One by one the words wander around like a drunken noise opening and closing for maintenance. It's difficult to throw the mind at a window and get nothing but glass. This is why we have shadows. Shadows are erratic, and words are shadows. Words are a way of undressing, as if, from head to toe, we were united by two different religions, and joined ourselves in warmth. The ideas that surge across the page, like the joints of fingers, show what distinguishes a temperament from a temperature, and how they might hang their fleece jackets on a song for the grammar surrounding them, and walk naked into oblivion.
These are hard times. Nothing is stable. But if words
flow spontaneously from one idea to another until an equilibrium is reached, an
abyss can dream of lava amid the sparks of the sacred and achieve full glory in
a thermodynamic of impulse. A voluptuous heat will express itself in joules
inside the body, and a framework of propagation will support whatever glass you
choose to put in your window. I recommend tempered, with a hint of foreground, glazed
with paradise.
After a friend died, we sat a black table and reminisced,
fueling our conversation with cognac and wine. Later we had cassoulet and
clafoutis. A toast was made. And the spirits remained quiet. And the candles
went out. And there was sudden laughter. And a ghostly image sitting in a
corner of France, on a warm day in August, watching the seagulls, and the
jolliness of the waves.
With or without a neuron, we find the frontier where
our identities are hungry for an alliance with something larger than a tilted
pony and grander than an airplane. A total lack of moderation or constraint can
be a source of filigree and untangle our knots. This will require lampshades
and parodies of erotica. The lives we lead when we’re sleeping are different
than the lives we inhabit in our lyceums. Here is where a little sorcery can be
serviceable. It is a candle of such bald vagueness that it seems like ants to
an agate, and will blow our minds to the rampant winds, where the windmills
creak and the houses are deserted and empty and the horses just chew their
grass and ruminate. It’s always the intervals, the places between the cities
that offer the most potential. But there is one drama in particular that
prepares us for Brown Willy, Cornwall, and you can’t fit it in a word. It’s too
indulgent. Too bloody dynamic. It successfully predicted the existence of
antimatter, the intrinsic spin of desire, magnetic moments of pure idleness,
and Cher on TV. I can’t say it’s what it isn’t when it isn’t what it isn’t. And
all the meanings it expands. It just doesn’t work. And for that, I commend it.
And recommend it. And feed it everything I have.
Which isn’t much, incidentally. But nothing is written
in stone, besides lichen. Any circumstance, however impoverished, can be
compensated by a generous spirit. It all comes down to perception. Take a
watermark, those semi-transparent logos identifying ownership or copyrighted
intellectual property. A watermark is a reverie of lines, be it fuchsia or an
assortment of clouds, which are the silent songs of the air. You can choose to
interpret as a thing of beauty or a pesky point of law with a decorous appearance.
In this instance, it is clouds. It is drifting. It is that interval between
paying strict attention to the details of this world and not paying attention
at all, which is a blatant inaccuracy since our language must be bent a little
to accommodate a circumstance of some vagueness, a phenomenon outside the
empirical realm, in which the mind is as large as the sky and just as casual in
its occupation of space.
From one end to the other of the blazing February sky
was nothing but a desultory convoy of clouds. They moved like worms, satisfying
their needs with a long slow undulation, while below, the infinite calm that
inhabits the shores of paradise carried in its currents the ash of a long full
day. This is how things become cathedrals. Details of crepuscular light ignited
the trees while dynamos of fresh new sensation held me in thrall as I clawed at
the threads of my old armchair. Themes of heavenly dispensation pulsed through
my veins like cosmic gold. I’m a man of the world, a traveler, but I’ve never
seen a backstage rain unleash itself with such force onto the stage of
existence and inscribe its meaning in so many streams and mosses.
Our flair returns when I find my being is on our side
of the predicament. Which is to say, it’s a matter of stellar importance, this
overwhelming confusion, this parable of hunger. You can feel it coming. You can
feel it squirm in your body like a like an emotion and struggle to put into
words what is largely anathema to any language: the inability to say one simple
thing about linoleum. So many experiences are made of ochre and dirt. While
many other aspects of our passage through life reveal so many beautiful things,
such as the phosphor of ancient bones in Colorado moonlight or summer oils
shining on a young woman's skin, there are things that elude a simple
assessment and require a deeper probe, a deeper application of our faculties.
Often thoughts, one after another, several at once,
tumbling around like clothes in a dryer, have the curious effect of moving me
as far away as possible from the granularity of brick into the hypnotic regions
of prestidigitation. This comes from watching the washing machine too long.
Prestidigitation is a common side effect of writing. It
involves quick, nimble finger movements to entertain or deceive an audience, and
is a worldly inflation of one's power to inflict a maximal amount of change
upon the things that make one sad.
It helps, sometimes, to think of words as small,
crawling, soft-bodied invertebrates with wills and agendas of their own, but
which generously include our thoughts in their parade, indecorously shrouding
reality with the intoxications produced by the power of effusion.
Accidents do, sometimes, occur. A bitter month or
lever which has a pleated surface, usually striped, becomes languid when
splashed with darkness. And sometimes a brilliant idea shines like a shooting
star, deconstructing logic and prophesying UFOs.
Ed Dorn’s Gunslinger, for example, where the words are
bullets and the horses are wise.
At home, I am sometimes myself, sometimes a weird and
distant tone, sometimes a bare minimum, sometimes a highly impractical
objective, and sometimes a remote periphery on the outskirts of reality crazy
about bears and confetti. Tonight, I arose from a crash of hydraulics and metal
in an effort to find the molecular core of poetry. I’m not looking for answers.
I’m looking for delegates. I am looking for a narrative that I can fill with
the dark energy of negotiation. I’m looking for a way out. I’m looking for a
way in. There are rumors from other worlds, as always, but none with a highway
to paradise. The truth lies in what we cannot do without and what we cannot
impose on others; therefore, there is never enough balance to achieve a happy
medium. That's why life is often so trying that you can't put it in a story
without backing away and surprising yourself with a confession. But let’s not
get too personal. I’m just here for the music. This isn’t a time for parables
and lessons. It’s a time for resistance. And whatever feeds the soul.
