Renaming the Species
Pagans, Christians, Muslims, Jews:
You are all the sons of blood.
Worshippers of Mithras
Of Horus, of Isis, or Mars:
You are all covered in blood:
The blood of sacrificial bulls
And lambs and doves,
Crucified messiahs and saints
Lining the Appian Way
For miles (miles in Latin meaning soldier)
Soldier coming from solidus,
Those who are paid in coin
To perform certain actions
Like eliminating the target
Wasting the offal, icing
Forever the unwanted presence
Like angry Achilles dragging Hector
Behind his chariot like a piece
Of bleeding prime rib ripening
In the Trojan sun. Or Lt. Calley
And Company C in Vietnam lighting up
Some poor “gook” villagers in a ditch
In the hamlet of My Lai
In Son My village, So’n Tihn District
Beside some burning banyan trees
Napalm clinging to their limbs
And to the limbs of naked children
Running up and down burning lanes
While their few remaining loved ones
Weep and scream and keen
And pray to their ancestors
For some rational answer
To the specter of death and horror
That has curtained their lives.
Or protestors of that very same war,
Students at a Midwestern college campus
In Kent Ohio on a bright spring day
In May 1970, shot down in cold blood
Like criminals by soldiers of the state
By the orders of a mad governor
And a Chief Executive so paranoid and afraid
Of dissent that he decided to wipe it off the map.
Or jihadists beheading Christian
Spies on the drone-blasted sands of Syria,
An ancient land drowned in centuries
Of blood since Alexander and Augustus,
Or Templars burning Muslim Saracens
At the siege of Acre, red crosses on their chests
Or Arabs blowing up trainloads of Turks
With romantic Lawrence in Arabia
Or Buddhist monks lighting
Themselves up with gasoline
All the while in zazen pose
Sitting still in black and white
Still photos from 1963 or John F.
Kennedy getting his head blown off
In Dallas, red red blood staining
Jackie’s mohair dress and pill box hat
Or Harold Godwinson with an arrow in his eye
Lying on the killing fields of Hastings in 1066
Normans and Saxons,
And Vikings and Danes,
Or elephants rotting on the plains
Outside of Carthage or in the Cisalpine Alps.
My God, does this never stop?
I could go on like this until the day
I die, until the day my own blood
Stops coursing through my veins
Through my heart up to my brain
And never run out of historio-graphic examples.
Our species needs a new name.
Homo is no longer, nor has never
Been sapiens. Whose vainglorious idea
Was this to begin with? Carolus Linnaeus
That obsessive Swede. The second Adam. Did he
Really think that mankind was wise? Did he
Never lift up his eye from a microscope lens
In Uppsala and look around him, or investigate
The bloody farce of history?
We are not wise. We are violent.
Violent to the core like a hollow-point
nine millimeter parabellum round
Exploding in a third-grader’s chest
Or an AR-15 in the hands of a mild-
Mannered man in a Batman suit
spraying a crowded movie house
As if it were a penny arcade shooting
Range or a new single-shooter video game.
Homo violencia is the name I now
Propose to describe this walking,
Inventing, grasping, killing machine that now
“Peoples” the planet with greed and lust
And bloodletting red in tooth and claw
No better than the mantis with a beetle in his jaw
Or a hawk devouring a sparrow
Or a murder of crows invading a nest
Like SS Wapen smashing plate-glass
Windows in gestapo Berlin or fascist Rome
Like a pride of lions eating a living gazelle
Genitals first, up through the guts to the brain
Leaving the rest for a pack of hyenas
Or a flock of red-necked vultures to feast on.
We kill all we touch, including ourselves,
Including the earth that we live on and kill on:
In love with the violence beating in our breast,
In love with the violent gods we created.
Featured Print: Kent State 1970 by Linda Lyke
Linda Lyke, a faculty member in the School of Art at Kent State in 1970, created the above print in response to the horror of the Kent State shootings.