Posts Tagged ‘Muse’

From a Clean Page


07 May

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Sempiternity

                                                                                        

I just imagined you

in a party dress

of surprised pomegranate gabardine

peeling crawfish

to see whether they were cooked

like a blues song on a downtuned piano

and by that vision

I knew that it was summer

again

at last  

a cackling whirl

of sunshine and sweat

in strands of dark chestnut hair

that smelled

like my last trip to Louisiana

and bubblegum from my Soviet childhood  

bought with inflated currency

tasting of the same inspiration

as when I got high

with the animals in their furnished cage

and my body no longer felt broken

and only a heartbeat

to keep the rhythm for our boogie

remained

only a single summer evening

when I conjured you in a dream I haven’t woken to thus far

because we hadn’t met back then

but there were wild stanzas that rollicked blindly along the zephyrs  

and I could almost capture them

like fireflies skirting the glass of opened jars

in juvenile hands that hadn’t grasped the world just yet

and we smoked a bit to pass the season

the cigarette transitioning from your fingers to mine

in delicate hesitation

and we looked at each other

wondering what kind of time apart this was   

in this mulberry vespertine glow

of new summer

refashioned into an astral, phantasmagoric isolato

taking a threepenny tour of eternity

 

(for M.)

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8 X 8 (Of Cinerea)


20 Apr

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8 X 8 (Of Cinerea)

 

I don’t like to make the bed because it reminds me of a Soviet orphanage; of tiny, pale hands pushing wool blankets of rough gray up into a strict horizontal angle. It reminds me of drying cement and a thin film over curdled government milk. I never want to be with her in an apartment where we have to make our bed, I always want for it to remain an eager invitation. I don’t want throw pillows, silk sheets or a mint either. I just want her and a ruffled blanket thrown on a comfortable mattress in a comfortable manner, some purple covers to keep us restless. I want it to look, in the morning especially, as if it all lay there like a song from an out of tune instrument, and I want her, and I need her to want to get into that bed with me. Everything else is shibboleth, ceremony, or a politeness I can’t stomach.

 

She thinks that I don’t know anything about her – but I know she’s stubborn, and she thinks it’s cute. I see it when she grins at me, in a toothy silence, during a pointed pause in conversation. I see it when her eyes become dewy from the irritation of light and contact lenses. I see it when she folds one leg underneath the other to listen to a new story I was meant to retrieve for her.

There was the time we went to Philadelphia and she caught a cold (before any soup could be purchased) and yet wouldn’t take my coat to cover herself during the bus ride. We split an order of curly fries after she refused to order her own. She ate most of them before we left the state, hoarding all the ketchup in the tiny paper container – I made sure not to notice and kissed her salty lips like rain on an April window or gray hair mourning on a cenotaph. When we finally reached the fraternal Pennsylvanian city we stayed in a hotel room that seemed to be moulting like a prideful falcon that cast its home on a high tower in an abandoned metropolis. We ate cheese steaks, which never seemed to have enough peppers or onions on them. We argued about who claimed the better Faust – Berlioz or Gounod. We drank whiskey, when she still drank whiskey. Watched bad television and made love like two bank robbers that got away with the loot after a gunfight with the law. Then we took the bus back to New York, never seeing the crack of the Liberty Bell or taking a single photograph – but she wrapped herself in my coat on the ride back and I thought that the trip was wholly worth it.

 

There was a time that the writing

flourished

in my stomach

like a writhing ulcer

and you’d see me spitting blood

in nouns that wore black stocking on long legs

in adjectives in rouge and skimpy robes of good intentions

in verbs that spilled over like premature ejaculation

and you’d soften it

stroke my hair

a 20th century massacre that we’re only forgetting now

you’d sit me down in my favorite chair

with a pen and Yardbird Parker

and get me to write another line

that connected the old world with the new

in a sepulcher of words

the same pretentious masquerade of black and white

stitches across the skin of an exhausted dream

resigned to the gluttony of past

and then what’s left

we’ve shocked and scared ourselves to love again

and on some strangling advice

which you warned me not to take

I rewrote the ending for some commercial viability

and started spitting blood again

but now

with no longer someone left

to stroke my hair

 

I want this life to remain an improvisation. A 20-minute riff in B minor. A yearning for more. Her arms. Her eyes. Her breasts. Her waist. Her hips. Her thighs. Let’s pause a moment. Not too long though. Her face: all brightness, sun along her skin. Something I described so simply, because there was no reason to strain it with complexity: I was a cold cup of coffee and she was the warm hands that held it. In our relationship, it was always too late to castle and so I left the king open and vulnerable, but with her, I never much minded losing the game, as long as it remained nothing more than an improvisation, a variation on all that we take much too seriously.

