Something blossoms,
something dies. I see Chicago tonight in the parlor where my father had seen
the stars, my mother the sun, my brothers the cosmic portrait through a trembling kaleidoscope snug
within the paper fortress. I see Chicago lit up like a luminescent baton
falling in the glass bowl of my morning, stumbling down the orange and yellow,
mumbling within the orbit of a somber Monday. I walk outside. Children like
oysters swaying in the grey parade; howling echoes spread atop the gut table.
My hands are his hands are their hands are our hands- it is the same from under
any waterfall. It is the same sheen of anothers eyes, pushing atop the mirror
until the reflection is softened atop a throne of tangible dreams drawn with
the imagination. Of the old way, I yawn. Chicago like a painted diamond whose
wrinkled palm holds the rivers of my silk hopes, in the morning, rising like a drunken
sun. I stumble, humbly along. Wither hath fled thy visionary gleam? It is a
vision I have had, it is a vision within a vision, framed within the restless
closet where the radio silently weeps. I believe in a city; I believe in a
possibility- the alembic of my life suspended from above a jar of teardrops.
Chicago standing beneath the marvelous kiss of industrialization, the sound of
a steel eclipse, the people coming and going, walking snugly shoulder to
shoulder in the bellowing cavernous streets. I see the train break the air like
water upon a shore, I see the women, tall and bright, the portrait of a lady,
composed of the collective sounds of words I had only imagined to be words; the
outline of their silhouette like a thousand raindrops suspended in the freckled
way the sun falls in-between the buildings, buildings like heavenly trees which
shimmer in the shadows as you walk by, lost in the way one becomes another- are
we not that similar no matter how many cities have fallen? When it snows it is
beautiful the way the aspect of the world is changed as we all brush the flakes
as they land upon us, the way our arms all do the same instinctual thing. I see
Chicago in the form of a story, sitting within the amber fish tank wrapped
within the fog of a moment held captive within my mind. I see the timeline of
my life falling short of an hour, I see the history of my life before it is
over, embalmed within a shadowbox, I see my voice as it rolls over a canyon, I
see my eyes as they close for once as something blossoms.
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Friday, October 26, 2012
The modern man tumbling
through the tumbleweeds like a land fish- a man rides his bicycle late in the
night in a town, somewhere, sometime. Progress. Rolling. He peddles in the cold
where in of doors it is warm by a fire. The crackling logs suggest the voice of
the disillusioned. A steel mill closes but what for? And the voice carries on
in the timber we continue to let fall. It is ok, it is not a civilization. I
read some things at night which become the shadows of the following day,
lurking somewhere within the garden. A woman, beautiful like bronze- beautiful
in its solidity, in its mineral form- she waits quietly with her arms at her
sides. I watch, suspended from above her mountain eyes. If I approach her it is
over. The actuality of the moment fascinates more than the moment actually
happening. So I wait. Dumbstruck, like loves loose ghost. And for a century she
stirs not, only does she turn the air into bread, the rain into wine and I am
lustful, I lust for her, yet to go to her would be the death of the dream. So I
wait, wanting more than the cleavage she has shown me from afar. The modern man
crumbling into a word. It is the disillusionment we have quite forgotten in the
cars; the highways pale in comparison to the clouds which they sit beneath. It
was a red car that carried so much steam, it was a green car which killed us
all. See the café, lit up as she spreads her thighs beneath the drawing of a
table? It has been drawn down and out on that road which leads to Winesburg,
Ohio, but he took the train, amen, god bless, and I laugh, I cough, I snicker
and blow my nose as another car floats into the nameless ocean then drowns.
Still she is waiting, my Madonna of the rainy night. She is ageless like a
plate. Her palate consists of gold, sit with me from above and watch the way
her breasts fall into her stomach. I have driven very far but I have seen what
the world can do to a man; what a man can do to the world. Women, perhaps
women, and another man passes but is he the same man as before? I cannot tell.
Dear roses will you answer, or is it to cold to pierce the brisk evening air
with you beautiful thorns…
Saturday, October 20, 2012
It
is strange to think that once we were children, that we shared a bed and a
roof. Have you thought lately of what I had mentioned, of the cabin, the fire
burning? It has been a dream of mine so I am sure you have dreamt it as well.
Are we that similar? Do we not both sleep beneath the same forgotten skies? I
see you often in my dreams; in my daydreams you become something
different. It is not with reproach
that I look upon you as I travel from day to day but you become something different.
