Amidst Mirrors

27 October 2010

Magwar and other stories

Part one

Have you heard the story of Magwar?
I think his name is pronounced like Jaguar,
two syllables, but I digress,
and besides I never was one to pronounce
names correctly.

Magwar one day was watching TV
such is his lack to do,
and he saw on 60 minutes or FOX news
a special about Harvard, how it was
the best school, and this intrigued Magwar
so much so that he decided he would apply
to study there as an undergraduate.

Now the key to this entire story is to know
one simple thing about Magwar:
he is an idiot. You can also make her
a woman, the gender isn't important,
but his un-redeemable idiocy is,
and what's more, Magwar didn't know,
nor could ever understand his predicament.

As you, along with me, will imagine,
his application to Harvard was a mess.
The SAT and ACT scores alone would
of qualified Magwar for state-sponsored
sterilization; they were incredulously low,
lower than 400 (he must of misspelled his name),
and his essay, oh his essay, that brought
chuckles to the selection committee.
One fellow even brought it to an open mic
and read it aloud, not one in the crowd
could catch their breath from all the hooting
and howling that was had.

Well, obviously, Magwar's application
was on its way to the ignominious rejection pile,
as insulting as that may be to the other losers,
when another fellow, she had been among
the red-faced and the slightly buzzed
that prior and infamous evening,
mentioned what a gas it was,
how everyone there enjoyed themselves immensely,
and this caused a bit of a stir
and demands for another impromptu performance
and that's when something astonishing, even magical
happened in the committee lounge
among the haze of cigar smoke and afternoon cognac:
the genuine pleasure of humor.

After wiping away the tears the committee hatched
a plan worthy of Magwar's ingenious application.
Let us accept him, we will give him full honors,
place him among the best and the brightest
the world has to offer. Logistically,
this was a nightmare, and worthy
of a Nobel in economics
or complex system dynamics, I don't know,
because for this to work they had to get everyone
at Harvard in on the Joke. There was some hand-wringing,
and a little soul searching while on the loo for the Dean
considering the possible cruelty, but it was argued
this could only be for Magwar's benefit
and would help foster a sense of community
among the disparate freshmen while providing
everyone with a little relief that they weren't,
couldn't possibly be, the worst student at Harvard.

Magwar was given a full load, the psycho-
linguistics of Chaucer's middle English,
differential geometry of N-dimensional manifolds,
Ancient Greek chorus translation and performance,
post-Heideggerian discourse using modal logic,
theoretical Physics: a survey toward unified theory,
along with being steered toward the proper
extracurricular activities such as polity, journalism
at the Harvard Crimson, and an avant-garde
musical collaboration (invitation only),
careful to avoid keening Magwar's interest
in any sort of athletic excellence
worried that even the densest dunce
would manifestly acknowledge physical ineptitude.

In each of these pursuits Magwar gave
a stellar performance, far better than predicted,
far better professors thought than any fool
created by Shakespeare could of done,
such was the amount of levity, comedic gold,
sheer joy brought about by Magwar's
inglorious ability. Oh my heart aches
over the delectable ruminations.
The only difficulty during those heady years
were for those fortunate enough to witness
first-hand the occasional performance
or presentation of Magwar,
be it the live interview in the Starr auditorium,
“tell me Madam President, you look so beautiful [sic]?”
or when he took command of the Prof. M's blackboard
to demonstrate his two minute proof that NP=P,
it took all of one's might not to break out
with thunderous cackles during these momentous occasions.
And it is impossible to comprehend much less convey
the perfection, nay the Shantih, of Magwar's
Xanthias (in the original Greek), it took
one luscious coed to the hospital for asphyxiation
after hyperventilating, “the spiritual orgasm”
she said, afterwards, “Mary's divine insemination”,
an orgy of the Trinity, you get
but the shadow's shadow of the idea.

It was with increasing sadness and despair
that Magwar sailed, Captain-like, through his fourth year,
with many at a loss of how they could ever
go on living after Magwar's graduation
and departure. It was with one momentous
announcement right before Christmas break
when Magwar declared his intention
to continue his education
with graduate study in theoretical physics
(by far the greatest of his loves, and,
arguably, the muse of his greatest gifts,
ancient Greek theater notwithstanding)
that Harvard breathed a collective sigh
of relief, “why a PHD would take him 5 years!”,
“No, no, nothing less than 10 would be proper!”,
“Why stop there, he could lecture until the day
he dies!”, and so on ran the general discussions
among the students, faculty, and administration.

