I did it by ignition. That is to say, by oozing teeth. What I had initially planned to be axiomatic and glass turned into a playhouse. But there was so much noise going through it, that I turned to neon for a better, languidly sedimented hour of argyle. I believe that certain things should be kept immoderate and wild, and that other, more modest attempts at prestidigitation should be congenially spread across the brain. A sorbet that we handle with our eager tongues I write forward into history by the fall of a northerly rain. This solves the bus problem. Thereby hangs a bivalve with multiple hats and a rhetorical helicopter. I can’t help but feel syntactical, and more than a little contiguous. Even though my reading glasses are engorged with Proust, I remain a fork at the dinner table, unbuckled and happy.
I am so there where the paper has consecrated my sad
knocking against the door of heaven. But let’s not get ahead of ourselves. I
came here with a purpose. I laughed at everything we said before going to see
where the Sticky Willy blasted out of the ground with those tiny hair balls at
its base, which isn't exactly why we went to see it, I believe there was
something ulterior involved, a stinging evasion of our ultimate immersion in
one another. And that’s why I came here. I came here to muse. I came here to
stitch all this together in a way that might reveal the smoldering needs behind
your eyes. I haven’t seen so many stars since that night in South Dakota, near
the Hell Creek Formation where they found Stan, who now stands proudly erect in
Abu Dhabi, 5.6 metric tons of Cretaceous bone. We may never see such heavenly
folly again, not to mention the tightness of your jeans.
The upheaval that makes words move towards a
liberation of such occasion is the sweat of angels. This provides the traction
to cross any chasm or drive any forklift you wish to bring the disaster of
civilization to light. I'm here for the geometry, yes, but also for a good dose
of temperament. I like being famously anonymous. I like flirting with paradox.
There is nothing that can’t be illumined by darkness or known by a lustrous
unknowing. We seem what we seem to seem while seeming to seem semiotic. This
floats beneath my construction, but it appeals to my conception of anomalous
dispersion. I’m often reminded of that poem by William Carlos Williams about
the broken glass in back of a hospital. Particularly the music of mosaic as it
adorns a man’s lapel. I like drama. I like cats and upholstery. The grenadine
is for Edith Sitwell. And the climate surrounding our knees is to embolden our
play in a Quantum Orchard whose fruit exudes the charm of taillights.
We are next to me in an imaginary place. The melody of
your maneuver while reading this makes us remember ourselves for a moment, and
what we came here for, which is even now beginning to boil. There's something
about what a handful of words can do that gives me a rather ecumenical feeling.
It’s often what goes through your mind while you're waiting for something that blows
you into a reverie of what it means to attain a state of well-being. Because
your life becomes parenthetical. You’re sandwiched, temporarily, between all
the monkey trees and stucco that brought you to this moment. The break-ups. The
disappointments. The triumphs. The coups de grâce. The banquets. The feasts.
The broken furniture. The stupid dances in Elizabethan garb at two in the
morning. The slow boil of fascism. The cracks in the wall caused by a
Tyrannosaurus rex tapdancing on your brain. Arthur Rimbaud showing you how to
prepare a caravan. Buzz Aldrin on the moon. Paul McCartney sheering sheep.
Miles Davis ripping the air into diamonds.
That moment when you openly admit to yourself there’s
something pressing down on your mind. And it ain’t mosquitoes.
I owe a debt to agates and tar, to those things that
dispose us to piquancy and blinking. My warmer voice speaks to a bitter time
that joins this diffusion in chamomile and makes it palatable, if not seismic
in its unadorned angularity. Whatever I intended to hoe in the beginning has
blossomed into vulvae. I can’t say how, I can’t say where, but the binoculars
have gone missing, and the glove compartment is a mess. I believe the piano may
exercise its opinions with a more affirmative breath if we allow it to breed in
silence. Those who spy a concordance may not be wrong about snow. It falls to
the earth in patterns that abstract our literature with rust. Personalities
just mean the House of Hardcore has a future. The real is always shifted a bit
to the northeast of Spoonville. It’s what gives Ed Dorn’s Gunslinger its
bullets and aim. That ontology of spirit we sometimes find in popcorn, an
exuberance so soulful it takes a sewing machine to survive its proverbs, and a
reliable needle to broadcast its thread.
But we know. We know what antennas are. We know what hammers do. All it takes is a little credulity, some balsamic hardware and a little common sense to make a possibility happen to itself. What makes the possible possible isn’t falconry or applejack or the quiet morphogenesis of a wedding rehearsal as it journeys into the brawn of implacable decisions, the weight of which will generate its own necessary rebellions, and find its expression in the muezzins of Marrakech. What makes the possible possible is the charade of the impossible. It is the kindness and attention we bring to the world that allows us to hear the ants as they whisper with pheromones in their subterranean galleries, the local foundry expressing itself in shadows, the chemistry of histogenesis flowing through the veins of the monarch as it generates its wings. A meaning remembered by undulation may cause a fever, whereas the birth of a gypsy banana tells the story of how to produce a sky-blue shirt, and leaves the body in a state of repose, unbuttoned and warm.