I imagine you sitting across from me, tucked away within the industrial way
this city carries us, you, a stranger, sitting bleakly and crossed legged. Your
head moves slowly, moving with the train, glancing, looking, falling upon all
the faces then the legs- if I met you in an imaginary moment would it be the
same as how I imagined it? Last we spoke it was sparse when I wanted it to be dense,
but the noise that surrounds one sometimes and I become lost in the words I was
preparing to say. Strange, yes, how sound swallows, drowns the thoughts, but I
was thinking of the hutch we shared and the silly moments we had tucked away,
forgotten in the pine drawers. Notes and letters, postcards unsent, a few
pictures, yet it was not those which I miss, it is the times we had placed them
there together. What is tangible I believe to be unimportant, it is what led us
to make and to create that which we can touch, the imperfect way we sometimes
have of composing the unfinished stories of our lives; one thought leads to the
next which is to finish what was before, but always do we leave the seemingly
perfect creation unsettled. It is never-ending the way we compose the
intangible moments which connect us within the shared reflection.
If
only you could have seen the masquerade, the promenade lit up like a thousand
deep sea fishes, the town folk dance and curtsy to a tune which reminds me of
your fair weather, the armistice resounds and I am thankful for the memory I am
sure will glow no matter how dark it is from within. It is sad, she said, that
we do not talk. The room grows smaller when I think of your resilient charm. Why
can you not break that indescribable barrier? You are a silly man to think that nothing will change; it is,
as you have made it, the wall is yours alone- I cannot climb that which I
cannot see. Things are well, things are okay, I have seen more often than not
that which I will speak of within this prancing dialogue we have surrounded
ourselves within. Is it that I am to blame as well? I remember standing in the
kitchen, glowing and red, dancing about in the wake of a new love. She was soft
this one, that one, and for the time it sufficed to say I felt something other then
the anguish brought by another, but something now is growing and as I have said,
I fear the day of her departure, the road down which I am more oft than not to take.
I have shown her where we have walked, the trees, the stream, and she has set
upon the grass the memory which she has kept of you. More often than not it is
alone that she visits what she calls, ‘the death of the twin souls fallen into
the abyss of a misguided apprehension of the fear of what one will think of the
other.’ Men are silly, she says, and boys are no better, but there must be
something in-between intuition and pride. Maybe not and maybe I am trying to
get at what is alive within, unsettled, a part of me which is yet and in time
to be a part shared. When we close the eyelids of our loved ones, what ever
will we say? And if in passing… I hope that there will be more to our lifelong
story than the times when we were absent, but on and on the parade goes…Her
outfit this evening is divine. I know you once said she is quite lovely,
tonight she is beyond love and beyond any words a man could muster up to
describe.
April
is a beautiful month, you should see the way the children dance and sing in the
shadow box garden of our youth; diner in Spain, the fantastic voyage, et al, et
al. Walking this afternoon in the shade of a hidden grove, a creek runs between
the stones smooth fingers; the water has softened the natural way the earth
fell into a grove here, winding, returning to Horseshoe Pond. As children we
often came and watched, chased one another, stumbled and fallen beneath the
cabbage green vines of the weeping willow. I tried, if you can imagine, swinging
as we used to, yet the strength of an old tree is not enough to hold me any
longer. I felt the ground, I glanced, imagined as you once ran away- your tiny
life sprinkled atop the old streets which haunted us, where the lights did not
shine and the old people coughed and frightened us. The park has since changed,
yet I stand and it remains the pillar of my often forgotten childhood, fresh as
ever, and the moments come on strong.
The days spent in mothers winter dressing barely able to walk but never
cold. Has it been long since you visited the old maroon house? The siding is
still the same weepy color. I thought to knock and say, but I once- but I could
not. She smiles at the thought of what you had mentioned, of seeing again our
smug cheeks grinning over a table and a glass of wine.
I
see someone and the ripple flows into the form of another. Old friend I see you
and your luster is fading. I write only now of the sea which drowned us all. It
would be a mistake to say I know not of what I am doing, that I have not
planned at all, yet within the growth of a thousand memories, I have swollen to
such proportions that it must be written before I burst into a beautiful vision
of an ochre sunset, for when I end, the world ends as well, and on into the
darkness of the sinking unknown depths of the soul I shall follow those who in life I had loved- old lion lead
the way with your flowering plume of life’s unwanted feathers.