Yet one difficulty remained, for the premise
to continue, for Magwar to be
an outstanding, extraordinary, insurmountable
graduate student, he would have to be published widely,
and be invited to lecture far and wide,
which would require not just Harvard's involvement
but Princeton, Yale, Berkeley, etc,
which was nearly enough
to convince Harvard to give up
such a delightful dream-
what use is an inside joke
if everyone's in on it?
Besides, the inevitable Harvard
amour-propre was siring many doubtful
broodlings of the “they won't get it” variety,
along with many contrarian siblings;
however the eldest and strongest of these
little monsters is always the golden-child
optimism, better known as the can-do
can-doer, and
after exhibiting one youtube video
of Magwar's Xanthias with
the hyperventilating coed
the entire academic world was sold.

28 September 2010

Work in Progress

Sing Muse or I shall bleed
you dry, chained to a Brooklyn radiator
for the month of August.

It's hot here in a coffin
that's slightly burnt of which
we speculated was used,
mistakenly of course,
for cremation
(taken out soon enough to be reclaimed
for resale at a cheap steal),
but it's hot in a wooden box
and being drunk isn't helping me
sleep--I'm only more lonely;
we assumed, I think unspoken,
that they buried the body.

Get up, I'm drunk, get up
or it's time to vomit on the floor,
but get out and make it to the bathroom door.
Careful the roof overhead, the planks
of resting lumber, the theater garb,
and the found drywall all resting
on the mezzanine;
careful down stairs that could be called
a ladder, to their living room refuge
of junked sofas, carpets, reffuse, etc;
careful lumbering, that drunken gait
which feels a step behind my mind
(perhaps this is when we're carried
by angels);
careful not to vomit since I'm almost there
and I have had to swallow it before;
careful not to look but I see it
on the kitchen island
where something that is between me and it
squeezes my stomach, like a nearly empty
toothpaste tube, up to my throat
then lets go;
and careful sanctuary
over the toilet bowl:
I breathe slow, clumsy breaths.

~~

“I'm sorry, but this writing sucks – this isn't how you actually think through the world is it?”
“At least in reflection it seems to run this way”
“And on line 25 you misspelled the word refuse”
“I know, but I wanted a more phonetic sound,
and I didn't want it to look the sound of re-fuse”
“I see.
Ok, I understand, but grammatically this is a list of nouns,
how could someone possibly imagine you're throwing in a verb?”
“But I'm not.”
“I know, that is the point I'm trying to make.”
“Isn't it interesting, refuse: re-fuse, ref-fuse, re-fuse(fuse together) and of course fuse explodes
into another litany of meanings.”
“God damn-it Rex this has nothing to do with anything!”

Leroy puts down the sheet of paper
and gives me a thick look of disgust
or pity from across the coffeeshop-table
with his baggy eyes.

We've grown sick of each other
as we've grown before
and repeated before and again,
but inbetween these spurts of spats
an affinity for something more,
that none of us seem to have,
keeps our company through these regularities
and it isn't that difficult—
indeed, this could be us flowing with the path of least resistance—
to love our philos.

“Arbitrariness is not an intention.”
“Why not? Can't I intend not to intend?”
“But you do and you don't,
and who can call it art if you have a system of line breaks
which you break repeatedly?
This is more simply called laziness.”
“Better laziness than artifice.”
“Whatever dude.”
“Perhaps there is a system by which these line breaks follow,
indeed it is a logical and mathematical certainly that some function,
or some transcendental number matches perfectly, perfectly,
isomorphicly it describes where each line break goes
will go, and I need not know it—perhaps I cannot—but
I am expressing it just as a computer
continues to circumscribe pi.”
“Now that is just sophistry. Bones dressed with fat. Where's the flesh beneath the skin?”

Now there's a moment here
difficult to describe
where a divergence of action
and thought occurs
simultaneously in the present-past, past-present
when in one, some sort of witty retort was made
(e.g.“we wear clothes to protect ourselves”)
which only upset matters further,
and in the other, a blankness of thought
when I wonder who said what,
and why (if it matters),
and more than the what or the why
is staring, like a horror-stricken mime,
at the pretension of a line.

“I can't keep doing this Rex: I am tired, it is 6am,
I have work in the morning, and we aren't accomplishing
anything by staying here.”

You're not looking at me when you say this,
or, more closely, I am guessing this
because I've stopped looking back,
to instead let my ear take in
your sound – the last vantage
unto the mood,
which let us in on the secret
that you're about to go home
any minute now.

We stare, somewhat empty-headed
and tired of course, at one another,
and it is the being-in of these silences
that I remember long after with pleasure.
Sometimes, and we could call it a moment of weakness,
I play with the serious make-believe
that I am all of you, you all me,
variations on the same theme
all played in the mind
of a Humean skeptic
and I suspect
the way out
is by faith
that this isn't true
like Indiana crossing an invisible bridge.
you know what I mean don't you?
I do.

“Let's have a cigarette.”

Outside, when it's the coldest
and the city is the most asleep
it can be with only its restless bowels
sweeping its gutters, clearing bags of garbage
from its sidewalks, I shudder between drags
in the false dawn and you stand, cross-legged,
speaking, as you do, loquaciously,
and we part, as usual, amiably.

