Yes, it was inevitable I'd turn to the Ashbery poem below for a post's title during metal mining. Holyfuck, Randal is after my soul like an evangelist after a bank account, all the youtubes (but for the Lampchop) in this post via him, I mean this sincerely, thank you very much! I have no idea what's good, what's bad, I always disdained these sounds, what a fucking moron I am what a fucking moron I am necessarily needing to be while I sort through noises while defining a grading system, it's what I do, this is better than that, that better than this, it's how I was trained. I like it fast, when the music grinds down to bwaaaaaaah, bwaaaaaaaaaaaaaah, growled mwaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaarg I think suck. Faster, motherfuckers. Is it OK if the split second a metal song hints at a ballad I bail?
- Yes, I'm going to milk this motherfucking gag until I stop giggling, it's been a great boost to my readdressing the fuckit.
- Addressing the shitsmears at LGM.
- The torture never stops.
- The fungus in your cheese is having weird sex.
- The liberal presidency.
- How big finance won the American Revolution.
- Targeting children.
- Police state. I do realize that by the time I actually engage in more than gratuitous pseudonymous digital dissent (pseudonymous to you, the state knows who I am, or can when they care) the police state I prophesy will have shut down my gmail account.
- CWCF, I haven't used that tag in a while though it still applies.
- How many people will die of if medicare age raised to 67?
- Why are poor kids paying for school security? Rhetorical question, of course. As for Prose's novel, good thing I have access to a university library's resources.
- Don Imus' corpse still has a radio show?
- My current and future hell.
- My current and future hell.
- Gaithersburg! They've talked about this for a decade.
- Another rhetorical question.
- The story of Stanley.
- Biblioklept's twelve good 2012 things includes:
- Have I ever mentioned that I love Lambchop? Dinner and show with Earthgirl and Hamster one of best nights of year, life.
- Oy, yablochko, /Kuda kotishsya.
- The ten grumpiest writers in literary history.
- Listen, Herbert, the background avatar @BLCKDGRD has changed.
- Silliman's always generous litlinks.
- I did this to my vocabulary.
- Robert Kelly poems.
- Mortuus.
- Drumming (yes linked before for it's bleggalgazing, now linked for drumming and
- Drumming. The Fleetwood Mac revival continues apace.
- Me here. Lindsey Buckingham, I keep yodeling. Here, drumming.
- Drumming.
- Drumming.
- Drumming.
- Drumming.
- 26 Neil Young covers includes Alejandro Escovito's Like a Hurricane.
THE INSTRUCTION MANUAL
John Ashbery
As I sit looking out of a window of the building
I wish I did not have to write the instruction manual on the uses of a new metal.
I look down into the street and see people, each walking with an inner peace,
And envy them—they are so far away from me!
Not one of them has to worry about getting out this manual on schedule.
And, as my way is, I begin to dream, resting my elbows on the desk and leaning out of the window a little,
Of dim Guadalajara! City of rose-colored flowers!
City I wanted most to see, and most did not see, in Mexico!
But I fancy I see, under the press of having to write the instruction manual,
Your public square, city, with its elaborate little bandstand!
The band is playing Scheherazadeby Rimsky-Korsakov.
Around stand the flower girls, handing out rose- and lemon-colored flowers,
Each attractive in her rose-and-blue striped dress (Oh! such shades of rose and blue),
And nearby is the little white booth where women in green serve you green and yellow fruit.
The couples are parading; everyone is in a holiday mood.
First, leading the parade, is a dapper fellow
Clothed in deep blue. On his head sits a white hat
And he wears a mustache, which has been trimmed for the occasion.
His dear one, his wife, is young and pretty; her shawl is rose, pink, and white.
Her slippers are patent leather, in the American fashion,
And she carries a fan, for she is modest, and does not want the crowd to see her face too often.
But everybody is so busy with his wife or loved one
I doubt they would notice the mustachioed man’s wife.
Here come the boys! They are skipping and throwing little things on the sidewalk
Which is made of gray tile. One of them, a little older, has a toothpick in his teeth.
He is silenter than the rest, and affects not to notice the pretty young girls in white.
But his friends notice them, and shout their jeers at the laughing girls.
Yet soon all this will cease, with the deepening of their years,
And love bring each to the parade grounds for another reason.
But I have lost sight of the young fellow with the toothpick.
Wait—there he is—on the other side of the bandstand,
Secluded from his friends, in earnest talk with a young girl
Of fourteen or fifteen. I try to hear what they are saying
But it seems they are just mumbling something—shy words of love, probably.
She is slightly taller than he, and looks quietly down into his sincere eyes.
She is wearing white. The breeze ruffles her long fine black hair against her olive cheek.
Obviously she is in love. The boy, the young boy with the toothpick, he is in love too;
His eyes show it. Turning from this couple,
I see there is an intermission in the concert.
The paraders are resting and sipping drinks through straws
(The drinks are dispensed from a large glass crock by a lady in dark blue),
And the musicians mingle among them, in their creamy white uniforms, and talk
About the weather, perhaps, or how their kids are doing at school.
Let us take this opportunity to tiptoe into one of the side streets.
Here you may see one of those white houses with green trim
That are so popular here. Look—I told you!
It is cool and dim inside, but the patio is sunny.
An old woman in gray sits there, fanning herself with a palm leaf fan.
She welcomes us to her patio, and offers us a cooling drink.
“My son is in Mexico City,” she says. “He would welcome you too
If he were here. But his job is with a bank there.
Look, here is a photograph of him.”
And a dark-skinned lad with pearly teeth grins out at us from the worn leather frame.
We thank her for her hospitality, for it is getting late
And we must catch a view of the city, before we leave, from a good high place.
That church tower will do—the faded pink one, there against the fierce blue of the sky. Slowly we enter.
The caretaker, an old man dressed in brown and gray, asks us how long we have been in the city, and how we like it here.
His daughter is scrubbing the steps—she nods to us as we pass into the tower.
Soon we have reached the top, and the whole network of the city extends before us.
There is the rich quarter, with its houses of pink and white, and its crumbling, leafy terraces.
There is the poorer quarter, its homes a deep blue.
There is the market, where men are selling hats and swatting flies
And there is the public library, painted several shades of pale green and beige.
Look! There is the square we just came from, with the promenaders.
There are fewer of them, now that the heat of the day has increased,
But the young boy and girl still lurk in the shadows of the bandstand.
And there is the home of the little old lady—
She is still sitting in the patio, fanning herself.
How limited, but how complete withal, has been our experience of Guadalajara!
We have seen young love, married love, and the love of an aged mother for her son.
We have heard the music, tasted the drinks, and looked at colored houses.
What more is there to do, except stay? And that we cannot do.
And as a last breeze freshens the top of the weathered old tower, I turn my
gaze
Back to the instruction manual which has made me dream of Guadalajara
Back to the instruction manual which has made me dream of Guadalajara