2013/01/31

A Vagueness at the Center Whose Slow, Persistent Movements Some Sentence Might Explain If We Had Time or Strength for Sentences



 
Holyfuck, have I ever mentioned I love Roxy Music. Phil Manzanera is sixty-two today. Incredibly busy, I'd love to tell you about it, can't, won't - just links, music, poems today. Lying or stupid? I'll let Yves answer: The willful blindness of Good Dems continues to amaze me. Obama did not want filibuster reform. He didn’t want it because he wants to be able to blame the Big Bad Rs for selling out his base. That is his plan, not the result of a lack of will or foresight. Notice the lack of agency in this piece? “Democrats” not “Obama”. Losing the deficit warWhy anti-authoritarians are diagnosed as mentally ill (via Fellowjeff in comment at this guy's post). Federici, for those of you who do. Foucault, for those of you who do. Between ideation and agitationFree Kathryn BigelowThings you might have missed (where perhaps Fellowjeff found the article above). This fat Frederick fucker wants to be governor of Maryland. Riffle Ford Road! You can see Seneca Hole 14 from there. I remember being told, Shut up, Najar's not going to Europe. Will be told Shut up, Hamid is not going to Europe this summer. Will Zlatan kick Beckham? Here's hoping. Looking for today's birthdays, saw Norman Mailer born 90 years ago today. That's the first time I thought about Norman Mailer in at least a decade. Imagine a jump. Reminded by Agi of the David Lee Roth Soundboard! Hours of fun. New Yo La Tengo video. A moment to mention FUCK BLOOGER! Hey, Philip Glass is sixty-six today, it's not love though major like and deep respect. Here's his most famous piece:





THE NEW INTELLIGENCE

Timothy Donnelly

After knowledge extinguished the last of the beautiful
fires our worship had failed to prolong, we walked
back home through pedestrian daylight, to a residence
                    
humbler than the one left behind. A door without mystery,
a room without theme. For the hour that we spend
complacent at the window overlooking the garden,
                     
we observe an arrangement in rust and gray-green,
a vagueness at the center whose slow, persistent
movements some sentence might explain if we had time
                              
or strength for sentences. To admit that what falls
falls solitarily, lost in the permanent dusk of the particular.
That the mind that fear and disenchantment fatten
                                   
comes to boss the world around it, morbid as the damp-
fingered guest who rearranges the cheeses the minute the host
turns to fix her a cocktail. A disease of the will, the way
                               
false birch branches arch and interlace from which
hands dangle last leaf-parchments and a very large array
of primitive bird-shapes. Their pasted feathers shake
                        
in the aftermath of the nothing we will ever be content
to leave the way we found it. I love that about you.
I love that when I call you on the long drab days practicality
                              
keeps one of us away from the other that I am calling
a person so beautiful to me that she has seen my awkwardness
on the actual sidewalk but she still answers anyway.
                              
I say that when I fell you fell beside me and the concrete
refused to apologize. That a sparrow sat for a spell
on the windowsill today to communicate the new intelligence.
                                   
That the goal of objectivity depends upon one’s faith
in the accuracy of one’s perceptions, which is to say
a confidence in the purity of the perceiving instrument.
                                                          
I won’t be dying after all, not now, but will go on living dizzily
hereafter in reality, half-deaf to reality, in the room
perfumed by the fire that our inextinguishable will begins.


2013/01/30

We’ll Dismiss the Event as a Glitch in Transmission



Fleabus! Cats as killers: In a report that scaled up local surveys and pilot studies to national dimensions, scientists from the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute and the Fish and Wildlife Service estimated that domestic cats in the United States — both the pet Fluffies that spend part of the day outdoors and the unnamed strays and ferals that never leave it — kill a median of 2.4 billion birds and 12.3 billion mammals a year, most of them native mammals like shrews, chipmunks and voles rather than introduced pests like the Norway rat. There is a full-on anti-cat war raging in my neighborhood, on the listserv I subscribe to, anti-catters have latched onto this article. I am remaining silent there, keeping an eye on our ferals for their safety. OK, I'm not going to do the whole XTC discography song by song here, at the time I proposed it it seemed like a worthy ritual, now seems a worthy ritual I can do in private with my earbuds. Weird, this not wanting to scream motherfucker in this post-inaugural cereal box shake, settling to bottom of box as my old reflexes finally crumble. Polanyi, for those of you who do. Liberty, feminism, equality. Capitalism. Slippery things. Bleggalgazing of a sort. The power of critical thinking. Unknown Brooklyn. Najar here, thereMusil, for those of you who do. Via Mark Woods, lots of Timothy Donnelly, who I haven't posted here in a couple of years, whose brilliant Cloud Corporation is below. Serendipitous to yesterday's post, Proust reviews Nyquil. Mantel's rules for writers. Jim has a playlist. Was reminded of Delta 5 yesterday. Rothko's Chapel in Rothko's Chapel.