It
is when one voice becomes the voice of many that art will erupt. When we look
upon something with the shared eyes of the human heart, when we touch and feel
the lives of our beautiful neighbors, when we taste the tongues of others in a
glorious display of sweat and grime. The past becomes the present and the
future is the present unwritten. If I gave you all the tucked away letters I
have used to compose the marble statue, the veritable edifice of hope and love,
would you look upon me with dismay or would you stand in awe at the way the
pale sky becomes the breast, the sun the hips, the earth below. We are above
nothing, you and I, only do we think that the sunsets and rises from the window
we watch from. It is beautiful to think it, it is more beautiful to have
written it, and what better gift then the gift to begin. I cherish the mess, I
adore the idea of change, the love of play, the intoxication of creation…
I
remember you driving and all the things I wanted to say, how they came rushing
upon me and I chose to say nothing. Can you understand that I did not wish to
be silent but I knew not how to express the sorrow, the death of the dream, of
a life imagined unlived, never to fully reach the fruition I had so fully
realized it to be? And then the road, the broken pummeling lines. It is
complicated when one stares at that which he does not understand, lost forever
in the movement. The automobile, the home, are they really that different? You
light a cigarette and I cannot bring myself to smoke. She hated the smell, the
taste. I would kiss her and she complained. Please understand it was something
then but it is nothing now, and if again I am silent, it is because I lack the
confidence to bridge the distance I have created, when I want to get closer I grow
farther until I have lost my way. Steps abound, the woods become more dense and
the fire goes out. If only the mountains were smaller, the roads closer, if
only the pillow were not so soft and comfortable, the bed like a galaxy of
tangible pomp, the pattern of all I have left unsaid is the meteor painted atop
my duvet…
She
stares at the wall as of late and see that which I am unable to recreate. Her
eyes are so small. If I could recreate the spinning ball in a tuft of entropy;
the firmament portrait of our black and white childhood which hangs upon the
wall. Often I sit and stare at your photo. I say, dear, king, world, how are
you where the dust collects, radiating in the freckled spots of the sun? But the dishes in the kitchen sing a delicate
song and break my concentration and if today is different than what will tomorrow
be?
I
see her standing on the corner where you had lived. He black slip falls upon
her skin like night upon the sun. The living room is furnished with the antiquity
of her grace, the eloquent way of her words, when for the first time I knew
what it was to feel within the presence of another borne out of love; the
shared movement of the echo, the symposium of the sounds bodies are capable of.
The curves of a woman are a prelude to the romance of construction.
And
yes I remember that we lived just up the road. You had cleaned that day and I
cooked. The friar? No, it was Briar, and the joke always ends the same way. Can
you see the now that the snow has fallen? I know your not one for traveling in
the cold, but please reconsider, the fire awaits as always and I will tell you
the tales of old, of the swordfish father had speared, of the picture where the
two men stand, one old and one older, it is a lovely moment in the history of
our photographic lives. There is nothing quite like a brandy Alexander in the
cold winter weather, the cold mixed with the slow burn of a rich dark amber
harmony, in the way it chills then warms. My spirit is softened at the thought
of your arrival, sitting, warming your toes. Come and lets us visit the inn,
let us tell of what we have seen, where we have been, as always, like the sun,
I am waiting for the fresh morning dew, to drink it!
It
is August now and the panoply of fall has yet to start. The signs so familiar
still resting in the nest of summer, warmed by her three siblings, June, July
and August. I here them from time to time in the hallway, I see them as they
walk atop the water, in the streets they were a Spanish orange. The bells ring
from a distance and shake in the mural as you walk by. I walk past and always
is it different. The way the family becomes the vision of the artist. They are
not lifelike but they are life-size, and maybe it enough that they were
painted. The children are little and move on a carousel of a spinning fancy
atop an unimaginable spread of acorns- the cornucopia of a civilization
realized in the hope of a new day. It is the same what we have painted, only
theirs is much brighter. The eyes glow like large comets on a land where the
sun presses with a firm finger year round. How I would love to visit the
visions I have seen.
The
sounds linger from the lake to where to where I have been staying. I have a view as of late just before a
wall, the vines now flow into the luminous street- I envy the sounds which only
my ears can touch. It is cold the way she comes and goes, stays and then leaves
when the moment becomes too much, too heavy for her teardrop shoulders. She is
sad at the thought that I am quite close and cannot reach her. She has begun to
draw the story of our lives. Instead of talking it is pictures she shows me. She
points, holds before me the girl which lives within the sinking ship. I sit
some nights in the vigil of a charcoal drawing. I read- ‘Ours is a tragic age…’
The black beneath my eyes pursues my cheek and the pallor which comes without
rest is upon me, throbbing. I am tired but cannot sleep knowing of the fever
within her. It will not be long before she leaves for good on that ship of indifference
which besets two that have loved within its deep unreachable waters. It is
midnight and the moons pocked face reminds me of the cosmic holes we have dug
for one another, and I long to bury that which stretches further the filament
which we have become. But I fear I cannot. She is Nadja, she is Rima, she is
the unattainable woman who houses the girl and silences her; the constant
reminder that she is undeserving of that which in life she dreams of. The stars
are nothing in comparison to the beauty of a rising sun which she dismisses
when she draws the curtains. Cruel morning, she whispers, and dies upon the
pillow. If it is love, then we must make it loving.
