Totem of the Chimera

ViewThroughTheRazorWire
2 min readJul 28, 2018

A poem about the effect of bitterness on the spirit by Daniel Whitlow

Bacchanale by Salvador Dali Z(1939)

I hardly ever smile anymore but not because I don’t want to —

I wash away long days of personal sedition

by scowling at distorted messages drawn in a scarred-glass face,

finger-traced constructs of mirror-reflected negativity

winding tedious epitaphs in cohering dust,

hanging from reproachful words meant to condemn and chastise,

to rebuke and renounce.

— I just can’t. I used to smile. I used to love laughing, but now —

I rinse away my perpetual litany of fallow principles

with the absurd belief that artifice is the voice of divinity,

compelling me to stumble up sanctified steps toward temples

of vast, concrete fallacies, shaped in the illusion of godless

piety, made wet by rain born of prancing idiocy, frolicking

beneath a victorious, fabricated, fictitious sky.

— it hurts more than it heals; it feels more false than real; I think —

Talking fails to ease my debt, so save your compassion for

other droning altruisms. Exert your humanity on the moronic

multitudes and leave me to my misery,

to the enduring legitimacy of my uninspiring legacy,

to watching as my deceitful inadequacies take full control

of my faded dreams; I deprive myself of everything.

Author’s Note

The vicious efficacies of bitterness and resentment evolve with viral prowess. They possess a single objective: the degradation of the spirit. We must prevail against such slow deterioration, against cynicism’s sullen whimpers. When the simplest joys have become redundant, we have lost.

About the Author

Daniel Whitlow received a life sentence at 17. He began writing and thought that no one would ever hear his words. He considers this opportunity — to share a part of himself he thought was lost to the indifferent, unhearing void of razor wire and concrete emptiness — to be life changing. His gratitude is beyond expression.

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ViewThroughTheRazorWire

A forum for fiction, creative nonfiction and poetry by students in the Men for Honor Writing Program at California State Prison-Los Angeles County.