THE CLOUD CORPORATION

Timothy Donnelly

1

The clouds part revealing a mythology of clouds
assembled in light of earliest birds, an originary
text over water over time, and that without which

the clouds part revealing an apology for clouds
implicit in the air where the clouds had been
recently witnessed rehearsing departure, a heartfelt phrase

in the push of the airborne drops and crystals
over water over time—how being made to think
oneself an obstruction between the observer

and the object or objects under surveillance or even
desired—or if I am felt to be beside the point
then I have wanted that, but to block a path is like

not being immaterial enough, or being too much
when all they want from you now is your station
cleared of its personal effects please and vanish—

not that they’d ever just come out and say it when
all that darting around of the eyes, all that shaky
camouflage of paper could only portend the beginning of the

end of your tenure at this organization, and remember
a capacity to draw meaning out of such seeming
accidence landed one here to begin with, didn’t it.
    
2

The clouds part revealing an anatomy of clouds
viewed from the midst of human speculation, a business
project undertaken in a bid to acquire and retain
                                                       
control of the formation and movement of clouds.
As late afternoons I have witnessed the distant
towers borrow luster from a bourbon sun, in-box

empty, surround sound on, all my money made
in lieu of conversation—where conversation indicates
the presence of desire in the parties to embark on

exchange of spirit, hours forzando with heartfelt phrase—
made metaphor for it, the face on the clock tower
bright as a meteor, as if a torch were held against

likelihood to illuminate the time so I could watch
the calm silent progress of its hands from the luxury
appointments of my office suite, the tumult below

or behind me out of mind, had not my whole attention
been riveted by the human figure stood upon
the tower’s topmost pinnacle, himself surveying

the clouds of the future parting in antiquity, a figure
not to be mistaken, tranquilly pacing a platform
with authority: the chief executive officer of clouds.

3

The clouds part revealing blueprints of the clouds
built in glass-front factories carved into cliff-faces
which, prior to the factories’ recent construction,

provided dorms for clans of hamadryas baboons,
a species revered in ancient Egypt as attendants
of Thoth, god of wisdom, science, and measurement.

Fans conveying clouds through aluminum ducts
can be heard from up to a mile away, depending on
air temperature, humidity, the absence or presence
   
of any competing sound, its origin and its character.
It is no more impossible to grasp the baboon’s
full significance in Egyptian religious symbolism
   
than it is to determine why clouds we manufacture
provoke in an audience more positive, lasting
response than do comparable clouds occurring in nature.
   
Even those who consider natural clouds products
of conscious manufacture seem to prefer that a merely
human mind lie behind the products they admire.
   
This development may be a form of self-exalting
or else another adaptation in order that we find
the hum of machinery comforting through darkness.

4
The clouds part revealing there’s no place left to sit
myself down except for a single wingback chair
backed into a corner to face the window in which
   
the clouds part revealing the insouciance of clouds
cavorting over the backs of the people in the field
who cut the ripened barley, who gather it in sheaves,
   
who beat grain from the sheaves with wooden flails,
who shake it loose from the scaly husk around it,
who throw the now threshed grain up into the gently
   
palm-fanned air whose steady current carries off
the chaff as the grain falls to the floor, who collect
the grain from the floor painstakingly to grind it
  
into flour, who bake the flour into loaves the priest will offer
in the sanctuary, its walls washed white like milk.
To perform it repeatedly, to perform it each time
  
as if the first, to walk the dim corridor believing that
the conference it leads to might change everything,
to adhere to a possibility of reward, of betterment,
  
of moving above, with effort, the condition into which
one has been born, to whom do I owe the pleasure
of the hum to which I have been listening too long.