Maybe we write what we miss most of all
(another allegory of the fall),
and you can miss what isn't true,
indeed, miss it more than anything real,
and when it seems that Hell is an easier creation than Heaven
it suggests one is likelier than the other.

Of course, to continue arguing with myself,
life, consciousness, otherness, what have you,
is a miracle, but one more credulous
than the alternative,
yet such a solution lingers,
as a bad taste would on the mind's palate,
with the afterthought that one answer
or other is one or another delusion
and it is more a question of which ones we share,
like which category: the living or the dead.

But the problem with skeptics is
they can never use the word is.

And failing to enact what is right is more the tragedy
than enacting what is wrong.

If perfect is the enemy of the good
then bad is an ally of the worst.

Certain questions don't have answers because they are bad questions.

And as exhaustion begins to cull my mind
and tie me down, metaphor
feels more to be
a metaballo
(to rhyme with hollow),

and I humor myself with the joking thought that
way back when
the first of us stood up and spoke
it was of how shameful we looked.

22 June 2010

Invitation for a Journey

Invitation for a Journey
For Annie

My child, my sister
think of the sweetness
of us residing out there
to love in leisure
to love … to die
inside the country that's you.
Where sunsets glisten
in nebulous skies
there my life is mesmerized—
how mysterious
your teacherous eyes
how through their tears they glitter.

Here: all is but order and beauty,
luxury, rest, and fatness.

Lustered furniture
polished by decades
would decorate our chateau,
exotic flowers
commingling
in ghostly scent of amber,
our ceilings vaulted,
our mirrors cavernous,
our great Western decadence,
all of this would speak
in ciphers of our love
in her warm and native tongue.

Here: all is but order and beauty,
luxury, rest, and fatness.

Look beyond the shore
cargoships which sleep
with daydreams of wandering
all to satiate
your slightest whim
they come from the furthest ends.
The sun is setting,
draping your valleys
your rivers, your whole city
hyacinth and gold,
and soon to slumber
tucks us under a warm gloam.

Here: all is but order and beauty,
luxury, rest, and fatness.

--Translation of L'invitation au Voyage by Baudelaire

12 March 2010

Visit


I went to see her,
she was living in Sicily
(if it can be called living).


She would wake up in the late afternoon


and reach for the empty bottle.


“Iacio!” Broken glass filled
her sandstone portico
(every morning I swept her shards).


“Water”, “Aqua”, “Voda”, “Mizu”, “Uisge”,
I learned many words for the stuff
she would chug a litter of 
then spew up half.


Down steps of rusted iron, hand rails cut from the cliff,
down to see the sun goodbye
and bathe wrinkled skin in Mediterranean sea.
Gurgle, brush with brine.


On the warm evenings she would stay
near the firepit and slowly smoke,
smokes spiced with cloves, weed, other things;
whispering with the fire,
“Agni enfuego” (priest and martyr).
she loved smelling garlic burning
but ate it raw.


Otherwise, a towel and hot bath
followed by curry cabbage soup,
or black rice with lentils,
or the vegetarian fare of the season.
Profane meat was eaten
under-cooked every lunar month,
a practice she knew was habit
but the repetition of slaughter
reminded her of slaughter.


I'm not, nor wasn't, a wide-eyed
acolyte, it was the second glass
of chianti that brought me there,
“Youth is a beast of fain oaths”,
“The Gods live alone”, it would go on
these phrases, her Sibyl sayings.


What is this old croon?
She refused to speak to me.


At night, where she lived,
there were no mirrors in the house.


She never said she was bored,
I sometimes was, but I am often bored,
(boring I'm told), it would bother me more
but I like it, like a guilty prisoner 
serving penance.


She wasn't famous, not anymore,
she had been successful, had wealth to waste,
from translating the Latins, the Greeks,
she rarely spoke of the Greeks,
called them superficial
but I didn't believe her,
nor did I argue,
I don't think she believed herself.
It is the way of words, saying them,
like trying on outfits, finding if they suit you,
you or the occasion or anyone who's there
to notice.


“Piazza, ice cream.”
She meant chocolate
from Modica. Under pentice
I would smoke while it drizzled
deciding if I could leave
or if I could return to her. 


Every night she threw out the contents
of the fridge it was my task to restock
like the invisible servant of Psyche
(Where was Apollo? Divorced, living alone
watching reality TV and reading cereal boxes.
I heard he never leaves his crumbling 
Upper East Side penthouse, a delivery boy
brings him the list he leaves once a week).


Yeah, lonely people, forgotten Gods,
dismissed, derided, they didn't care
that was the trick, it sounds simple
and it's like my boredom, I don't care
If I'm bored or boring:
meaning, matter, significance
like pants which fall down without a belt
we make them fit.