Something
blossums, something dies. I await every day for the memory of tomorrow, but I
cannot wait for yesterday, though I have been down that winding golden archway,
it was not enough to set right the infatuation of the object. She hands me a
note written in a mysterious tongue, and utterance from Greece when she was
there in August. It is the narrative of a depressed period of our relationship
which has not been acknowledged. She says the water has kept us from the
sleeping voices within. But I am tired like the sun must be, like the moon from
having to make an appearance from behind the sheen of an invisible candle. I
say, smile just once so I may remember the way you had become the charm of so
many sunken nights, so many misguided ways and roads, misadventures which stand
like a titan when we sought only to climb the staircase to the home. Rather we
chose the fleeting lure of attraction, the decline of the ideal swept away in
what the night may offer. It offers nothing but the hourglass of another
approaching morning. But I am indifferent, like the cold hands of indecision, a
boy from under the brass balloon of hope. I hope for one thing and choose the
other. I have chosen now to bathe within the song, to see the dream become
alive or to die within the dream. Mother I am sorry beneath a life of setting
suns, I only wanted to understand why the heavens appeared for you at a length
from which your arms could not reach…
She
has left. The world has fallen into the shade which has become my eyes; cannot
you not see the sadness cause gravity to shutter? I miss your way of looking at
things, of taking the shelter I have crawled under and lifting it with your all
encompassing arms, saying, there are so many fish which never will we have the
time for but she over there sitting in the corner looks like a beautiful
morning, so go and have a hello before she gets cold. As a man sometimes needs
the admiration of a woman, a beautiful hairline which sets the boundaries of
her subtle cheeks, it was the admiration of her which garnished not a single
beat of my heart. It is love defined, or it is pure confusion; chaos embodied
in the vanity we stand before each night, or it is the desire to turn the stone
into a flower, still I do not know. When the world ceases to spin, confusion
reigns from beneath the covers I use to shelter myself from another hour. I
know you have known of the ghost, that you have swam in the apparition of a
bowl of rose petals, that you have drank from the puddles of her remaining
footprints, yet how does one remove the shared blanket of a vision destroyed?
The
vines I have mentioned pale with insignificance beneath the stream of a
forgotten memory. I call from below where my toes have been resting, withdrawn
from the warmth of a shared duvet. The wish to have lived within a generous
hand, giving always, twofold, the love I lived within, the statue of a stunted
perplexity of should I? I should always. But the weight of a dark evening
perspires. She returns for a few of her things. I think to ask her to stay, to
say I am too heavy tonight to rest, to heavy to let the lids fall, to heavy to pardon
the sadness of a sinking, drowning, to heavy to sleep and it is lovely the way
she comes in and out through the clouds of a dark heaven, so very nice the
sound of her sleeping, breathing, the sound of a girl who dances atop the moon,
to a moment which was not ours and then to me, to when it is early and she lay
like an orchard composed of an orange October, to when it is late and she falls
like the leaves, to when I kiss her and she rolls like a snug note folded over
in the corner of my shoulder as I unfurl the night of her passing thoughts,
nestled in the brazen way she arrives at my neck, to my cheek, to the freckles
I have imagined would come with age and the strange way how we think that under
a Saturday sun we will become the disintegrated shape of our youthful visage,
of what as a child we misplaced in the bursting valley of cosmological stardust
and we begin again beginning to begin…
Thursday, October 11, 2012
The
Clastic castle, memory number four, room the first where my mother has passed;
my mother, the stained glass window within her garden, framed within the wooden
fence, the vines are a continuous moment emanating from her sun bathed ways,
the old women as she walks upon the plucking violin as father tends to the
lawn. The flowers she has given, their never ending inflorescence, the weather
which has yet to fall upon us like an endless parading mask- she parades above
in the morning from below where I have been living, where the furnace heavily
breaths, where father approaches then leaves. We laid there often grinning at
the ceiling watching as the mango skins dried. Do you remember as I the ceiling
white and crumbling? We are running out of rooms to store all the frozen
moments- when it snows we will have more. The town is small and tiny and the
alleys come to a short end where the stairs meet the floor and the stairs again
begin- if I could only see the
steps on Christmas morning the way I once saw the evergreens. She leaves now,
leans in a passive way like a rudderless ship, somnolently upon the death of
soil. In the second room there was a closet which many a night I spent mourning
the approach of the unforeseeable way she came in the morning, the distance,
the ember valleys from afar where her voice is calling. Outside the men are