5
    
The clouds part revealing the advocates of clouds,
believers in people, ideas and things, the workers
of the united fields of clouds, supporters of the wars
       
to keep clouds safe, the devotees of heartfelt phrase
and belief you can change with water over time.
It is the habit of a settled population to give ear to
    
whatever is desirable will come to pass, a caressing
confidence—but one unfortunately not borne out
by human experience, for most things people desire
      
have been desired ardently for thousands of years
and observe—they are no closer to realization today
than in Ramses’ time. Nor is there cause to believe
         
they will lose their coyness on some near tomorrow.
Attempts to speed them on have been undertaken
from the beginning; plans to force them overnight
            
are in copious, antagonistic operation today, and yet
they have thoroughly eluded us, and chances are
they will continue to elude us until the clouds part
          
in a flash of autonomous, ardent, local brainwork—
but when the clouds start to knit back together again,
we’ll dismiss the event as a glitch in transmission.
    
6
       
The clouds part revealing a congregation of bodies
united into one immaterial body, a fictive person
around whom the air is blurred with money, force
          
from which much harm will come, to whom my welfare
matters nothing. I sense without turning the light
from their wings, their eyes; they preen themselves
            
on the fire escape, the windowsill, their pink feet
vulnerable—a mistake to think of them that way.
If I turn around, the room might not be full of wings
           
capable of acting, in many respects, as a single being,
which is to say that I myself may be the source of
what I sense, but am no less powerless to change it.
          
Always around me, on my body, in my mouth, I fear them
and their love of money, everything I do without
thinking to help them make it. And if I am felt to be
          
beside the point, I have wanted that, to live apart
from what depends on killing me a little bit to keep
itself alive, and yet not happily, with all its needs
            
and comforts met, but fattened so far past that point
I am engrossed, and if I picture myself outside of it
it isn’t me anymore, but a parasite cast out, inviable. 
    
7
             
The clouds part revealing the distinction between
words without meaning and meaning without words,
a phenomenon of nature, the westbound field
            
of low air pressure developing over water over time
and warm, saturated air on the sea surface rising
steadily replaced by cold air from above, the cycle
              
repeating, the warm moving upward into massive
thunderclouds, the cold descending into the eye
around which bands of thunderclouds spiral, counter-
            
clockwise, often in the hundreds, the atmospheric
pressure dropping even further, making winds
accelerate, the clouds revolve, a confusion of energy,
          
an incomprehensible volume of rain—I remember
the trick of thinking through infinity, a crowd of eyes
against an asphalt wall, my vision of it scrolling
             
left as the crowd thinned out to a spatter and then
just black until I fall asleep and then just black again,
past marketing, past focus groups, past human
                       
resources, past management, past personal effects,
their insignificance evident in the eye of the dream
and through much of the debriefing I wake into next.



2013/01/29

Full of the Same Wind




Full on XTC cascade, YAY! sparked by listening to Nonsuch on drive home from Ohio. Full album at bottom of post. Expect LOTS next week or so. A friend asks, Proust? I failed, will be buying amber Nyquil for TNPers all of 2014. Why I wanted a quieter mind is a larger question than why I thought I could achieve one. Another friend asks, Tablet? Maybe. Another friend asks, fucking blooger? YES! If anyone has any suggestions on how to make the Apply to Template button work, I'll buy you amber Nyquil all the rest of 2013 if you can fix it. Links: Police state. Capitalism. Capitalism. CapitalismPriorities. The myth of justice. The coming collapse. Dirty WarsIsrael's Tuskegee. More here. Police state practiceOne year ago. Why aren't you using these apps to track your death?




 
Did you know Washington DC has a professional soccer team?  Writers on writers. I've never heard of Joseph Ceravalo. While I have failed Proust, I have not failed Olson, Maximus works. William Gass discusses Rilke. Everybody knows this is nowhere. On not like Wallace Steven's poetry. Pynchon and AshberyPrunella's latest playlist. Mr Alarum provides a Rainer Maria cascade: Rain Your Hand, Viva Anger, Viva Hate, Breakfast of Champions, Contents of Lincoln's Pockets, Make You Mine. FourTEEN. Gubaidulina.





