Michel Deguy writes of the untraceable transference between suffering and art. I think there’s something to be said for drifting. The feeling of it exhibits mint. The evident urgency in the shape of a mouth. This is my beginning it’s written in Cubism. I’m fluent in the art of getting behind things. And letting them swim in their polemics. I don’t know what kaolin is, exactly, but I can feel it sometimes, unfolding itself into a pizza. The placebo is gratuitous. This is my area of expertise. Is anyone here to watch my feeling wander? Is there somewhere where your hat will feel more salient? I can sometimes feel something crawling up my arm. I look, and find that it’s a beam of light, a tentacle of the afternoon sun awakening my tangibility. Everything has been so brash today. I believe it’s due to the monster in the garden, surfing the Adam and Eve birdbath.
The older I get, the more
religious I get. It’s only natural. Sometimes nothing can be everything. I
stand by my words, rolling a big metaphor into the oven. Similes go good with
incense. But this isn't incense. This is flagrant thought. A page of testimony
the words refuse to embrace. Life gets sloppy in old age. When words rebel, the
best thing to do is to grab them like a bouquet and give them to a touch of
aspersion. I will not block the ambush. Not if I’m flourishing, and sitting on
a block of enlistment. This is how I sift through the strain of living and find
a nugget of cotton. Emily sat down beside herself, and wept. With laughter.
Nobody dreamed time travel would be so indigo. I interact with just enough
ambiguity to make it constructive, and then I sit down to read a book on the
topic of skin. Videos are ok. But I find books far more touching.
Everything seethes like a
fugue on Rue Mouffetard, opening the ruby eye of a gypsy's kite. Meanwhile,
here in the L'Hôtel du Vaurien the sideboard needs repairing. It is rumored
that Rimbaud wrote a poem on it, and the letters burned into the wood, after
the sheet of paper he was writing it on burst into flames. The poem is still
readable, but it hurts to read it. Hurts in a good way. Is someone drifting
toward this shoal? I feel a shadow emerge from the egg of a phantom barracuda. The
temptation to collude with the absurdity of existence feels like a pulse in the
wrist of a cynosure. Once it enters the bloodstream, it's hard to get away from
it. You break down. You relent. You give yourself over to a force far greater
than yourself. Which is called language. And is a serious abstraction, like
track-and-field. Or leading a caravan over an Ethiopian desert.
There's a trick to
determining whether something is real or not. You let it prowl around in your
mind long enough to determine its weight and depth, and if it entices further
thought with the hope of a definitive conclusion always dangling a little out
of reach, it is most likely a piece of fiction. That said, fiction is
frequently teeming with insights that bear the weight of ambiguity. They will bedazzle a jury with the grayness of
a fading morality. The truth nearly dies, verisimilitude bathes in uncertainty,
and the judge is in a stupor. The law trembles with its own brushwork. And
there it is, the framework of a negotiable reality. Hot air balloons drift over
Albuquerque, and by evening we have a greenhouse with veins running through
panels of bulging glass. Nitrogen stirs in the dirt and the fourth dimension
drips with succulent euphorbia.
I never cheat at
division. I divide things unevenly, this is true, but I do it with a nod toward
the grammar of the situation, and touch the watermelon for luck. I’m wearing a
green sweater. But I have plans to upholster my lips with a riotous hayrick in
June. I’m all about sonnets these days, and garnishment and immaterial details.
Do you understand the principle behind clapboard? Hint: it’s got nothing to do
with clapping. Somebody told me I smell like lightning. There’s a reason for
that. I still have a poem by Philip Lamantia cooking inside, teeming with
innocence and airplanes. Innocence in a world this corrupt is a threat. It’s
subversive. And deviant and hilly. Think of it: the Beatles playing at the Star
Club on Grosse Freiheit in Hamburg, circa 1962. Or a war on war. Or a
pilgrimage to the land of nonchalance. The noise of silence in a blatant spree
of fuzz. A patch of snow with the blue of a neon sign glowing on it is anyone's
guess. I thought that now might be a good time to bring it up. The question of
romance. The heart of the situation. La raison d'être. Life. Meaning. Purpose.
The lingering smell of sawdust after sawing a piece of grammar out of the air.
And building a shamrock with a shank of syntax and a soft lament.
So: what kind of
suffering are we talking about here. It’s the kind of topic you sneak up on,
approach slowly, with poise and grace, and whatever stealth you can bring to
the table. And tea. Tea goes without saying. Tea is essential. Any talk of pain
is to be mitigated by whatever means. The wonder of it is its audacity, sharp
as the blade of a knife, strong as Danish butter. Art, I mean. The forms it
takes in prehistory, in caves, and the forms it assumes on Tik Tok. You tell
me: which is better? An Earl Gray flavored with bergamot, a smoky lapsang
souchong, or a mug of sencha? It tea fails, we have opium, heroin,
stethoscopes, online dating, charming rascals, heavenly imagery, ludicrous
perceptions, terrible metaphors, silk parachutes, and Billie Holiday on tap.
This is a place of voluptuous pleasures. This is where we address the issue of
pain. And kick it down the street. A little sleep can help mollify a sting. But
it won’t replace the exquisite pain of an unmanageable beauty.
Anyone adrift must know
what it's like to move toward a future of scorched ideals. It isn’t long before
a sense of futility bends to the dynamic of the situation, which is clearly
birds. Has anyone ever yelled at you to get out? That’s not what this is about,
in case you were wondering. No, this is about argyle. It’s like arguing with a
flute. You can’t fight it with a banjo. You’ll have to use an oboe. It’ll keep
you on your toes. Try writing a poem of devotion. While racing down the streets
of Pamplona with a bull in pursuit. If you’re so inclined, I give you Lorca: At
the forge the gypsies cry and then scream, the wind watches watches, the wind
watches the Moon. Why so many watches? Because in Spanish it’s mira, mira.
El viento mira a la Luna. The marvelous isn’t shy. But it is rare.
Therefore, we should hustle the raw fact of our feeling as if it were coins of
fire, and spend it on ice cream.
