Allegory
By Rafael Campo
Outside somewhere, beneath an atmosphere
So pure and new each breath is musical
And silent, mouth-watering, without taste,
So full of butterflies one can’t imagine
Because it hurts to be so free, out there
There was a hospital where AIDS was cured
With Chinese cucumbers and royal jelly,
With herbal medicines, vaccines, colostrum.
I went there in a submarine, through space
It seemed, and I was armed with nuclear
ICBMs. I read The New York Times,
That’s how relaxed and skeptical I was;
I sat upon the floor, my back against
The gleaming missiles. Strangely , no one else
But me was on the submarine, except
The President, whom I’d confined beneath
The lowest deck, inside somewhere where air
Was scarce and hardly breathable. One can’t
Imagine what it’s like to see a world
Like theirs from such a distance for the first
Time: God, was it beautiful, butterflies
And silent musical wind, the hospital
Where no one paid. I tried to give them small
Pox, missiles, blankets; they looked at me
Like I was crazy, and they asked me why
The President had been incarcerated.
There’s no explaining of morality
To savages, I thought. And though it hurt
To leave, to conquer them and take with me
The royal jelly and colostrum, when I aimed
My missiles at their hospital I felt
Much better. Munching on a cucumber,
The light of the explosion brightening
My face, I couldn’t help the tears, I was
So sad and happy, all at once, again.
Copyright Credit: Rafael Campo, “Allegory” from The Other Man Was Me: A Voyage to the New World. Copyright © 1994 by Rafael Campo. Reprinted by permission of Arte Público Press.
Source: The Other Man Was Me: A Voyage to the New World (Arte Público Press, 1994)