II. iv
I am writing this poem
 about the 1965 massacre
 of Indonesians by Indonesians
which in an article ten years later
 I could not publish
 except in Nottingham England with
a friend Malcolm Caldwell who has since
 himself been murdered
 no one will say by whom but I will guess
seeing as this is
 precisely poetry
 the CIA's and now Peking's Cambodian
assassins the Khmer Serai
 In that article I estimated
 a half-million or more
killed in this period
 it took Noam in a book
 suppressed by its first publisher
to quote Admiral Sudomo
 of the Indonesian junta
 more than 500,000
and now Amnesty International
 many more than one million
 so much for my balanced prose
But none of us experienced
 that pervasive smell of death
 those impassable rivers
clogged with corpses
 Robert Lowell is that why
 even you a pacifist
had so little to say about it?
 Or you gentle reader
 let us examine carefully
the good reasons
 you and I
 don't enjoy reading this
Like the time
 in the steep Engadine
 we saw the silent avalanche
fall away from the mountain
 hair and eyebrows
 the first to feel
the murmurations
 of the spreading
 killer wind
IV. i
Mégève coming down
 beside a rainbow
 into a shower
glissade 1000 meters
 on wet grass
 laughter at falling safe
think married a Venezuelan
 and lives near Lausanne
 tell me now you
with homes in the mountains
 who are at hand
 and know all things
where we hear only rumor
 of the captains
 at Bilderberg meetings
one has to sound
 like a John Bircher to talk about
 between the Rockefellers
the Agnellis and the Rothschilds
 at whose Megeve resort
 we were lodged in uncomfrtable
luxury as delegates
 to the International Student Service
 Bilderberg meetings
supplying Prince Bernhard with
 an almost unrivalled network
 not just for the European Movement
financed with German counterpart funds
 but also for the recruitment
 of old intelligence contacts
as conduits for Lockheed payoffs
 through the Temperate Zone
 Research Foundation
for Antelope Cobbler the Italian premier
 which supplimented the CIA's
 financial support
to parties canidates
 and incumbent leaders
 of almost every political persuasion
and under Sukarno
 which is why I am telling all this --
 not just recalling
the swampy fields
 around the Rockefeller lodge
 in the Connecticut valley
where the Liberty Lobby discovered
 the Bilderbergers in '67 --
 Jakarta payments deflected
four months before the coup
 at legal risks to Lockheed
 towards the very wealthy
General Alamsjah
 epitome of
 the military entrepreneur
whom a Lockheed memo
 called the second man
 the coup made at once
funds available to Suharto
 a Lockheed web
 extending from Geneva to Jakarta
millions to Japanese officials
 where every move made
 was approved by Washington
the money through Deak
 back to Shig Katayama
 in the Cayman Islands
the Wildlife Fund the Sultan
 Castle Bank in the Bahamas
 Helliwell narcotics CIA
the name Richard M. Nixon on the list
 It was at a Bilderberg
 meeting that Prince Bernhard
was introduced by Baron
 Edmond de Rothschild
 to Tibor Rosenbaum of the ICB
the International Credit Bank
 (later exposed by the Baron
 after the Vesco coup
as a source of secret funds
 for the Mossad
 Israel's intelligence service
and one of the country's primary
 weapons brokers)
 and whose colleague Ed Levinson
was the power behind
 the Havana Riviera
 and the Serv-U Corporation
of the Bobby Baker payoffs
 which began to be exposed
 in November 1963 --
My book would have asked
 as the Warren Commission staff
 working for Allen Dulles
was unable to
 why Levinson's pit-boss
 McWillie gambler and murderer
from the old Binion gang
 in Dallas and Fort Worth
 who had a fix with Mr. Big
I don't think we'd better
 go into that phase of it
 twice brought to Havana
most likely as a courier
 his close friend
 Jack Ruby
A dumb subject
 The book went into galleys
 and was photographed
for the Pocket Books spring catalogue
 but never published
 freeing me
to write this poem
 Do you remember yes
 just for an instant
the sun warm on our shoulders
 and beyond the mists
 rising from the meadow
Mont Blanc
IV. ii
From the Bay Bridge
 on the way home from the opera
 you could look down on the searchlights
of the Oakland Army Terminal
 where they loaded the containers
 of pellet-bombs and napalm
into black Japanese ships
 over which the cranes
 bent like anxious surgeons
in the calm and glassy night
 People of good will
 of whom at first there were many
were willing to sign petitions
 or to help in drafting
 the letter to the Times
about how six months
 they had moved from true to false
 reports of the North Vietnamese
negotiating position
 that the letter never published
 and the music changing
bonfires to still the streets
 the first smudges of tear gas
 the Yellow Submarine
(acid in Bir Sur
 Allen kneeling to pray
 for Johnson's health)
at the rock poetry festival
 no sensations from my first joint
 except for the difference
between the salt and pepper
 I felt being shaken
 on my bare left arm
Owsley by parachute
 at the Human Be-in
 Mika on Carole's shoulders
one mine so they could see
 the Brave New World
 worms in the rose
the party's hostess