talking of the fallen timber. I am sure of the forgotten art, the galleries of
the faithless, the history of a small fortune raised, spent but what is
marvelous any longer? I thought it was her and her broken piano voice so I tickle
the ivory atop the plastic floor, my wooden leg and I. In the valley he has a
cabin and a Dictaphone, he smokes three packs a day, visits the farm often in his
withered blue rolls Royce. Albania, it is you I am thinking of like the crumbled paper below the heel
of an Italian wedding, the invitation of your sister tan and pulling the clouds
upon her, the mora that she speaks in, the grisette! but no she is not French,
bubbles, no it is just the kid, the jar is not large enough for his tiny
thoughts. It is venerable the way the roof sits above the children, they talk
of such wonderful things. From above the sanatorium, the man, the concocted
honey, the burrowing way he lives within the universe of tiny holes he has
created out of the need to tell his story, do you see the way he has become his
story? Silly to think the water would settle us, the wind, the woman in black,
the man, the king, turn the page over and sweep her beneath the rug. The playground, the park, the fence,
what are they if not the semblance of a ceaseless desire to be young again? In
the closet where the champagne calls, I have died a hundred tiny deaths in the
eyes of another. If one life were enough, one life, I would stand tall each
morning on the burnt out fire of the night before, rather, let us light the
coals and begin the dance of joyful sorrow, to relive again the undying night
when the ship arrived in the harbor and the war had begun, and I in my steel
jaguar rolling somewhere in the green mansions of the Carolina’s. August, like
an eloquent womb, in her belly I hear September breathing. She is course, foul,
her breath is the crooning organ of time, stuck and bled, the annals of history
have been living in the open meadow of her giving ways, of a child without god.
In a world without the encompassing, enveloping hand, I wonder if things would
have been better, produced more honey. The birch trees have fallen, the redwood
softly peels, at a time when we are losing more of what we cherish. The cherry’s,
the plums, the American dream unraveling within the drought of our dispirited
hearts. The moth calls from within the chrysalis. We are alive at the very
beginning and the beginning has just begun.
Everything
begins with Elsa, sitting in the shape of days. Elsa was August, the
reoccurring memory held captive within a summer month.
Sitting
in her kitchen I watch as her form glistens in the freckled way the sun passes
through the curtains; the crimson curve of her vibrant lips, her hips which
fall into her thighs. Naked, she leans against a wall. Like drops of rain her
breasts fall from her shoulders. Her charm is in the disinterested words she
has not yet spoken; she speaks in a broken verse- between the distance of each
syllable there exists the shade of her love. Elsa, I say, and she stops me,
falls into the chair across the table, lays her toes atop mine as the smoke
lifts gracefully from the ashtray, dissipates above her amber waves of hair.
In
a moment we will have danced into the bedroom, to the mattress in the cove of
her apartment; the waterfall of dreams- the subtle sound of the distant water
makes its way through the window. I kiss her neck; the unfinished oil portrait
of the recently deceased, vanishing into the oval history of her eyes.
She
remains a mystery to me but it is her portrait I wish to paint, that others may
come and see her lying upon the divan, marveling at her imagination.
We met beneath a violet
night, Chicago, circa 1936, Barabbas and I. Sitting within a parlor he
approaches, hands me his handsome face, hand someone your face, he says, and
the end is written in the smile. I glance about and he pulls me back with his
heavy tongue. His eyes incessantly drop into his drink then to the women,
walking, passing by. His words are the words I wish I had the words to say. Let
us walk he says, it is too beautiful of a night
The luster of his face
spreads to his thick oily hair as he brushes it with trembling hands-
suspenders and jacket, his pants neatly rolled I ask him too many questions. I
should be sure, he says, of the man which rests somewhere within. His
confidence stands tall like the buildings we pass on this pivotal night.
I imagine the room he as
taken, he says I have taken a room up north. He shows me the rooms he has seen,
the paintings he has left on the wall, the flowers which fall from time to time
in the rooms he has forgotten- he painted them so it would happen that way, a
yellow center which curves to an oily black, at the bottom of the lake where
the verdigris will finish what he has begun.
In a night a friendship
begins, in a decade it strengths, to then live at the bottom of Jupiter’s well,
where the water tastes of an endless cosmic night.
He holds his life curled
within his hand. It is over he says, if he were to open his palm. He walks like
rolling clouds of thick black smoke. He talks and I walk beside him Barabbas,
the ghost, the spirit of the old way.
If there is to be salvation he says, it is with women, the machine song
softened by the threading vein of their shared loom song, the furnace and the
factory will vanish in the wake of their distant voices. It is madness we are
approaching and we must live no matter how many skies have fallen.