 

Russians have a superstition that if you step on someone’s foot that they in turn have to step on yours lest you get into an argument – a savagely irrational eye for an eye custom hued in folklore fitting for the people that originated it. Adhering to this superstition tends to make for awkward subway rides during rush hour, especially if you’re navigating the conservative, overpopulated East Side of the city. I once asked an elderly man to step on my foot while I was huddled amongst weary bodies on the 6 train, late to work, and after he looked back at me bewildered, I explained the peculiar ethnology of my proposition. He smiled and tapped my shoe, then talked my ear off about how he had no one, no grandchildren to tell the story of how he wrote a musical adaptation of A Midsummer’s Night Dream with Duke Ellington back in the 1950s. It was a nice conversation and we promised to meet again when the musical was going to be put on in New Orleans the following summer, I mentioned that I always very much enjoyed Cajun cuisine. And with the words “the course of true love never did run smooth for young Lysander,” I left the train with a small imprint of his heel on my shoe.

 

(For Herb Martin)

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Stroganov Likes Smetana


19 Apr

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———–

I/You

 

the more I live the more I think

two people together is a miracle

 

- Adrienne Rich

 

I am not soft, nor sentimental

it is true

but, I do not believe in competition

am I

I am but what you’ve made of me

a wreckage of derelict machismo

discovered by an azure-blue dusk

falling

I am a golden button on your blouse

the suffering string tether that binds me to you

slowly limping into the dream of embezzlement  

underneath your index finger  

a binding breaking; a freedom, maybe

but, loss – most definitely, loss

becoming myth

becoming fabulism

becoming nothing

a drowned island

that future eyes will never see

and I should end it there

because the past twenty explain it well

but you know that I always have more to say

especially about that time

you know which one

five minutes after it was over

like a war when all stood still

divided in binary solipsism

a wounded poet and his despotic muse

surrendered to themselves

alone, each in an empty cavity

that holds them firm and prim

the leftovers in a funereal fridge

a hope that’s prone to spoil to be devoured soon

soon enough

am I

I am

are you

becoming bracelet for your tyrant god

becoming abandoned night

becoming nothing

———

Another Love Song


31 Mar

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Before updating the Official Material section, here’s a new sweet one for your Sunday.

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Untitled (Silence)

 

I love the rain

but it ended today

like the ambrosial benediction

from your lips.

They walked out of the service

with umbrellas underneath their heavy arms

while your toes curled

in my bed

and some sweet 70’s record

played.

There used to be time enough

for all of us

to sleep like that

but the insomniacs

and the living anagrams

own the world now

and the bed

where we watch each other

like a conflagrant sky predicted by some ancient weathermen

like an apparent truth  

is the only place for peace and sermons.

I kiss her forehead like a fever

which I’ve had since I first wrote sonnets about wings

that belonged to love and no canon in particular

a fugue composition of the heart

stirring towards a climax

and she feels warm

because these temples hide

a lovely cavern where the moon bathes at night

like a myth for little princes

and I swallow just a bit of manna from the skin

which burns restlessly for no reason in particular

and she hides me in her arms

letting me know through her embrace

that there is no longer any lie we need to live in

because we never say a word

and the silent are thus rewarded.  

 

(For Lilia Seven Years Ago)

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Something (Against Nothing)


13 Mar

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Writers Make Choices

 

Why don’t we both sleep on it tonight

almost make it to some sort of daylight

I was working on a book

editing the part when he met her

jealous when you woke up

you looked at me

at my typewriter

yawning, stretching your wonderful limbs

asking whether I wanted to join you in the shower

flawless through your efforts

but there was already too much daydream to go around

so I smoked and made toast for us

instead

while you walked out clean

and asked where I ended up

I told you

that he was in Greenwich Village

wearing dingy sunglasses

when he saw her

off the bus

stopped by his favorite bar

(Trostky’s Mexican Adventure with the happy hour promising half-priced drinks)

he leaned against a railing

and made his life

a glory for fiction stuck inside

fiction

an addiction to love and policy

a polylemma between breathing

him following her, skipping from verso to verso

and my taking you

where mistakes can’t always be corrected

where I can’t always be refined

undressed by red ink

but if you’ll ungently take me to some place ungentle

where it’s snug and warm

and a repetition isn’t needed because nothing ends

then I’ll find a way to cut the rhapsody off the tree

and finally let it sleep

for it’s been dangling like a shaman

for four years next month

growing hostile and vindictive

like a sad lover lost in a length of time

having nary to do with life

and barely anything to do with me

anymore

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Supernova Hidden by Interstellar Dust