THE SNOW MAN

Wallace Stevens

One must have a mind of winter
To regard the frost and the boughs
Of the pine-trees crusted with snow;

And have been cold a long time
To behold the junipers shagged with ice,
The spruces rough in the distant glitter

Of the January sun; and not to think
Of any misery in the sound of the wind,
In the sound of a few leaves,

Which is the sound of the land
Full of the same wind
That is blowing in the same bare place

For the listener, who listens in the snow,
And, nothing himself, beholds
Nothing that is not there and the nothing that is. 





XTC's Nonsuch, what a great fucking album, listened for the first time in maybe a year between Friendsville all the way downhill to Hancock this past Sunday (and at least three times since, and HOLYFUCK! what an XTC cascade I'm only beginning to indulge, it's medicinal). Peter, above. My Bird Performs. Dear Madam Barnum. Humble Daisy.
    




Holly Up on Poppy. Crocodile. Rook. Omnibus. Not only is that one of my favorite songs in the world, there's an allusion - I insist on believing - to Yvonne Craig in the lyrics. Then She Appeared. War Dance. Wrapped in Grey. The Ugly Underneath. Bungalow.


2013/01/28

Theme Song January 2013

Gagging to Spit Them Out




Robert Wyatt is sixty-eight today. Thanks to Bleeding Edge (Pynchon allusion) for the above, Greyhoos for the last link in this paragraph and the video below. No slideshow of yesterday's Bamgier to Zanesville to Wheeling to Washington to Morgantown to Cumberland to Hancock to Hagerstown to Frederick to Kensington. After we abandoned Planet in Ohio in the morning Earthgirl took out her camera, sighed, put it away, sketched or knit the rest of the way, her call, I'm happy. Thought about the email re: episodic v serial blogging starting roughly from Martinsburg Ohio to the first pissstop in Cabela West Virginia (the first West Virginia west to east, the second West Virginia east to west). I'm pleased to find (and old-timers will be pleased too) that while I've lots to write about, I'm not going to write about it here - or at least not yet - and I promise not to explain another gag (five embedded in this post, including two in this sentence) until the next time. Reminder: Villagers. The placebo effect of law.  The Handmaiden of Capitalism versus The Swamp Denizen of Detroit. Bashing the walrusSrsly? David Harvey, anarchism, tightly-couple systems. Federici interviewFracking. Wait, I thought frat boys were, in the majority, conservatives. Blogging as performance. Fumigation tentsFire St Benny! Laugh at Juve! For my Western Pennsylvanian buds: Pittsburgh 1956International Pynchon Week. I confess I've never got Seamus Heaney, I assume the fault is mine. Lip-synching the poetry of empireBowie and re-writing one's past. Nilsson cascade. Quartets ahoyDondestan.





ARS POETICA (COCOONS)

Dana Levin

Six monarch butterfly cocoons
          clinging to the back of your throat -

          you could feel their gold wings trembling

You were alarmed. You felt infested.
In the downstairs bathroom of the family home,
          gagging to spit them out -
                    and a voice saying Don't, don't -


2013/01/27

Bamgier to Howard to Mt Vernon to St Louisville to Newark to St Louisville to Mt Vernon to Loudonville to Wooster to Shreve to Nashville to Danville to Millwood to Howard to Bamgier



