Who Gets the Pope’s Nose?
It is so tiring having to look after the works of God.
The sea will run away
From martyr’s feet, gay
Dissipated Florentines kiss tumours out of a man’s head,
Scheduled liquefactions renew saint’s blood,
In Andean villages starved Inca girls
Develop the stigmata,
Dying dogs pronounce the Pater
Noster on the vivisection table, the World
Press report trachoma’d eyes that drip wide pearls.
All investigated, all authenticated, all
Miracles beyond doubt.
Yet messengers go in and out,
The Vatican fills up with paper. The faithful
Work for a Merchant God who deals in souls.
Was there ever a man in Nazareth who was King of Kings?
There is a fat man in Rome
To guide his people home.
Bring back the rack and set the bones straining.
For faith needs pain to help with its explaining.
Fill a glass with water and gaze into it.
There is the perfect rule
Which no God can repeal.
Having to cope with death, the extraordinary visit,
Ordinary man swills in a holy sweat.
And high above Rome in a room with wireless
The Pope also waits to die.
God is the heat in July
And the iron band of pus tightening in the chest.
Of all God’s miracles, death is the greatest.
(From Once Bitten, Twice Bitten, 1964)
The sea will run away
From martyr’s feet, gay
Dissipated Florentines kiss tumours out of a man’s head,
Scheduled liquefactions renew saint’s blood,
In Andean villages starved Inca girls
Develop the stigmata,
Dying dogs pronounce the Pater
Noster on the vivisection table, the World
Press report trachoma’d eyes that drip wide pearls.
All investigated, all authenticated, all
Miracles beyond doubt.
Yet messengers go in and out,
The Vatican fills up with paper. The faithful
Work for a Merchant God who deals in souls.
Was there ever a man in Nazareth who was King of Kings?
There is a fat man in Rome
To guide his people home.
Bring back the rack and set the bones straining.
For faith needs pain to help with its explaining.
Fill a glass with water and gaze into it.
There is the perfect rule
Which no God can repeal.
Having to cope with death, the extraordinary visit,
Ordinary man swills in a holy sweat.
And high above Rome in a room with wireless
The Pope also waits to die.
God is the heat in July
And the iron band of pus tightening in the chest.
Of all God’s miracles, death is the greatest.
(From Once Bitten, Twice Bitten, 1964)