14 Jan

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you are air turned to gold

 

you are air turned to gold

and I said that

because I thought you’d like

the Dr. Manhattan reference

I want to live in love

I want to be sweet to someone in this world

because in my neighborhood I always have to look mean

for risk of getting caught up

food stamp office in the ghetto

is Langston’s nightmare sped up

knife scars and bullet wounds on dour faces

bleak from the water you can’t drink

a thin tub of graceless bodies

sweat and cigarettes

a kid drops his mother’s coat

the floor is sprinkled with a set of needles

like rough uncut diamonds into greedy hands

teenagers talking about gauges hacking foes off at the knees

we all sit and wait to be reimbursed for poverty

and there I think

I want and need to be sweet to someone

because the only gods existing

are in your comic books

 ———–

With you gone I have nothing left to strive for but Immortality (Part II)


10 Jan

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Rereading The Crack Up, thinking about her and whether she’d be Zelda or Elizabeth Taylor at the end of Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf, I came up with this one. But then again, she was the one that suggested that I should forget. We lose people all the time, so this should of never taken this long.

If you find yourself dating a Sayre – buy lots of ballet slippers and stock your cabinets with gin.

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For L.

 

I will not try to shrink you

I want you to get there on your own

and if one day, off your pills

you might go mad

I will not put you in a home

you are in the enviable position of having cracked prior to failing

you are young and beautiful and damned to live as such

but do not worry much

because the life ahead will seem quite very short when ending

and when you’re 49 a decade quickly

I’ll still be pale and handsome

with flowers picked from your family garden

by my hands of ardent vengeance

that plead with ink for ascetic immolation

phony (but pretty) as a rubber check

when really we want the payment in the mail

and cash on hand

not struggling youth

but, both of us, two charming writers

becoming ex-pats somewhere overseas

garrulous and drunk in the night of no Invictus

no night that covers one

but covers both

and I will raise you out of it

even if I have to continue living through it

just to show you something new

a place to find us both, in

all the iridescence of the beginning of the world

 

(with thanks to Scott, Zelda and William)

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Work Brought Back From the West Coast 02 (Dreaming)


24 Nov

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Ice Cream (Gilded Diadem)

 

I liked feeding her

without succumbing to paternalism:

all the writing they read

(they aren’t aware)

usually only took one hungover half-hour

while the argument between mint-chocolate chip and rum raisin is a much more delicate

-      and time consuming    –  

digging in of aesthetic discourse

but she tasted like two continents

and she always got her way.

Sweet and succulent

she licked the bottom of the spoon

then let her terpsichorean tongue devour it

the cold confection like Buddha to the Taliban

and she smiled like a small savage filled, the successful sacrifice sufficed.

A little devil with little tricks.

She let me kiss her shoulder,

but not her lips

so I gave her another spoonful

and only then

she acquiesced my appetence

like death in slumber delighted by the smell of fragrant virgin’s bower, like the almond of her hair, a weary poetic repetition from her gestures to tempt me  

because she knew  

that I loved

how she made me grateful, guiltily poisoned.

Intoxicated, I did not want to reemerge from her intoxication

and as always

I realized

that I was created to want her

and wander until I found her

like a breath

like a glass of gin

like the West Coast

like the eventual choice of mint-chocolate chip.

 ———–

Sandy by Candlelight


28 Oct

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                          Detective Story                     

 

            Which of us is searching now?

            Which one of us drew the short coke straw to play the role of the one found? Were you looking for me while I was looking for you? I’ve been writing like a mirthless Dashiell Hammett. We should have gotten together just to save time. But we were always restless and careless about how time dangled.

            Too depressed to function outside of a few months at a time.

            Now it is September in the end of the unfinished Hemingway novel, but it is already mid-October over here. And she threw out his stories and his clippings and he grew bored with her madness and took the dark girl for a ride along the Spanish countryside.

            There are lines and contradictions that made us consider the practicability of our fantasies. Because you know what they’ll all say: “not again”, “she’ll destroy you this time around”, “isn’t it time for something new?”

            They don’t know that I’ve gone through the new and the old and the other like an eager chronologist. Get the condoms for free, when you don’t have money and the Duane Reed-time to waste while they’re fumbling for the keys to open the glass case by the pharmacy aisle, in Village gay bars. In and out. They don’t seem put off. They want to be helpful and see if I want a drink. But, no, I have places to get to. Leather-adorned, festive company wouldn’t cheer me up. I have to go and find her.

            Restless and careless about how time dangled.

            In the memories that faded I’ve forgotten her skin as it glistened displaying the caveat emptor asseveration, like a clinical bit of risk meant to frighten and to arouse, like a religious observation perverted underneath my heathen fingertips. I guess this is why simple people freely admit that dangerous situations excite them.

