Saturday, October 14, 2023

( via / via )

Nubbly waves.

"The Kraken

Below the thunders of the upper deep,
Far far beneath in the abysmal sea,
His ancient, dreamless, uninvaded sleep
The Kraken sleepeth: faintest sunlights flee
About his shadowy sides: above him swell
Huge sponges of millennial growth and height;
And far away into the sickly light,
From many a wondrous grot and secret cell
Unnumbered and enormous polypi
Winnow with giant fins the slumbering green.
There hath he lain for ages and will lie
Battening upon huge seaworms in his sleep,
Until the latter fire shall heat the deep;
Then once by men and angels to be seen,
In roaring he shall rise and on the surface die."

--Tennyson

"Klingon, Elvish and Kryptonian are popular contemporary examples, but they represent only a fraction of a much broader landscape." (via feuilleton)

" 'We use acid-free paper,' Charlie said.

'I'd just as soon have my books rot when I do. Why should they outlive me? They're the reason I'm dying before my time.' "

--Mao II

☆:*´¨`*:.•.¸¸.ପໄଓ☆:*´¨`*:.•.¸¸.ପໄଓ☆:*´¨`*:.•.¸¸.ପໄଓ☆:*´¨`*:.•.¸¸.ପໄଓ☆:*´¨`*:.•.¸¸.ପໄଓ☆:*´¨`*:.•.¸¸.ପໄଓ☆:*´¨`*:.•.¸¸.ପໄଓ☆:*´¨`*:.•.¸¸.ପໄଓ☆:*´¨`*:.•.¸¸.☆:*´¨`*:.•.¸¸.ପໄଓ☆:*´¨`*:.•.¸¸.ପໄଓପໄଓ☆:*´¨`*:.•.¸¸.ପໄଓ☆:*´¨`*:.•.¸¸.ପໄଓ☆:*.

( me / via )

Fuck Your Lectures on Craft.

"And lo! from out the smoke
I saw the grim and clanking skeleton
Of the dead dog, licked bare to the white bones,
Run as alive. With skull revert, and jaws
That may not cease to move, but make no sound,
He flees for ever o'er the startled earth,
A terror and a sign."

--Balder

"Kandel learned that it was published when she heard someone reading it on the street."

"evening snow

filling her footprints

a second time"

--R G Rader

Abandoned departure terminal.

( me / via )

No Small World Will Ever Be Enough.

"Did Not Come Back

In the roan hour between then & then again, the now, in the Babel
Of a sorrel ship gone horizontal to a prow of night, the breach of owls

Abducted by broad light, but blind, in the crime, the titanesque of rare
Assault--we who have come back--petitioning, from the chair

Electric with bad news, from the stunning, from the narrows
Of an evening gall, from the mooring of an hour slanted on the follow

Bow, she rose from a bed of Ireland like a flyted trout, a shiny
Marvel on the sailor's deck, an apologia--divining--

As once, as at a salted empire port, he washed
Her fleeted body & they lied, the best of them, the cream & crush

Of this, the madrigal & sacrifice of that, the best of them,
The slowest velvet suffocation of their kind, did not come

Whittled back by autumn, at an hour between thorn & chaff,
Not come riddled with oblivion, the crossing & a shepherd's staff,

The moment between Have & Shall Not Want, we who have salt
Always know, that we who have--the best of us--did not come back."

--Lucie Brock-Broido

Clowns removing bodies from the ruins of a city, detailed oil painting, remedios varo, james ensor.

“…Or where the stark roof-tree
Of a burnt home blackened and sear lies dark,
Betwixt the gaunt-ribbed ruin, hast thou seen
The rose of peace…”

--Sydney Dobell, Balder: Part the First (1854)

The Ghosts of Gulliver's Kingdom.

( me / via )

雨のオルゴール (SE,BGM)🔈🎼.

Four anagrams of "we made good ruins": a guided newsroom, a disowned morgue, a wooded resuming, a winged dormouse.

🌞📠🌞.

Deadline-driven journalists remember
Here is something ought to be remembered.

Many people died, but for what cause
And what came after, they do not remember.

Yesterday is nothing to us now;
And what tomorrow's for, who remembers?

