"The Pandemonium" by John Martin‘Dystopia’ and Other Poetry by C.B. Anderson The Society January 24, 2022 Beauty, Culture, Poetry 13 Comments . Dystopia Reality is never what it seems To be. It hides itself in shrouds of mist, In bulging envelopes of gilded dreams, In requisite pronations of the wrist That guides the palsied hand that holds the pen. What good is it to cry that life’s unfair If one does not possess the acumen To seize the wealth that’s drifting everywhere Around us? Everything is up for grabs When poor administrators drop the ball And scientists abandon working labs, Which, sadly, brings all progress to a stall. We seek the counsel of our oldest friends, But what we get is spurious advice, And this is where a cherished friendship ends. For simple honesty we pay a price. A pack of lies is taken for the truth, The bitter for the sweet, and dark for light; The world cannot supply enough vermouth To help a harried human sleep at night. The Family now is ridiculed, proclaimed A habitude whose time has come and gone; Our honored institutions have been maimed, And shameless malefactors freely spawn. When dense penumbral clouds obscure the sun, When smoke from burning buildings fills the air, And justice, faith, and hope are on the run, We tend to make a virtue of despair. . . Freewheeling The preservation of the central radix From which profound philosophies arise Requires much more than ordinary hay-ricks To guarantee a store of opened eyes Come spring. It’s in our nature to obsess About the details of the fluid world In which we’ve all been swimming. Nonetheless, The wall against which our complaints are hurled Is solid as Gibraltar. It resists Assaults more easily than mortal flesh Can fend disease or rid itself of cysts, And howsoever gladly we refresh Ourselves in salutary mineral springs, Magnesium can only go so far To reinvigorate our flagging wings And reconfigure what we truly are. Although it’s laudable to think before we act, Deliberation’s not our strongest suit, And caution’s just a moldy artifact Of stuffy rule books long considered moot. . . C.B. Anderson was the longtime gardener for the PBS television series, The Victory Garden. Hundreds of his poems have appeared in scores of print and electronic journals out of North America, Great Britain, Ireland, Austria, Australia and India. His collection, Mortal Soup and the Blue Yonder was published in 2013 by White Violet Press. NOTE TO READERS: If you enjoyed this poem or other content, please consider making a donation to the Society of Classical Poets. The Society of Classical Poets does not endorse any views expressed in individual poems or commentary. Share this:Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)Click to print (Opens in new window)Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)Click to share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window)Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window)Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window)Trending now: 13 Responses Allegra Silberstein January 24, 2022 You are a lovely gardener of words and thoughts…thank you for your poems. Allegra Reply C.B. Anderson January 24, 2022 You are quite welcome, Allegra. Perhaps I’ll post some recipes one of these days. Reply Joseph S. Salemi January 24, 2022 “Dystopia” is truly a poem of this day and age. Sometimes a poem cannot be written unless it grows in the atmosphere of a certain period. Excellent work, but also deeply sad. Reply C.B. Anderson January 25, 2022 “Sad,” Joseph, is the perfectly apposite term, especially when it comes to friendships sundered due to deep political divides and when it comes to the prospect of the entirety of Western civilization being canceled. Let’s see what the soft leftists think when we train no more physicians or engineers, and every dwelling has been burned to the ground. This is not a time in which I would have wanted my children (and especially, now, my granddaughters) to be born. Let’s go back to those good old uninteresting times. Reply Brian Yapko January 25, 2022 C.B., I think these are both evocative, intriguing and– especially your “Dystopia” – far too relevant. “Dystopia” manages to catalog most of society’s ills economically, vividly and — to my surprise — quite movingly when addressing the circumstances of “where a cherished friendship ends.” Relationships have become much more difficult to maintain in the polarization that has taken place concerning the most basic of issues. The despair you describe does seem to be inevitable and longterm. It’s difficult to see a pathway out. Your “Freewheeling” poem is fascinating — the imagery is striking and seems pulled together from a great variety of sources — philosophies, hay stacks, swimming and then hitting that Gibralter-like wall (a metaphor for God?) I’ve read through this poem a few times now and what I get from it is something of a meditation on aging, mortality and the fearlessness that can (perhaps should) come with age. I will read it again because I feel certain that I am missing ideas in it. But the ideas that I have picked up so far are wonderful. Reply C.B. Anderson January 25, 2022 Yes, Brian, one can tell that the world is in a sad state when despair seems a more reasonable approach to it. Hope is a cardinal virtue and despair is its opposite, but as William F. Buckley said on the eve of Bill Clinton’s election when asked whether he thought there was any hope that Clinton would be a good President (to paraphrase), “Well, as a Roman Catholic I am required to have hope, but I see no reasonable evidence that would lead me to expect the outcome that you suggest.” In the second poem, I think Gibraltar represents sublunary entities such as Government etc. In a strange way, growing old is actually good news because it means that one is still alive. Any ideas you gather from it are perfectly valid. After all, it’s not as though I wrote it with a detailed outline in hand. I will say this: When one is old there is less worry about ruining one’s future. Reply David Watt January 27, 2022 My favorite line in “Dystopia” is ‘For simple honesty we pay a price’, because that is an undeniable truth, as are your other lines. We find out who our true friends are when differing opinions are respected, or taken as an affront. The thoughts in “Freewheeling” are equally well expressed, with unexpected rhyme pairings including ‘radix/hay-ricks. Reply C.B. Anderson January 27, 2022 Thank you, David. To be perfectly honest, finding