                                                      
Holyfuck, no one looks at these but the three of us and a few of you. (A friend emailed yesterday, suggested I not assume everyone knows what these back-and-forths to Ohio are, that some readers - most readers - read this blog episodically, not serially, so: Earthgirl and I are visiting our daughter Planet, she's a sophomore at a small and relatively prestigious credentialing factory in the middle of Ohio: I've never denied my complicity in perpetuating empire. Earthgirl, in service of her art, hoping to capture images she will paint, photographs all the long drives of the trip. She lets me download and make slideshows out of them which I post here.) We were on our way to the Hungarian bakery in Wooster when the rental car's front right end began wobbling throbbingly once speedometer hit 45. Pulled over, called the nearest Hertz, down in Newark, 35 miles the opposite way we were heading, doubled-back on 36 through Mt Vernon then south down 13, past St Louisville's one policeman parked as always half a block south of the sudden, not warned 35 mph speed trap, then seven miles farther south on 13 to Newark's 21st Street (Newark's Rockville Pike) and picked up a replacement rental. Back the other way, north up 13 (the same cop same place in St Louisville) through Mt Vernon to 3 then north twenty miles Loudonville then twenty miles more to Wooster for omelet rolls and poppy seed cake in the downtown Wooster's Tulapan Hungarian Bakery. After lunch Planet and I hung out in a used book store while Earthgirl spent money we don't have on wool she doesn't need in a favorite wool shop around the corner from the bakery. It's tradition. Took a far more scenic route back to Bamgier, 3 to 226 to 514 to 62 to 36, through Shreve and Nashville and Danville and Millwood, you can see it during the latter half of the slideshow you're not watching (so you'll not see Planet or see cool stuff in her art building). Here's today's poem, a line not taken for this post's title because Egoslavian edicts dictate what this post be titled. Here's the good news that after long absences two blogbuds, Jim and Tee Vee, both posted yesterday. Here's Warhol's 99, my avatar demands it be posted. Here's a song from yesterday's trip's soundtrack, one of dozens of my ten favorites songs (and most posted songs here) ever.


2013/01/26

Kensington to Frederick to Hagerstown to Hancock to Cumberland to Morgantown to Washington to Wheeling to Zanesville to Bamgier



  
Started snowing near Finzel, started hard near Mt Morris, rest of trip was interesting but not frighteningly dangerous, just fuckslow. Oh, I only thought I hated motherfucking truckers before encountering motherfucking truckers doing 75 in whiteout conditions. I haven't figured out Ohio DOT's plowing strategy - a state highway can be clean between intersections with other state highways then be unplowed between the clean and the next intersection. The innkeeper where we're staying says there is no pattern, that each snowstorm is plowed different, whether randomly or deliberately designed to confuse and frustrate the populace she's no idea. Stuff about the Inaugural Speech. Goldman Sachs as capitalism's worse enemy. Girl, you'll be a woman soon. Legality, morality, and dehumanization. Avedon's lastest link round-up. Tomorrow's NYTBR gives top billing to new books by Fred Kaplan and Max Boot. What the fuck? Praising the language police. I'm not sure in what capacity Ed's involved, but Ed sends me news of a new radio project. Puzzles and frustrations. Labyrinth croquet. Joke. United steals a striker. darkblack's Weekend Overnight. NEW THE KNIFE! The main purpose of this trip (is to see Planet any chance she gives us) was to drive the car we inherited when my mother-in-law died out to Planet (we stopped in Zanesville and grabbed a one-way rental we'll use to get home), the inherited car had neither USB or AUX ports, so soundtrack was the old yellow CD binder, so it's Bless Serendipity as always that on turning on the laptop once in our room the first thing I see is a new Flaming Lips song (first below) since Soft Bulletin and Clouds Taste Metallic and Transmissions from the Satellite Heart (forgive me, I know they can be bad clowns, but I love the Flaming Lips, especially early Lips) was sound from Hancock to Washington.





BACK ROAD

Bruce Guernsey

Winter mornings
driving past
I’d see these kids
huddled like grouse
in the plowed ruts
in front of their shack
waiting for the bus,
three small children
bunched against the drifts
rising behind them.

This morning
I slowed to wave
and the smallest,
a stick of a kid
draped in a coat,
grinned and raised
his red, raw hand,
the snowball
packed with rock
aimed at my face.