If there were fascist governments before
It must be how they decked out, we remember.

Old Graywyvern drowses in a chair;
He should be mad, is all he now remembers.

Snowy Nights.

Friday, October 13, 2023

( via / via )

Gemini.

"October Christmas wreath"

burned up
all my karma
searching through the old poems
i barely even recall now
who for

vict'ries
in the back seat
later · other people's weddings
i'm sure at the time there were wars
then too

we watch
murder stories
a couple holding hands
some of our own land's leaders want
us dead

walls of
fire · fire moving
across the frame we ask
which atrocity was this on
what day

i was
parked & the birds
were looking up at me
i thought i should take their pic for
twitter

burned up
in the back seat
a couple holding hands
which atrocity was this on
twitter

I'll Plant My Own Tree.

"The novel used to feed our search for meaning... It was the great secular transcendence. The Latin mass of language, character, occasional new truth. But our desperation has led us toward something larger and darker. So we turn to the news, which provides an unremitting mood of catastrophe. This is where we find emotional experience not available elsewhere. We don't need the novel... We don't even need catastrophes, necessarily. We only need the reports and predictions and warnings." --Don DeLillo, Mao II (1991)

Third kaleidoscope.

( our neighbors at 2041 / via )

Evil.

“If the rhinoceros wrote with his horn, publication would make it tingle.” –Gerald Burns

Mood.

“THE BUILDING OF THE SKYSCRAPER

The steel worker on the girder
Learned not to look down, and does his work
And there are words we have learned
Not to look at,
Not to look for substance
Below them. But we are on the verge
Of vertigo.

There are words that mean nothing
But there is something to mean.
Not a declaration which is truth
But a thing
Which is. It is the business of the poet
‘To suffer the things of the world
And to speak them and himself out.’

O, the tree, growing from the sidewalk–
It has a little life, sprouting
Little green buds
Into the culture of the streets.
We look back
Three hundred years and see bare land.
And suffer vertigo.”

–George Oppen

Gaussian splatting.

( via / "Depiction of the punishments of Diyu at the Hell Museum, Bao Gong Temple, Singapore" by joe wyman on fb )

Everything will be fine👍.

"raking my leaves
I rest for a moment
imagining earth,
air, fire uniting
at the flick of a match"

--edward j. rielly at ahapoetry

"In the 1980s, the firm that had the contract for upholstery of BART seats paid people to slash the seats. People slashed in specific patterns so the company would know who to pay." (via @skinnylatte@hachyderm.io)

"Socrates was invented by Plato to sell more Philosophy" --@CSMFHT via @sentantiq

Travertine.

( via / via )

Your Mind Makes It Real.

"Be that your Task, ye Sages, to explore,
Who search the secret Springs of Nature's Pow'r:
To me, for so the wiser Gods ordain,
Untrac'd the Mystery shall still remain."

--Rowe's Lucan

For the bomb shelter tour, more than anything else.

empire of the strange lizard
sidewalks with detours slather
into dumb certitude wither
for this bright hazard

a crowded weapon's orange
transcends its scorpion circle
in halcyon ways i'll snorkel
the rice cake syringe

& hearing the skyways slither
bag of child-bones chuckle
i write with ink-dipped sickle
on the face of the souther

Soothing sponge star.

( via / via )

September is the new July...or something like that. (via @GreatDismal)

meanwhile · a giant star
vanishes · dark cusp speaking
with the face of P*p*

& game over for gluten
the meme · gets stuck in my head

Motel.

"The secret force that drives the industry is the compulsion to make writers harmless." --Mao II

Farmer Gary.

( via / via )

Endless Depression.

"How else can these forty-odd letters be arranged?

To be self-ordered and create the ghostly answer."

--@Anthony_Etherin

¸„.-•~¹°”ˆ˜¨ Ỗ尺𝐁ᶤ𝐭S ¨˜ˆ”°¹~•-.„¸.

"The Fury of Aerial Bombardment

You would think the fury of aerial bombardment
Would rouse God to relent; the infinite spaces
Are still silent. He looks on shock-pried faces.
History, even, does not know what is meant.

