really matters…
- by Damo Suzuki |
- Poetry And Lyrics
- | Submitted on 10/12/2008 |
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- Title: The Beach
- Artist: Damo Suzuki
- Description:
- Date: 10/12/2008
- Tags: beach
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Comments (3 Comments)
- The Turqual - 10/12/2008
- This is what they call an epic poem...
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- winca - 10/12/2008
- it's really long
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- Joe_Jonas_Shane_Gray - 10/12/2008
- i can picture the scene in my mind...............
- Report As Spam