 some new drug in the basement
 crying like a child
CIA personnel
 helping local chemists
 set up LCD labs
in the Bay Area
 to monitor events
 STP Serenity
from Dow Chemical
 and the Edgewood Arsenal
 like being shot out of a gun
men with their Sunday morning
 rifle range target practice
 Black Panthers Ku Klux Klan
women who shyly hinted
 at ineffable orgies
 of acid nakedness
Ed Sanders the Fugs
 investigative poetics
 Out demons out
with no respect whatsoever
 for the unassailable logic
 of the next step
two hundred pounds of daisies
 from Peggy Hitchcock
 to skybomb the Pentagon
Fort Funston Beach
 the Barb's first nude-in
 under the fixed gaze of the mounted police
dunes of iceplants and callas
 linnets in the sun and mist
 (To shoot a policeman
is a sacred act)
 the women in seaweed and surf
 wading as if to be washed
as clean as seals
IV. viii
Clifford Geertz having just
 reread your Notes
 on the Balinese cockfight
how you were first accepted
 by cautious villagers
 after you all fled
from the Javanese constabulary
 and how slaughter
 in the cock ring itself
after red pepper
 is stuffed down their beaks
 and up their anuses
joins pride to selfhood
 selfhood to cocks
 and cocks to destruction
a blood sacrifice
 offered to the demons
 to pacify their cannibal hunger
depicting how things are among men
 not literally but almost worse
 imaginatively
what it says is
 it is of these emotions
 that society is built
and of the combat
 between terrible witch Rangda
 her eyes bulging like boils
and the endearing monster Barong
 a clash between the malignant
 and the ridiculous
It is not your belief in men
 every last one of them are cultural artifacts
 that I now question
or even that the imposition
 of meaning on life
 is the major end of human existence
that Virgilian flourish
 in your footnote to Max Weber
 but your recurring interpretations
of the Balinese massacre
 after what you choose to call
 the bungled coup and its savage aftermath
My complaint is not
 of your early field project
 for Ford and the CIA-funded
Center at MIT
 in which you preceded Pauker
 or your commissioned study
on which local elites
 would best play a role
 in Rostow's pre-take-off period
I will not cast that stone
 from this front window
 of the world's largest weapons lab
you who know about
 puputan and Tjalonarang
 have the right to recall
the fact of the massacre
 through the medium of the cockfight
 the theatricality of trance
but why did you write
 several hundred thousand
 people were massacred
largely villagers by other villagers
 though there were some
 army executions as well
when even Shaplen admits
 the murders in Bali
 did not start until early December
that is until after
 Colonel Edhie's commandos
 with unit-names like Dracula
had finished in East Java
 the army began it
 then handed the job over to the Balinese
that is to the special teams
 set up under Nasution's
 and Suharto's orders
and finally stopped the bloodletting
 as the smell of burning houses
 overpowered the customary
fragrance of the rich island flora
 Clifford Geertz sometimes
 the world is not as mysterious
as you and I might wish
 why can you not write
 as straightforwardly as Time
about the land to which you returned
 on a junta visa
 and how can you write
about the integrative revolution
 in a book that is indexed
 to sixty-one countries
Paraguay the Soviet Union
but not the United States?
IV. ix
When some toys from the West
 where stolen out of the back seat
 of our Peugeot in Saska Kepa
I went without thinking
 to the Warsaw police
 A moustached officer
wrote down everything
 I had to say
 which was very little
and then asked me
 Was the door locked?
 I said I had no idea
probably not and he said
 Prosze Pana excuse me
 but it would be good in the future
to keep your doors locked
 Our children are not used
 to seeing toys from the west
and you do not want
 to encourage them in crime
 those Sunday walks with
Cassie in her blue pram
 the well-dressed housewives
 offering in illegal dollars
twice what we paid for it
 I told the officer
 I was withdrawing my complaint
He smiled and began to talk
 about his life as a policeman
 how much easier it had been
after Stalin had died
 in those days no one
 wanted to talk to us
even our own children
 sometimes mistrusting us
 despite what they learned at school
We talked for two hours
 and I think of him often
 as I read in the papers
of Solidarnosc suppressed
 how those must be
 privileged moments
one can so transcend history
 how today he would not dare
 to have such a conversation
nor I have the heart
 And yet those two hours
 in that ill-furnished precinct
seem somehow more true
 than the street battles since
 My own life is easier
no longer having to be consul
 I suspect that on our side
 officials of U. S. Steel
IV. xvii
And now East Timor
 where in 1977
 the Indonesian minister admits
perhaps 80,000 might have been killed
 that is to say one person out of eight
 by his own government's paracommandos
these gentle midnight faces
 the beetles which crowd their eyes
 From 1975 to 1977
the New York Times index
 entries for East Timor
 dropped from six columns
to five lines