You would feel that after so many centuries
God would give man to repent; yet he can kill
As Cain could, but with multitudinous will,
No farther advanced than in his ancient furies

Was man made stupid to see his own stupidity?
Is God by definition indifferent, beyond us all?
Is the eternal truth man's fighting soul
Wherein the Beast ravens in its own avidity?

Of Van Wettering I speak, and Averill,
Names on a list, whose faces I do not recall
But they are gone to early death, who late in school
Distinguished the belt feed lever from the belt holding pawl."

--Richard Eberhart (um, i ought to mention this)

The Current Thing.

Thursday, October 12, 2023

( via / via )

"The implication is that, behind every story, there’s a place and an absence, a mystery and a profound uncertainty, waiting like a vampire at every moment to emerge and take over, to stop the story dead in its tracks."

on the droll drive · i drink radio
news my nerves · like raw nubs
the sun simmers · in mild ascendance
elsewhere isotopes · aidle unseen
& the bombs that bury · whole fam’lies fall

🪐.

"She liked working past the feeling of this is it. Important to keep going, obliterate the sure thing and come upon a moment of stealthy blessing." --Mao II

Cloudy Nights.

( via / via )

"Many came out of the box damaged by their travels."

"At once their rattling Branches all they rear,
And drive the leafy Clamour thro' the Air."

--Rowe's Lucan

.⊙.

white phosphorus whistles
as whelkblood-dyed knell carves
passage in the pinwheel
front riddle-disgruntled

i ravel cold Kevlar

"It took all my life for that dark historical truth to be accepted." (via @joycecaroloates)

( laura ostteen in dallas filth / via )

All Along the Watchtower.

"pre-dawnlight
to hear its quietude

stand but still

as the great blue heron
atop a low-tide stump"

--an'ya

Leper Squint. (via @ladyliminal1)

"...Neptune of the blood,
With fearful trident, blows from his dusky breast
A wind throughout the spiral-twisted shell."

--The Sackvilles' Duino, 3

Lardil that i misremembered as "Nardil".

( via / via )

🏛️.

If there ever is a final showdown, it will not be between two sides of a political, religious, or territorial dispute, but between Reason & Magical Thinking.

A Rilke by Jarrell.

"Valley of the Lardils"

1.
dream while the wheels are coming off
a wall of fire at the near horizon

dream that you reconnect
to one you really never knew
by accident in Switzerland

so much catching up to do

2.
when Progress came to a halt
they still called it Progress

they said this is still moving
it wasn't moving

while other changes afoot
we couldn't be bothered

to notice when they were small
began to bother us

3.
i wrote complicated books
for a complicated time
the fortunes of a poem
attest each silent airstrike

why is it so hard
just to keep up with staples?

a trail of metacarpals
from dappled sunlight into shade

Third Eye #8.

Wednesday, October 11, 2023

( via / via )

Another apocalypse.

   “ '…The kangaroo-dog’s the hungriest subject in the animal kingdom.'

   'Well, no,' replied Jack forbearingly, as he returned to his bed; 'he ain’t in it with the man-o’-war hawk. That’s the hungriest subject goin’; though, strictly speakin’, he don’t belong to no kingdom in particular; he belongs to the high seas. If you’d ’a’ had a chance to study man-o’-war hawks, like I’ve had, you’d never think a kangaroo-dog was half hungry. Why, he dunno what proper hunger is.'

   Then he gave me such a description of this afflicted bird as, in the interests of science, I have great pleasure in laying before the intelligent public. I must, however, use my own language. Jack’s rhetoric, though lucid and forcible, would look so bad on paper that the police might interfere with its publication.

   The man-o’-war hawk, it appears, utters a thrilling squeal of hunger the moment his beak emerges from the shell; and this hunger dogs him⁠—kangaroo-dogs him, you might say⁠—through life. At adult age, he consists chiefly of wings; but, in addition to these, he has a pair of eager, sleepless eyes, endowed with a power of something like 200 diameters; and he has also a perennially empty stomach⁠—the sort of vacuum, by the way, which Nature particularly abhors. He can eat nothing but fish; and, since he suffers under the disadvantage of being unable to dive, wade, or swim, someone else must catch the fish for him. The penguin does this, and does it with a listless ease which would excite the envy of the man-o’-war hawk if the unceasing anguish of hunger allowed the latter any respite for thought.