It was in Paris that he met
her, Paris in the daylight, he says, an antiquated candle from the heavens, she
stands tall and bright on a giant steel thigh. He sits and orders softly,
sipping, the rumors echo from a dark alley of a war approaching. Mysterious, he
tells me, the sound of freedom. He sips again; the oil, the bread dripping- with
him a rucksack, a book and a pen.
He outlines the way she
bends, the way her foot pulls the air, the way she displaces gravity. From
within he is weightless. He draws the way her arms rest like a lady, he points
to her elbow; he is bemused at the bend. Her skin, he says, is a rich soft
white. She blushes as he lifts his chin and smiles.
He cleans his pipe, stuffs
it heavy with leaves, incessantly puffing; Barabbas the train, rolling, the
steam floats past, stretches, tumbling atop the ocean. It is as I remember; I
remember it is Sunday. I spoon from eyes sleeps leftover kisses, tumbling,
dusting my chin.
When the sun falls into the
water, he reads of what he has written and a world erupts.
Monday, October 1, 2012
‘We passionately long for
there to be another life in which we shall be similar to what we are here
below. But we do not pause to reflect that, even without waiting for that other
life, in this life, after a few years, we are unfaithful to what we once were,
to what we wished to remain immortally. Even without supposing that death is to
alter us more completely than the changes that occur in the course of our
lives, if in that other life we were to encounter the self that we have been, we
should turn away from ourselves as from those people with whom we were once on
friendly terms but whom we have not seen for years.’
‘We dream much of
paradise, or rather of a number of successive paradises, but each of them is,
long before we die, a paradise lost, in which we should feel ourself lost too.’
‘But won’t you, indolent traveler,
rest your head and dream your dreams upon my shoulder?’
-M.Proust
Monday, September 24, 2012
The arches of her feet are bells atop the floor, ‘The telephone’,
I say, ‘no it is my toes, I am mistaken, it was a mistake to have walked from
the kitchen.’
The dishes crumble; the sad silent song of porcelain wishing
for the pumpkin, the stone. ‘Darling,’ I say, but her legs have started upon
the hallway.
I awake and have a cigarette, the lampshade blue is broken,
hanging from the stiff hips of her waist; blue and blue best is the song this
morning in the town where the horns are never as soft as the truffle.
In the shower the water runs upon me, falls into the eye of the
tub where time has stuffed the leaves of its mysterious tome which tells of the
girl, the boat, the storm which curled her hair and swallowed her whole- the
soap the smell of bubbling foreign flowers.
A man approaches me, in his hands a ruffled shirtsleeve. ‘I
gather’, he says, ‘that when it storms your arms will need a place to sleep; a
button for all the children whose wishes have been similar to yours.’
Beneath the door her breathing, puffing nose- I touch her tiny
fingers. ‘Silly girl,’ go an wake your mother, the night has asked that we
watch her children the stars, so she may go and wake her sister the sun.
I call upon her sometimes when the sirens whistle. ‘Are you
walking,’ I ask, the church bells rolling. ‘The door,’ she says, ‘is broken;
from the window the world slowly burning.’
She dreams of the fire escapes on every other building but her
own.
The women I can hear below where it is frozen- the immemorial
moment when first I climbed the stairs and passed their door.
The girl who I imagine with watercolor eyes the size of the
lake tasting of silver tinted mold. I let the smoke fall from the window hoping
that it warms her.
I get closer some days watching all the women walking, the
linen flowing white, the sound of a morning when not a thing is said but the
quiet caress of fluttering eyelids.
I imagine I am old as I write this; my children sleeping, snoring-
I am not bothered by the noise. The scent of fresh linen kissed by the midday
sun; her hands are ageless, as she places them upon my palms waiting to be
kissed in the morning, standing on the tips of her toes.
My love I long to comfort her as she sleeps through the weary
night; her faith dissipates into the midnight anemones.
It is not the sadness of tonight, it is what follows.
Perfidious, charming, it is in the way she comes and goes, I
lift my lids and she is gone. It is a dream I have had; I have imagined in the
orchard of my graying thoughts.
As the night drifts into the soft humid morning, the window is at
a pinch; the pulse of the summer heat has started.
The flowers which fall from above- I want to hold her but I do
not wish to interrupt. I anticipate the freckles as they shimmer, the fragments
of a memory flowing, for as I remember it becomes something different.
In an instant I am carried to the shadow, the shade beneath the
tree. I stop some days in the places I will have seen, broken beneath the
weight of our autumn toes.