            I kissed the line of her back years ago searching for further clues along its curlicue. I though for once I had an answer. A lovely Arcadia in our bed, wild as her hair on late mornings, where Pan is serving drinks.   

            But she finds a new truth about once in a season. This one a crumpled dollar bill breaking the pill into a powder. I submit and kiss her like a paternal blizzard.

            We’ve been building towards a savage cold, but we might find a night to be warm. It will get here with the approaching storm.

            Exposed then covered in my arms and my new words; because it’s been so long, and I have nothing else to add. Just old promises to reiterate.

            So, I’ll smoke a cigarette after a dirty dream and play that Leonard Cohen record from the year you were born and laugh a bit at a coincidence that isn’t particularly funny. I’ll remind you that they’ll never catch us – and each new day will be like primetime, like a gelastic cavalcade of freedoms pawned to us for a few pieces and gold chains.

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A Day Inward


22 Sep

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A Day Inward

 

            He turned her chair so that the big mirror reflected the minor miracle performed. The coiffeur smiled and nodded, pleased at his own efforts. She looked pleased as well, ready to be poised and vicious in the face of death; we had a funeral to get to.

            Our dress for funerals was now one of formality; the same pungent slickness each time, as if it were a business transaction, as though we were getting ready for some court appearance sprinkled into a labilizing dissoluteness – rid of the tattered habiliment that might suit us better for the beloved trivialities of our day to day, sanguine and softer each time; full of labial, loud carousal and time for quiet, tender and each second an intimation of chemical, literary, architectural inseparableness. She wore a long dark skirt and a blouse the color of a rustic brown too ancient for me to understand. I stuck to the conservative black on black ensemble – Johnny was my friend, after all, and he would have respected the choice to go plain and unaffected.

            America devours its young like a stoned Poseidon – and a lot of my friends are way down, below where Jonah was digested. The names blur; the headstones start repeating Ecclesiastes and Dickens and her dialogues between the spirit and the dust and each farewell seems crowded. Each one gets in the way.

            Her face looked radiant and anguished and fair and eternal, the lines of her profile made inward slopes into the lines of her neck – she resembled a black and white starlet from the silent era, her physiognomy sculpted in aging celluloid, cast in shadow. Colleen Moore, maybe.

            We were late. As always we must be. But these things never started on time anyhow, too many people can’t bear it and start drinking early which causes things to move slow. I stopped by the bar as well, and got us a couple of drinks. She was fidgeting, looking around nervously at people she didn’t know. I introduced her to John’s parents. Some other high school friends soon came along to shake hands tragically and then squeal nostalgically about those times spent smoking pot outside of school and acid trips during biology class and the punk band we started before the drugs turned practice sessions into a languished gray funk where we’d only manage to remain half awake and half alive strumming bar chords dissonantly around twinkling girls who wanted to vamp around those who were only half existing and romanticized the poetic mediocrity of that kind of scene while we chased around them as though they really were fireflies in some youth we’d later cherish.

            I was half spun after the third drink, and I saw her sitting on the little divan in front of the large door leading into a little garden outside of the funeral home. She was looking at the dead fountain, short streams of superfluous water have outrun their necessity, creating a sick coloring, the shape of creeping fingers, of festered charcoal across the granite. She looked wonderful and light. I sat by her and wondered whether it would soon be time to leave.

            We had plenty to do today and not much reason to do it all. 

            I really liked this new shorted cut. Her hair asked me to run my hand over it, to kiss her forehead under the locks that slumped like Brooklyn awnings. She smiled. I took her hand and we looked at the fountain together, then looked at the people walking about, from group to group, condolence to condolence, a heartfelt grasp of a shoulder, a fond memory shared, a rough anecdote rushed, uttered for a bit of levity and to crisp the bourbon served too warm as disincentive of forgetting – I knew she liked them, I could tell by her face. She thought that that was how they were like always. Warm.

            I enjoyed watching her this way. Grieving without knowing why, or who for. Intimate and snug. I took a drink and watched her and watched the clock until a few hands passed and some bread was broken and some people cried and some people really felt it and she still looked wonderful and light and it hadn’t caused her too much weight and I was glad and we left with some of the last few and she hugged John’s mother and I shook hands with his father and they nodded with half-smiles because they haven’t been cued as to what to do when the last guests are leaving. She grabbed my hand as I grasped the doorknob and we were gone, back out into it, back with the living, or some of them, but we were together, the city seeming new each time, like a reconciliation with an apologetic fairytale.

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Jack Tsoy Tumult

Morose Pontifications and Other Poetic Ramblings


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