I can’t remember all the faces, but I do remember the torments. Meatus of votive syllables. Line by Michel Deguy. That I remember. It’s so eminently chewable. Full of protein. Baroque as a vessel for burning incense. Tribute to Jack Johnson by Miles Davis. I want to write a review of my favorite river. Mark Twain already covered the Mississippi. That leaves me with 187 major rivers globally. This will be long and ongoing project. It will be like a river. Maybe my favorite river. I’m leaving now I can already feel the tug of the current pulling me into another embankment. Another repercussion. Another ceremony. Another house. Another rising sun.
I’ve never been to Japan. It’s on my bucket list. So
is Budapest. It’s in the title of one of my books. I feel irresponsible for
using it in a book title since I’ve never been there. It seems fraudulent. So
it’s on my list. Budapest. Which always makes me think of Buddha being
pestered. Or Buddha himself being a pest. Imagine somebody being pestered by
the Buddha. I think that may be the underlying reason I used it in a book
title. So Budapest is on my bucket list. And so is Buddha. And building a time machine.
I want to hear Rimbaud read The Drunken Boat on Rue Férou. I’ll bring Buddha
along. If we’re lucky we’ll get pestered by Rimbaud. Why does denim look so
cool when it’s torn? I’ve spent my entire life in denim. I’m wearing denim
right now. Denim pants. Denim shirt. Denim eyeballs. Denim skin. Denim hair.
Denim Buddha. Denim impertinence. Denim riddle. Denim nickel. Denim devotion.
Denim motion. Denim emotion. Denim ocean. And when the tide ebbs I’m left
naked. Staring at the stars.
I like socks. But I’d prefer not to talk about them
just now. If you don’t mind, I’ll just drift along dreaming of walking barefoot
on the sands of Carmel, July, 1965. Some guy on the beach playing a guitar.
Iconic image. Ironic spinach. Laconic mnemonic. On another occasion, I started
a revolution, based on evolution, endless postponements, and bold
exaggerations. Solomon Burke drove me around town. Inglewood. He told me
there’s a diamond in the mind. I said thank you, thank you for leading me to be
something more than a frankfurter. Our lives change so gently we often don’t
see the result until we’re 79, gazing out of the window of a hearse. Every time
we cast off from the bank, I lose my balance a little. It’s only natural. It’s
the frequent disassociations that cheer my interactions. Invisible strains of
DNA ripple around our contact. Let me roll it to you. You should be feeling a
current by now. It not, I have failed. Failed to enthrall you. Here: take this
sentence and give it a home. Feed it poetry. Clap your hands. Spit and repeat.
We’ll get there. We’ll get there alright. I’m not even writing this. It’s
writing me.
Bo Diddley’s rhythm is a variation of the Afro-Cuban
son clave. I lean toward anonymity. This is the rhythm of the broadloom. The
painful yet strangely jubilant results of an uncompromising stance. À rebours
by Joris-Karl Huysmans. Just writing this causes me to disappear. I sit here
ripping thoughts out of the air. But I don’t want to think them. They’ve
already been thought. Therefore, they stink. It’s not what I’ve been seeking.
It’s not the shelter I was hoping for. Those vagaries of the mind that provide
some inkling of elsewhere, the flickering lights and shadows of a foundry
between the knee and ankle, the alluring mysteries of negligee, the salty
brevity of ocean spray, the penultimate unfolding of the afternoon, the jolly
self-deprecations of office blandishments. The asylum of words. The diesel of
distraction. The intricate defense of filigree. The immoderacy of music. The
haunting voice of Hope Sandoval. The final squeak of an unhinged door. The
chuckling cluck of a cockatoo. A dodecasyllabic synopsis clicking across the
floor.