I have a view as of late just before a wall, the vines now flow
into the luminous street- I envy the sounds which only my ears can touch, the
puddles beneath the feet, the rain, the gutter, rooftops drip dropping above
Amaranthine in her pelerine.
- She lay upon the bed, a fallen rose petal, her toes coldly
fallen. I touch the hem of the blanket which lay atop her; a fortnight or so it
seems longer.
She flickers as the heavy tides of her breath become small. I
wonder how much longer. Upon her ear my lips softly touch, talking of the days
to come. Her father, his hand upon her. I read to her until she whispers that I
stop-sleeping now, her heavy eyes shut.
I am sorry my pet to have forgotten you sitting in the shape of
days smoking an enormous cigarette- ‘your sister, the starfish, does she still
sleep atop the slumbering bay?’
Saturday, September 22, 2012
The night of the fallen
rebels has come; the streets which hold us dissipate and beneath is the beauty
of our solid feet floating atop the graveyard of a buried city. Are pants are
rolled, waiting for the flood. Where we shall live, we do not know, we will be
orphaned as one within the hospice of the underground, where we mine for a century’s
worth of leftovers from which we construct the towering monument, a testament
of our effort rolled into an enormous pillar, the thigh of our giant daytime
lady who we worship, waiting for the rain of her meliferous ovaries, to be filled
with the joy of her dripping sweaty kisses, our fluttering wings are nothing
beneath the sound of her moaning love…
Thursday, September 20, 2012
c.
Not 23, ah, you see it
was a mistake, it was not the twenty third page- I light the lamp, I glance
below, I was thinking of something different, I am thinking of the way I want
to say I am sorry…you see it is not very often that I encounter the moment, a
moment, shared, when I felt alive and felt bad afterwards; I am sorry it had to
be there, that it had to be with them- is it different? Sometimes I wonder and
god did we fight! - she is a lion when she wants to be, I imagine you to be the
same, though please do not tell her I compared the lion and the lioness. I
thank you for what you have shown me, the incessant way you have made the
moment yours, ours, both of us together have smiled under the same shared moon,
but what is it which lurks in the shadows, separates me from you- dear have I
forgotten the way you remember when I was younger? Time, inseparable from the
moment…I am sorry, I apologize, a hundred times over- I am a man and a boy; I
am being honest, I have tried, I try to empress you. I see you as the framed
moment of a shared childhood, I see the way she smiles when she mentions the
past you have shared- the night progresses, can I be foolish for just one
night? But so many nights I have spent in tomfoolery, in the coming and going,
the whistling and the drowning faces. You see a man sometimes get stuck within indecision,
he becomes married to a thought, I am became married to the insufferable man I
am at times- our mothers should have warned us of our fathers and how we become
them at times- we do not, we only reflect the imperfection, the doubt which
lives in our heart. Doubt, I am sure you have known, you see it was a moment of
doubt and like a child I went with the kite rather then the hands of the father
who had told me to slow down, to wait- grandfather calling from afar, did you
tell him? We can hear the echo within but the translation is always lost. Your
heels looked nice, it was nice to see you stand, and any man- the ivory falls,
it is late, the cat sits and waits for her friend the sun- whether tall or not
tall, should be thankful to stand before the endless way you are.
g.
In the wake of a
beautiful September morning unburdened of humidity, all seems alive and
flourishing, for last night I felt wrapped within my cold thoughts; warmth
appeared to be unreachable, but for the moment that coldness has passed and I
will try to avoid its bitterness as long as I can. You ask of my words and if I
would hand them to a living soul inhabited by a ghost, and to that I will say
this: my words of course are not words of my own, as I incessantly read I pile
note card upon note card, written upon them all the words I do not know, to be
defined, written out on more note cards- a thought, and much is owed to the
authors which I have read, borrowed, have stolen from, but they are alive no
longer and though their pages may carry on, their voices cannot, and my voice
is alive and well and in good form, and weather I be for or against all their
small and large thoughts, and though they may not be entirely my own, parts of
them are and are fresh each morning as I change the water in a vase of
forgotten roses. I too, when not help captive by my burdensome thoughts, write
most eloquently, for in the absence of self something happens, and writing as
T.S. says, ‘is a continual extinction of personality.’ We create for we are
representatives of a point in time, and though much has and will be since the
start of life remain the same, what we have done and have said, though heavily
influenced, has moments of our own uniqueness, where influence shimmers in the
background under the dim light of our thoughts.
