According to Empedocles, there’s a distance infinitely removed from the day, which is also what is most intimate to us, more interior than any interiority.
The poem is
what opens, what in opening is a call for everything else to open, to enlighten
itself, to come to light.
You have to know where
to look. It could be in a bin of lettuce. Or a pharmacy in Pocatello, Idaho. A
sex worker washing windows on a brothel out on the alkali desert 30 miles east
of Sparks. A timber king sitting down to a plate of juicy roast beef. Who
suddenly takes a dive into the mashed potatoes. Death by myocardial infarction.
You never know just
where or how it’s going to happen.
I’m not sure what
anything is anymore.
I never really got into
religion much. But I do believe in ghosts. Not like the one in Hamlet. More
like qualia that stir the blood. Churn of starlings over barren earth. That
urge to call a friend or brother or sister that’s been dead for years. That hummingbird
hovering inches from your face. That horse on the other side of the mirror. That
monkey wrapped around your leg at Angkor Wat. That elusive haiku waiting to be
discovered among the ferns in a stand of redwood.
Think of it as a can of
soup. You’ll need a can opener. And to escape the prison imposed on you in
childhood.
When I was 13, I became
obsessed with fighter jets. I remember staring at the Air Force Academy in
Colorado Springs. It was the power, the roar of jets. But I was slow at math. And
captivated by music. Green Sleeves. Green Onions. He’s A Rebel. Twist and
Shout. The One Who Really Loves You. Blowin’ in the Wind.
The quality of the
highway surface on I-90 worsens markedly once you leave Ellensburg and begin to
rise into the Cascades.
Why is that? Why are
the highways to the east of the Cascades better maintained than the highways to
the west?
We stopped for gas in
Moses Lake and headed into the night.
The surrounding country
was desolate, flat, and lonely.
I saw Mars to the east.
A glowing red dot as
desolate as the highway we were driving on.
I enjoy following the
data coming into Nasa from the Mars Rovers, Sojourner, Spirit and Opportunity,
Curiosity, and Perseverance. The desolation is so stark, so immaculate in its
austerity, it’s spellbinding. It looks familiar and strange at the same time.
Reddish dust with the character of iron under a pink sky with a shrunken sun
gives the mind a craving for life. The drama is quiet. It’s a funny drama. This
is a place of giant soliloquies uttered by a phantom life that may once have
existed. Rocks resembling faces and bones mock the familiar comforts of a
carpet and chair. How did this happen? These fingers typing these words. These
words. These feelings. These longings. Propinquity and protein. Kinfolk and
kneecaps. Illusions and disillusions. Primal mutterings. Dogs wagging tails.
Orioles on a prairie. Clean bedsheets. Egyptian mummies. Nonsense and noodles.
Gothic architecture. Tearful goodbyes to the dying.
The sound of our sun is
an eerie howl.
The sound of the
universe is a low-pitched hum. Oṃ maṇi padme hūṃ.
But
there are no molecules to carry the sound. “In space, no one can hear you
scream.” Alien. Ridley Scott.
Man
in a Chevy Silverado doing 90. Hard, determined look. Takes the exit to
Ritzville.
A dead coyote at the
side of the road.
There comes a point
where reality is so hard, so brutal, so unforgiving, so absurdly merciless, it
makes you want to laugh.
This
feeling of an es tagt,
of "the day is breaking," which makes possible - as much of the night
as the day - the chaos as well as the gods, this font of divine light that
radiates through all of Hölderlin's work, drawing it up with light, pure light,
the allure of the pure ray, and because of this the words are suffused with a
light beyond the light, which is clarity itself, and all clarity.
For the
jubilation of the Universe always tends to distance itself from the earth and leave
it stripped; if humans don't hold it back.
…that is to
say the poet, calls it so as not to get lost in the expansive infinity that it
derives from its origins: as it is, it is indeed a limitless totality and that
must be, but it must also be that "without limits" becomes its limit,
is integrated into the totality, and this is why the poem must come.
* * * * * * * * * *
*Lines in italics from La Parole “Sacrée” de Hölderlin by Maurice Blanchot.
5 comments:
Beautifully said. The Prarie captures the ineffable loneliness between life and death.
brilliant & beautiful. 'the poem must come' as a force indeed. admire how you weave in blanchot within the spell-binding force of your own poem. again, this is brilliant & beautiful.
Thank you Richard, for your sensitive and generous reading. Much appreciated. And Anonymous, I agree, the prairie and desolate regions like eastern Washington do tend to intensify feelings of loneliness and the commingling of life and death; the distractions of the city obscure the deeper aspects of the human condition.
Loved your post! Your writing is both informative and engaging. Keep it up and write more!
Hi nice readding your blog
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