

SONG OF KALI
by Dan Simmons
For HARLAN ELLISON, who has heard the song,
And for KAREN and JANE,
who are my other voices.
". . . there is a darkness. It
is for everyone . . . Only some Greeks
and admirers of theirs, in their
liquid noon, where the friendship
of beauty to human things was perfect,
thought they were clearly divided
from this darkness. And these
Greeks too were in it. But still
they are the admiration of the
rest of the mud-sprung, famine-
knifed, street-pounding, war-
rattled, difficult, painstaking,
kicked in the belly, grief and
cartilage mankind, the multitude,
some under a coal-sucking Vesuvius
of chaos smoke, some inside a
heaving Calcutta midnight, who
very well know where they are."
— Saul Bellow
"Why, this is Hell; nor am I
out of it."
— Christopher Marlowe
Some places are too evil to be allowed to exist. Some cities are too wicked to be suffered. Calcutta is such a place. Before Calcutta I would have laughed at such an idea. Before Calcutta I did not believe in evil — certainly not as a force separate from the actions of men. Before Calcutta I was a fool.
After the Romans had conquered the city of Carthage, they killed the men, sold the women and children into slavery, pulled down the great buildings, broke up the stones, burned the rubble, and salted the earth so that nothing would ever grow there again. That is not enough for Calcutta. Calcutta should be expunged.
Before Calcutta I took part in marches against nuclear weapons. Now I dream of nuclear mushroom clouds rising above a city. I see buildings melting into lakes of glass. I see paved streets flowing like rivers of lava and real rivers boiling away in great gouts of steam. I see human figures dancing like burning insects, like obscene praying mantises sputtering and bursting against a fiery red background of total destruction.