I write you always from
that which sits atop my head, which at the moment, specific in time only, has
swollen to a proportion large enough to fill a sheet of paper, if not entirely,
then just enough. Does it beg of a response, not always, quite possibly not at
all, it is only a moment shared, for you- a response is your own and sometimes
only serves to say thank you and that I have read your letter, never do I
expect you to let clouds fall upon a piece of paper, of course, and et al, is
sometimes more than enough. We love, all of us, in ways so far removed from one
another I wonder sometimes if we ourselves are capable of understanding where
it comes from, and then can another, simply I do not know- I am reading your
letter and am without words, to say the least, it was unexpected- life is much
larger then us sometimes, its complexities transcend everything which we are,
time especially is nothing more than that which it already is…if I had seen
your letter I would have picked it up; the doubt which you feel for me stems
deep within…
I think of love sometimes
and I see mountains folding, the world and all its oysters standing, open,
love, all of us…
To an extant, which is to
say maybe, or, we have- I am using we nonspecifically-stopped loving as
children, rather loving as adults, which, if anything, is to have dipped the
feather in tar… Namely that we have given to something which- taken the sky
from a cloud, taken the clouds from the sky and put them in a jar, yet in a way
we have to, but to find somewhere in the middle, ah, the though is that which
is not only a burden lifted but glows with the hope that maybe, hopefully, and-
sometimes I look at you walking and I think I have become, or am becoming my
father, and your hand becomes worlds away. Life, love, these are beyond us,
larger than what we imagine ourselves to be. If I have as of late, or ever, or
again, fail to show you the affection which in my heart of hearts I have for
you, it is not that I do not love you, or that I am not in love with you, the reasons
are an infinite amount of possibilities, none of which justify the act, or even
offer consolation, an explanation, but as we are, our thoughts at times so
become us, overtake us, and we become captive to the intangible fleeting whims
of the children upstairs who run the show…
lt.
I thought of writing you
the other day and I did not, yet this morning has made of me some kind of
thoughtful after reading your kind words- mush of a man, I think sometimes the
way a woman says things to a man, sometimes, no- I am speaking from the heart,
excuse me for the jitter jatter, I am rather a nervous man. Never have I truly
wanted to, never have I had the courage to say to you that which I want to- I
imagine, I am imagining us walking towards Daly center very much in the same
way miller imagined FD. and Trotsky square, God! and the allusions, really
though what I want to say is at that moment you gave me a part of you with
which I was very unfamiliar with, a part of your heart, a little bit of
honesty, and I feel as though, to some extent, you deserve the same. France! My
envy could cripple a mountain. My apprehension was deep, a molded sun, at the
thought of you before I knew you, yet please let me know and understand it is
melic; my intentions are of the best sort, and truly, genuinely, never have I
wanted to befriend, or be a friend to someone as much as I have with you. I am
speaking rather honestly and excuse me, yet I hope that is in part ok with you,
but the sun is shining and your words have warmed me…let us begin…I had a pen
pal in New York but out of a misunderstood obligation I killed her- I would
love to receive letters from you, from France! Dear God it pains me to say
that, not you, no, but France! Ah my jealously is getting to me, but, if you
would than I would as well, no? We are talking and walking, walking and
talking- I am the clichĂ© now- and you say, l. says, ‘the world, the city, has
made, makes you cold’…I agree. Then what, what then happens? We eat, rather you
eat- I want you to see this the way I am seeing it, the way you see it, please
remember- and I look at you as the snow is falling and the light which once
shone above changes and the flakes become more white and the city changes, you
change, and beneath the falling snow you appear to me as that which I have
always known you are, human; life can only take so much from life but it gives
back, twofold. I saw you in the whirl and burl of life which alone is a
testament to what I am trying to say- words are birds! - that you are life, we
are life, and aside from all that jazz, in the midst of all that is seemingly
wrong, you gave breath to something, gave life. Please know that this is a part
of my heart; a part of life. I am laughing now, reading, reading and writing,
looking at a quote I have written on my wall -in French nonetheless- wondering,
wondering always why, yet at this moment I know……..
‘Je ne parle pas logique,
je parle generusite?’
I write you out of the
love which exists within me, that two individuals can meld that which was never
broken from the beginning, beginnings, ah! In the beginning was my end, thus
here we are; a black chapeau bobbing.
gb.
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
I had the most curious dream last night and
now I am dreaming…I am sorry, I say that I am sorry as she listens from afar
and the day fades into days and the night becomes nothing but a reminder to
touch the morning but the door always opens then closes and our clothes remain
untouched like our hearts with arms and our tongues with legs and our eyes with
toes, I say she has the most curious nose and I can smell her sometimes, always
after she is gone and it is then that I say to her most always all that I did
not say before about the red bricks and all the people that walk and how they
wear their clothes and how we should not have worn ours and she lays like a
tome and she rises like bread when the water falls in the shower…
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