Slim Jim
 



Slim Jim


Into the mouths of men go these thin red rods:               
Slim Jim.  

Chaw.        The texture of unshredded tobacco.

A texture that makes
a dog        
out of you. Shrunken skin 

grips tight the peppery sheath     
          of meat, stiff and straight.     
          At each truck stop, lit so stark     
          & lonely,
wakefully erect: Slim Jim.

Lean. Stripped and cut 
from fat—it is the fat that rots,
that kills—it is the muscle that lives, 
red
         &lean. The rippling cords arrayed,

military posture,
made of what makes you move,
makes an animal move.
All kinds of animal:
beef, pork, chicken,
mechanically separated,
made wet, pressed && squeezed, 
made hot, made tight,
then wrapped in plastic. Safe.

Ready for an anonymous late night cruiser, gruff&silent, to sate their hunger—
 
that stranger’s hand,
sweat-slick from wheel gripping,
becomes a liberator. 
Paid for, shucked, and stolen to a
 hot and humming cab,          
where smells of man and meat
 combine in private.            
  Nighttime desperation,

           a fumbling key and then
quiet rumble growling, clutch shoved,
the shifting stick pulled and locked, 
matched,
            free floating teeth of gears
slipping entwined until clutch releases;
frictive plate.
Recruiting pistons newly freed
from palletized tons.
           Now roar
as red rod stands peeled & raw
for teeth to
            chaw
            and rend.
By bite and mile
to heavy throat & gut, be gone.
Be leaner still in every death.
Become the man that now rolls,
            roll long,
roll home Slim Jim.