   The penguin also lives on fish, but there the resemblance happily ends. In every other respect he presents a pointed antithesis to the man-o’-war hawk; and that is the only pointed thing about him, for he consists wholly of a comfortable body, a blunt neb, and a pair of small, sleepy eyes. He has no neck, for he never requires to look round; no wings, for he never requires to fly; no feet, for he stands firmly on one end, like a 50 lb. bag of flour, which, indeed, he closely resembles. His life is unadventurous; some might call it monotonous. He takes his position on a smooth rock, protected from cold by the beautiful padded surtout which clothes him from neb to base, and from heat by the cool, limpid wave, softly lap-lapping against the impenetrable feathers. He feels like a stove in the winter, and like a water-bag in the summer. When, from a sort of drowsy, felicitous wantonness⁠—for he never requires to act either on reason or impulse⁠—he desires to visit an adjacent island, he simply allows the tide to encircle him to about two-thirds his total altitude; then, by the floatative property of his peerless physique, and by the mere volition of will, he transports himself whither he lists.

   He has few wants, and no ambition. Dreaming the happy hours away⁠—that is his idea. He knows barely enough to be aware that with much wisdom cometh much sorrow; therefore, no Pierian spring, no tree of knowledge, thank you all the same. He is right enough as he is; the perpetual sabbath of absolute negation is good enough for him. His motto is, 'Happy the bird that has no history.' Once a day, he experiences a crisp, triumphant appetite, which differs from hunger as melody differs from discord; then he slowly half-unveils his currant-like eyes, and selects from the finny multitudes swimming around him, such a fish as for size, flavour, and general applicability, will best administer to his bodily requirements, and gratify his epicurean taste. Whilst he is in the act of dipping his neb in the water to help himself to the fish, a man-o’-war hawk espies him from a distance of, say, five miles. Emitting a quivering shriek of hunger, the strong-winged sufferer cleaves the intervening air with the speed of a telegram, and has siezed and swallowed the fish before his own belated shriek arrives.

   The penguin, living in total ignorance of the man-o’-war hawk’s existence, vaguely and half-amusedly apprehends his deprivation. In this way. You have heard the boardinghouse girl rap at your bedroom door, and tell you that breakfast is on the table. You have thought to yourself: Now I’m turning out; now I’m putting on my ⸻; now, my socks; now⁠—Why, I’m in bed still, and no nearer breakfast than at first! Here we have a reproduction of the penguin’s train of thought, plus the slight shock of surprise which marks your own relatively imperfect organisation. The whole thing doesn’t amount to a crumpled rose-leaf beneath the penguin’s base; so he apathetically depresses his dreamy eyes in casual quest of another fish.

   Now if the feathered martyr could only wait one minute, he might obtain the second morsel on the same terms as the first; but Nature has so constructed him that, in his estimation, the most important of all economies is the economy of time; and his Dollond eye has descried another penguin, seven miles distant, in the very act of dipping for a fish. Can he make the return trip? He must chance it. He negotiates with lightning speed the interspace between his tortured stomach and the second penguin’s provender, whilst his own steam-siren screech of famine comes feebly halting after, and blends with the desolate plop of his prey into the abysmal emptiness of his ever-yearning epigastrium. Then, wheeling madly round⁠—his Connemara complaint freshly whetted by what he has taken⁠—he sees the first penguin dropping asleep as the fish he has just caught slides down head-foremost, to be assimilated by the simple clockwork of his interior.

   Too late, by full fifteen seconds! and the wild despair of lost opportunity lends a horrid eeriness to the banshee utterance with which the man-o’-war hawk greets this crushing discovery, barbed, as it is, by the prior knowledge that every penguin within twenty miles is in Nirvana for the present. Now he must wait⁠—ah! heavens, wait!⁠—while one with moderate haste might tell a hundred. By that time, the bird beside him will have caught another fish; and though it be only⁠—By my faith, he must wait longer; for the penguin, concluding that his own appetite will be more finely matured by another half-hour’s sleep, is just dozing off. Woe for the man-o’-war hawk! he must decide on something without delay, and he must do that something quickly⁠—quickly⁠—quickly⁠—for there will be loafing enough in the grave, as the great American moralist says.

