Thursday, November 13, 2025

Monkeys in the Temple

Cambodia breathes.
The jungle is dark green and hot,
thin yellow prison bars falling
through the canopy of Strangler Figs,
Mai-Sak, palms, Silk-Cottons.
The monsoons are a month away,
and the stone Buddha spikes a fever.
Ferns and bamboo choke the temple,
prana and kundalini strangled
below the crumbling sandstone and bricks.
A hundred yards away,
a fighter jet screaming Vietnam
hangs in the trees, a metal skeleton
with broken and rusted chakras
sacrificed to Charlie, G. I. Joe, the Cong.

Macaques climb the vines

twisting around the filigreed chedis,

clamber over the Buddha,

eyes closed as he ponders in peace

the fact that his left ear is gone

from rot or riotous cluster bombs.

The monkeys are inquisitive, demanding.

Who is the sandstone god?

Who is the prophet, the maker of worlds

consumed by artillery and missile strikes?

Where are the avatars dressed in olive drab,

in cone hats and black pajamas?

What is the mystery of the shrine

tended only by the python and cobra king?

 

The blue marble breathes.

The ad men on Madison Avenue pitch their tags.

They fornicate and ride the shafts to Shangri-La

while their wives bake and smoke

and make love to the cabana boys out back.

Priests and whores clamber over rocks,

pavement, and pews to worship the sun and the moon.

Who is the sandstone god?

Who is the prophet, the maker of worlds?

Monkeys swing from New York to L.A.,

smoking ganja in tweed and conical hats,

inquisitive and demanding as they try

and try again to decipher hieroglyphics

from a race of apes in swaddling clothes

and black pajamas and wooly mammoth skins.

What is the mystery of the shrine?

It is a primitive world missing the Buddha’s ear

that pirouettes in space and spins, spins, spins.


~William Hammett


Copyright 2025 William Hammett


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