AP photo
By
Alejandro Escudé
Realpolitik
At the Richard Nixon Presidential Library
I take a photo of the puke-green phone
Nixon used to talk to the Apollo astronauts;
one of the extensions read Haldeman.
My children interact with an exhibit named
The White House Taping System, my girl
and my boy slam the red buttons that reveal
the hidden microphones in each room;
something about the Gap is explained
on an app we don’t bother downloading.
It’s 1968, and he’s just gotten elected.
If you squint, Nixon’s snarl could be
the new President-elect’s. The walls are
papered with protestors and soldiers, a row
of POW’s in pajamas then in the next
huge frame one of those same men opens
his arms for his daughter on a tarmac.
There’s so much that went wrong, so much
that can go wrong in every decade-breath
America takes. Napalm strikes lead
to a room with glass red and blue balloons
as if dropped from a ceiling, a white
skimmer hat with a ribbon: Nixon Now
More Than Ever—guess there’s always
a need for a Nixon, a strongman waving
two v-signs across the void of the universe
as the helicopter waits—which is there
as well, the original nut-brown upholstery,
the yellow swivel chair beside the couch
Kissinger sat on as they hovered over
the blinding whirlwind of the world.
Dud
Between huddled streets, tenements, lying
on the sidewalk, a pressure cooker like a poem
sits unread, except perhaps by the one who
first thinks it’s trash: a white bag like a cosmic
parachute trailing the round tin body, a cell phone
attached, a Rauschenberg combine, and wires
snipped and wooed with the care of a Banzai tree.
If you were to slide it across the concrete, it would
grate your ears, and you’d have your worst fears
to contend with, a muted clock inside your chest.
Yet, there’s a number you call, posted beside
graffiti glimpsed in subway stations—the voice
says, “Run!” The pressure cooker’s lid mirrors
the skyward angles of a building, out and in,
as if you too were defused, unable to explode.
superb - dud definitely has an ending worth reading toward. Thanks!