good lines and unexpected end rhymes is what makes writing these little poems so much fun. Maintaining coherence and cohesion throughout a poem can be a bit tedious, and I often neglect that important aspect of any work aspiring to become good or great art. Reply Susan Jarvis Bryant January 27, 2022 C.B., both poems are admirably crafted, as usual. I always appreciate your fresh eye and skill where rhymes are concerned. “Dystopia” is my firm favorite. You say all I strive to say in my poems with a poignancy and poise I can only aspire to. You have tapped into horrors of today with subtlety and a gloomy beauty that echos the heft of my heart. I’m in awe. Reply C.B. Anderson January 27, 2022 You make me blush, Susan, which is a good thing because it means that blood is rushing into my face and, I would like to hope, into my brain. Your poems never lack poignancy or poise, and though I really don’t want you to do this, if you forego some of the “special effects” you are famous for, then you might end up with something closer to what you say you aspire to. Reply Susan Jarvis Bryant January 27, 2022 Thank you for your tip C.B. I’m going to have a word with my boisterous muse… I’ll see if she’s willing to calm down a little for my next serious poem. C.B. Anderson January 29, 2022 Even your funniest poems are dead serious, Susan, and don’t you forget that. Reply C.B. Anderson January 28, 2022 That way, everybody wins. Reply Leave a Reply Cancel ReplyYour email address will not be published.CommentName* Email* Website Notify me of follow-up comments by email. Notify me of new posts by email. Δ This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
Allegra Silberstein January 24, 2022 You are a lovely gardener of words and thoughts…thank you for your poems. Allegra Reply
C.B. Anderson January 24, 2022 You are quite welcome, Allegra. Perhaps I’ll post some recipes one of these days. Reply
Joseph S. Salemi January 24, 2022 “Dystopia” is truly a poem of this day and age. Sometimes a poem cannot be written unless it grows in the atmosphere of a certain period. Excellent work, but also deeply sad. Reply
C.B. Anderson January 25, 2022 “Sad,” Joseph, is the perfectly apposite term, especially when it comes to friendships sundered due to deep political divides and when it comes to the prospect of the entirety of Western civilization being canceled. Let’s see what the soft leftists think when we train no more physicians or engineers, and every dwelling has been burned to the ground. This is not a time in which I would have wanted my children (and especially, now, my granddaughters) to be born. Let’s go back to those good old uninteresting times. Reply
Brian Yapko January 25, 2022 C.B., I think these are both evocative, intriguing and– especially your “Dystopia” – far too relevant. “Dystopia” manages to catalog most of society’s ills economically, vividly and — to my surprise — quite movingly when addressing the circumstances of “where a cherished friendship ends.” Relationships have become much more difficult to maintain in the polarization that has taken place concerning the most basic of issues. The despair you describe does seem to be inevitable and longterm. It’s difficult to see a pathway out. Your “Freewheeling” poem is fascinating — the imagery is striking and seems pulled together from a great variety of sources — philosophies, hay stacks, swimming and then hitting that Gibralter-like wall (a metaphor for God?) I’ve read through this poem a few times now and what I get from it is something of a meditation on aging, mortality and the fearlessness that can (perhaps should) come with age. I will read it again because I feel certain that I am missing ideas in it. But the ideas that I have picked up so far are wonderful. Reply
C.B. Anderson January 25, 2022 Yes, Brian, one can tell that the world is in a sad state when despair seems a more reasonable approach to it. Hope is a cardinal virtue and despair is its opposite, but as William F. Buckley said on the eve of Bill Clinton’s election when asked whether he thought there was any hope that Clinton would be a good President (to paraphrase), “Well, as a Roman Catholic I am required to have hope, but I see no reasonable evidence that would lead me to expect the outcome that you suggest.” In the second poem, I think Gibraltar represents sublunary entities such as Government etc. In a strange way, growing old is actually good news because it means that one is still alive. Any ideas you gather from it are perfectly valid. After all, it’s not as though I wrote it with a detailed outline in hand. I will say this: When one is old there is less worry about ruining one’s future. Reply
David Watt January 27, 2022 My favorite line in “Dystopia” is ‘For simple honesty we pay a price’, because that is an undeniable truth, as are your other lines. We find out who our true friends are when differing opinions are respected, or taken as an affront. The thoughts in “Freewheeling” are equally well expressed, with unexpected rhyme pairings including ‘radix/hay-ricks. Reply
C.B. Anderson January 27, 2022 Thank you, David. To be perfectly honest, finding good lines and unexpected end rhymes is what makes writing these little poems so much fun. Maintaining coherence and cohesion throughout a poem can be a bit tedious, and I often neglect that important aspect of any work aspiring to become good or great art. Reply
Susan Jarvis Bryant January 27, 2022 C.B., both poems are admirably crafted, as usual. I always appreciate your fresh eye and skill where rhymes are concerned. “Dystopia” is my firm favorite. You say all I strive to say in my poems with a poignancy and poise I can only aspire to. You have tapped into horrors of today with subtlety and a gloomy beauty that echos the heft of my heart. I’m in awe. Reply
C.B. Anderson January 27, 2022 You make me blush, Susan, which is a good thing because it means that blood is rushing into my face and, I would like to hope, into my brain. Your poems never lack poignancy or poise, and though I really don’t want you to do this, if you forego some of the “special effects” you are famous for, then you might end up with something closer to what you say you aspire to. Reply
Susan Jarvis Bryant January 27, 2022 Thank you for your tip C.B. I’m going to have a word with my boisterous muse… I’ll see if she’s willing to calm down a little for my next serious poem.
C.B. Anderson January 29, 2022 Even your funniest poems are dead serious, Susan, and don’t you forget that. Reply