   But, five hundred miles away across the restless, hungry waste of waters is another rock, where penguins steep themselves in sinless voluptuousness; and, with one prolonged, earsplitting yell, wrung from him by the still-increasing torment of his fell disease, the unhappy bird expands his Paradise-Lost pinions, and, with the speed of a comet passing its perihelion, sweeps away to that rock; for, like Louis XVI, he knows geography.

   After listening with much interest to the description here loosely paraphrased, I fell asleep with the half-formed longing to be a penguin, and the liveliest gratitude that I was not a man-o’-war hawk." --Such is Life

Automata.

"We have only to look at the United States to see what it is to have a people deprived of the time dimension." --The Need for Roots

"What piece of clothing or accessory could you give a model to mark her as 'Young Lady in 2023'? A titanium-cased iPhone is all that comes to mind, and even that hasn’t changed its appearance much in a decade."

( via / via )

"Literary fiction was not commercial, not popular, and not genre fiction, a phrase that had only entered publishing’s lexicon a decade earlier, in the 1970s." (via aldaily)

"Idolatry is an armor, prevents pain from entering the soul." --Simone Weil

🐇🫧.

"TRIAD

These be
Three silent things:
The falling snow…the hour
Before the dawn…the mouth of one
Just dead."

--Adelaide Crapsey

King of Cylinders.

( via / via )

"...Abby flatly refused to participate the next year (and later wrote her college entrance exam on the difficulties and tribulations of having an 'insane' cousin, i.e. me.)."

      "Moon's Ending

Moon, worn thin to the width of a quill,
   In the dawn clouds flying,
How good to go, light into light, and still
   Giving light, dying."

--Sara Teasdale

Siren Song.

"This, let me add, is the record of an actual occurrence. It will just show you how much the novelist has to answer for; following, as he does, the devices and desires of his own heart; telling the lies he ought not to have told, and leaving untold the lies that he ought to have told." --Furphy

Holdfast.

( via / via )

A Hacker Manifesto: Twenty Years After.

"Our conception of greatness is the very one that has inspired Hitler's whole life. When we denounce it without the remotest recognition of its application to ourselves, the angels must either cry or laugh, if there happen to be angels who interest themselves in our propaganda." --The Need for Roots

Saktranomicon listed.

they buried their dead with flowers
ours have toothmarks on the bones
Neanderthals receive our fleers
they buried their dead with flowers

now we're the stratosphere fliers
to ourselves the king of banes
they buried their dead with flowers

ours · have toothmarks on the bones

"A very important book for me during that time was House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski. Not only because of the book itself (which is quite brilliant, by the way) but because it allowed me to be part of a vibrant community of readers for a few years. In fact, when the novel was published (in 2000 in the USA and in 2002 in France: I was 22-23 years old at the time), it was accompanied by an online discussion forum, one of the very first internet forums specifically dedicated to a novel."

Tuesday, October 10, 2023

( via / via )

FRAYS16.

rolled into a ball
& tumbling · cranched
this is the functional mode

bright explosions in the night sky
five drafts, each on diff'rent paper

the infinite life of a twist-tie

Brooklyn Bridge III.

"And it is good to think that people can paint in Dallas without taking to the catacombs." --Lewis Mumford, 1933

"When the American national poet Robert Frost visited her in 1962, Akhmatova said: 'I've had everything – poverty, prison lines, fear, poems remembered only by heart, and burnt poems. And humiliation and grief. And you don't know anything about this and wouldn't be able to understand it if I told you...'."

( via / james koehnlinme on fb )

Four Ka'bas.

"Listen, my heart, as once the early saints
Alone knew how to listen, when the mighty
Summons upraised them from the earth; but they
Intractable, knelt on and heeded not
The call, so ardent was their hearkening."

--Sackville's Duineser Elegien I.

"To be fair, by conventional standards of horror filmmaking – even by conventional standards of narrative filmmaking in general – Exorcist II: The Heretic doesn’t exactly work, at least it doesn’t work if you’re the kind of person who thinks movies are only about acting and writing."

