292 chapter eight
Figure 8.2. «The Program»: Content and Plot
you, reader of «The Program», take the place of you, protagonist and
reader of the beautifully printed program (1:1), and are drawn into an eerie
if not grotesque and violent event. The play-within-the-play and its
aftermath, for example, show that terrible things befall the audience.
When the poem is next read, the process starts anew. The reader will
become you, you will become he, and he will be ousted. Notably, in a
side street of reality, he might become you, the poem’s next reader. «The
Program»—or, the program—continues endlessly and relentlessly, go-
ing around in circles, cyclical and resonating in itself as poetry does.
The namelessness of the oft-repeated personal pronouns suggests
that they represent ineluctable, inherently repetitive patterns of social
interaction rather than moments that involve individual choice. This
impression is reinforced by emphatic repetition on the level of form,
actor A kills? actor B
(soldier A) (soldier B)
people die
audience
(all those present)
actor
(he)
audience
(you + others)
TWO
THREE
ONE
ousted from the poem
into reality
actor A usurps actor B
(you) (he)
audience (others:
audience, crowd)
audience in reality: reader of
«The Program»
ZERO
possibly becomes