She loved the beauty of sound
above all. It was sense, sense
before meaning, when done well
artfully, god like, translating
had broken her, bruised her heart
whimpered the brain, tossed the spirit
in the garbage can. She believed
this deeply but the world goes by
and she didn't care, so she said,
but really, can anyone say this
and have it fit without a belt? 
I thought she could when I found her 
living in the dark, demanding the trivial, and laughing
and crying and laughing at the bottom
of wine bottles, espresso cups,
mason jars of whiskey, empty boxes
for gloves, of grinders,
laughing at the empty bottom of it all,
she cared more than most.

19 February 2010

An Alcoholic Albatross

Me? What a waste of time I turned out
to be, lazy, I troll for drinks, you'll
buy me one won't you of course?

Yeah? For your troubles I'll tell ya a story
but don't worry this isn't a cautionary tale,
just anecdotes to whittle off the time.

There were many great, great parties
like at the Kevorkian, 17th-&-10th-ave,
we'd drink till sunrise seeking the last man
standing. One night after splitting a bottle
of Jack three ways, we knew the bartender,
if you're serious you gotta know the bartender,
but after the Jack, Damien, a queer hooligan,
was suggesting we quote famous lines of dead
poetry, if the two of us don't know who said it,
we drink, if we do, Damien drinks.
Stella is all for it but it's gotta be
tequila, and don't let the lady name
fool ya, she was a tough bitch,
twice the drinker I ever was,
mean too, I don't know how many times she got
her hands stained on another yahoo's blood.

Well, to be democratic, we rolled a die
to see who goes first, dice
are an inexpendable necessity to have on hand,
and Stella, who was first to go, gives us
something about a slanted ray of light,
Emily Dickinson it turns out.

What bullshit, that first shot burned like shitting
in a Mexican prison and then I'm up, and they kept shouting
at me to hurry up already or take another,
mocking mocking mocking, I gave 'em an old bird-cat routine,
but Damien right off yells Bukowski and I demanded
a lime to get the second one down, and as I'm gasping
for breath something Spanish or Italian or French came pouring
out of Damien's oversized maw. Stella guessed Baudelaire,
but I looked at him straight into his gut, trying to stand still,
Rilke! No, T.S. Eliot, you believe it, that bastard wrote
entire poems in French and here Damien trots
it out like a prize-winning show-pony,
but I accepted my shot without thinking, and decided
it was time
for a break

to piss and smoke.

Outside, I still remember this clearly,
the rain had gone from drizzle to mist,
and all the other drunkards were out
clumsily rolling down the streets,
like pinballs scarred to knock anything too hard,
when one smelly bastard, swooning, grabbed hold
of me like I was his life jacket on the high seas.
I pulled him up, and as we're swaying a bit
he looked at me, I looked at him, and he kissed me,
a buoy smacking itself with its rusted bell.
Fuck him, I wanted to fall down a hole
and drown in my own crap.

When I had gotten back it had surely turned
into a shitstorm, those two had a private round and
she's arguing that he's gotta know the sonnet number,
since Shakespeare wrote so many god damn words,
but he tells her she wouldn't know it even if he did tell her
which got her wet 'n angry, funny it took a fag to get her horny.

After much shouting and a little shoving, good foreplay in my book,
they agree to each write the number down and check the net real quick.

I never seen her sorer, like she's been through anal,
but her 53 wasn't his 73, and those birds don't keep singing,
although I tell ya, I hear songbirds in Winter all the time.

We reroll and Damien's back up, Stella tells him English only,
and he just smiles with his sinister snake-lips, and goes
on and on - till we shout him down - about how we're eating whale
and that, if you believe it, was some Chinaman, writing in English.
I still remember (and not much else) the yellow filth of that shot going
down, ugh.

Oh
I tell ya, I must of vomited out my heart that night.

18 February 2010

An early Spring from a late Fall

Bread crumbs on moistened fingertip
she licks the salty earth (to taste).

The seasoned snow will continue to fall
and soften corners wishing for silence.


and since Dawn's arrival her warmth
is warm, as fashions thus are worn.

Forget in expurgated surfaces,
renew dead chicken-manured flowerbeds,
await the coming on of ovulums.

Despite the nipping cold, outside
our homes the moon hides then blazes
for those who chance a weirder game
of reading ampersands as lore.

I never made-believe the unreal world -
such stuffs were sprung from earliest concords
and still-standing writwords - you ever see
the same clear-water glades or modern turf,
but diff'rence speaks with thoughtless tones and heat.


12 February 2010

Out of Habit

                 They tie down his arms
and legs and one, with knees pressing
on his chest, grips a handspan below
his elbow and steadies the pinion
a thumbs length from his wrist
and the other stands, eyes fixed,
and in one goodly strike
                              pierces the wood
as you would
                     a railroad tie.