“The Quetzal”

We did not think we’d find so many years
In the same place passed & all of them passing fair.
Bookshelves filled to sagging, half-banked desire
With only now & then a spell of grief.
Our fiestaware is almost what it was.
I wish I could say the same of the ratty yard
That stretches to a curdled horizon dry
As fossilized regrets—three ducks I saw
A few nights back had landed in our pool.
I’d gone to turn the water on; they flew
Though I in the half-light tried to hide myself
Against the crumbling brick, & I felt lost
When they had gone, as though the only quetzal
Had deigned to visit here in our recursive loop.

"The term trobairitz, as Angelica Rieger (2003: 42) notes 'is not used by the women troubadours themselves'..."

( via / via )

The Sackville-West translation of the Duino Elegies online.

Leery of solid ground;
Fallen, all I have built.
Emerge to catch the little rout
Dwale fireworks send.

Pray that the sheetrock holds,
Hope that the month’s check drops
As monkeyshines entrance the dopes
And age culls skalds.

"Against that policed scarcity of the closed geometrical figure, the green folds of tapestry keep moving."

"wolf moon
a mirage
a sharp cry comes through"

--@poem_exe 12-4-15

Streetlight snow flurries.

( via / via )

Solitary Man.

"Logic is the kingdom of the unexpected." --Mandelstam

Breeze.

forward like the shark
thrust aside rank bilge
frolic Charon's barge
flaunt spidergoat silk

human bones or shark
flickering blue redoubt
stymied from the start
ziggurat of talc

future duties shirk
come build the royal hellscape
these reasons scant & snirp
abet the waltzing earthquake

or unforgiven thrive
as sleepthieves carry the note
boundless appetite
shudders the sacred grove

Hide & Seek.

( via / lanny quarles )

All the Duinos.

festination moon
Jupiter in the West
all the cold fires loosed
yet again

Venus in the East
festination overpass
after swarmings cease
grudges amassed

dying of the light
festination moon
dandelion wine
frore parachute

sere parasite

Rilke & Pynchon.

"Long ago the trees thought they were people.
Long ago the mountains thought they were people.
Long ago the animals thought they were people.
Someday they will say
Long ago the human beings thought they were people." --Brenda Peterson, Living By Water

The Elegies in blank verse.

Monday, October 09, 2023

( via / via )

"The enthusiasm of academic departments and university presses for creative nonfiction and 'hybrid genres' that mix literary criticism with memoir has done nothing to dampen the persecution complex of those who insist that academia has declared their love illegal."

"A man who has something new to say...can only be listened to, to begin with, by those that love him." --The Need for Roots

Lightning Device.

all these records wait
for that random mood
to blossom when they're played
& gather what the twain impute

if once or twice i erred
& turned some into cash
that way i learned to cherish
the loyal armies i still had

the Great Arch glumly stands
rebuke to lesser reach
a baboon bard may cranch
in seasons where no word succeeds

"The pillars might stand for another 5,000 years. (IRONY TRIGGER WARNING) This site thinks only 250 years. (Wow, a whole wiki about post-human earth existence--talk about Non-Correlationism!)

( via / via )

"It is, in fact, an intercourse with ghosts..."

         "ARCTURUS IN AUTUMN

When, in the cold October dusk, I saw you near to setting,
   Arcturus, bringer of spring,
Lord of the summer nights, leaving us now in autumn,
   Having no pity on our withering;

Oh, then I knew at last that my own autumn was upon me,
   I felt it in my blood,
Restless as dwindling streams that still remember
   The music of their flood.

There in the thickening dark a wind-bent tree above me
   Loosed its last leaves in flight--
I saw you sink and vanish, pitiless Arcturus,
   You will not stay to share our lengthening night."

--Sara Teasdale

"But the new data show that sea levels became low enough for the land bridge to appear only 35,700 years ago."

"Watching these lewd fellows of the baser sort at their sordid toil, my mind reverted to certain incidents of the preceding night, and so drifted into a speculation on the peculiar kind of difficulties which at certain times beset certain sojourners on the rind of this third primary orb. The incidents, of course, have nothing to do with my story.

But as the mere mention of them may have whetted the reader’s curiosity, I suppose it is only fair to satisfy him." --Such is Life

"I then asked it to assign a human emotion that most closely resembles that 'hypothetical experience' to each."