2013/01/25

Addressed Lambent Fops




Leaving one minute after I plunge this post's publish, Kensington-Frederick-Hagerstown-Hancock-Cumberland-Morgantown-Washington-Wheeling-Zanesville-Bamgier today, Bamgier-?-?-?-?-?-?-Delaware-Bamgier Saturday, Sunday Bamgier-Zanesville-Wheeling-Washington-Morgantown-Cumberland-Hancock-Hagerstown-Frederick-Kensington. So slideshows, if you look at only one of three if you've seen them before I'd look at Saturday's Sunday though Friday's Saturday might have dramatic Garrett County blizzard photos, the all-white buried windshield shot of a snowbank. Melodrama, self-serving, there, we're leaving one minute after I plunge this post's publish to get over the mountains before snow attacks. Soundtrack and travelog probably too, besides the slideshows. Yes, the ironies described here occurred to me too. By schooner to the past. Artificer. Relative absolutism. Thai fish estimates sea thicket is angry. There are no poems in either Poets or Poetry databases that contain the word oleaginous. Plumbing the origin of po-faced. Anthony's links of the week. A vase. Live 1970 Joni Mitchell - a friend mentioned his mysterious ambivalence towards Mitchell a few days ago (Bless Serendipity). I like Joni Mitchell's music though have never loved it, but it makes me think of NPR's mostly crappy Chongs for Aging Sildren radio show my doper friends liked to listen to, hosted by the icky oleaginous Dobert Rudley Aavis who STILL WON'T SHUT THE FUCK UP, WHEREVER HE IS AT THIS VERY MOMENT, HE WON'T SHUT THE FUCK UP, HE"S SLOBBERING HIMSELF, HE'S GIGGLING AT THE SLOBBERING, THE SHOW'S BEEN DEAD SINCE BEFORE THE DEATH OF MACNEIL/LEHRER AND DOBERT RUDLEY AAVIS STILL WON'T SHUT THE FUCK UP, STILL OOZES! Fine metaphors abound.





HOW TO JUDGE

Lisa Robertson

To those whose city is taken give glass
pockets. To those whose quiver gapes give queens
and pace their limbs with flutes, ropes, cups of soft
juice. To those whose threshold vacillates give
that bruise the dust astonished. To falling
heroes give raucous sibyls’ polished knees.
To those who sip nectar give teeth. And if
they still sip nectar—give green chips of wood.
To swimmers give clocks or rank their hearts
among new satellites as you would
Garbo’s skint lip. To scholars, give dovecotes
to virgins, targets. Justice has nothing on them.
Virgil, sweetheart, even pretty fops need
justice. If they think not let creditors
flank them and watch their vigour quickly flag.
To exiled brides give tiny knives and beads
of mercury then rob them of prudence
for prudence is defunct. To those who fist
clouds, give powder.  And if their sullen
wallets flap, give nothing at all. Still
I have not addressed lambent fops
swathed in honey, the stuttering moon
Martyrs, Spartans, Sirens, Mumblers, Pawns
Ventriloquists—or your sweet ego

The Beloved Ego in the plummy light
is you. When I see you in that light
I desire all that has been kept from me
etcetera. For you. Since your rough shirt
reminds me of the first grass
pressing my hips and seeds heads
fringing the sky and the sky
swaying lightly to your scraped
breath, since I hear
panicked, my sister calling
since the gold leaves have all
been lost, and you are at least
several and variegated
I toss this slight thread back

The beloved ego on cold marble
blurs inscription. Hey Virgil
I think your clocked ardour is stuck
in the blue vein on my wrist. It stops
all judgement
 

2013/01/24

Won't Salve These Stuttered Accoutrements



     
No idea why I woke up thinking about Glenn Branca, but it's a good thing. As for the relative lack of aargh here recently, just for side-to-side compare and contrast, two dueling and - setting aside which tribal memes you consider righteous tenets - equally predictable blog-columns on yesterday's Hillary Clinton's Benghazi testimony, first by Jennifer Rubin, the second by Joan Walsh, do you really need to read the columns to know exactly what each says? Gah, anyone check InTrade today to see if HRC16 stock up, stock down, how this affects POTUS 16? Politics of distractionAmerica needs to know the truth! The most critical question facing America! Dig this lead sentence in Your Fucking Washington Post news story, not signed op-ed: The success of President Obama’s starkly liberal second-term agenda will rest largely on the shoulders of Senate Majority leader Harry M. Reid, who has been a rock-solid political ally and a valued legislative tactician for Obama during his first term. Starkly!  Untouchables. Does lying pay? I hadn't thought of The Goatblower in years. Gaithersburg welcomes fortunetellers! Bradford City. I vote Option Two. Why Melville. What is this tint that in the shrill cressO'Hara. Plath. Genre map (h/t @Twitchelmore). Serendipitous to my Gunn post last Sunday, Paris Review just tweeted this Gunn interview from 1995. Mining the audio motherlode.





ENVOY

Lisa Robertson

I have tried to say
that, although Love is not judgement
analysis too is a style
of affect
since the scale that rends me vulnerable
has cut, from abundance, doubt
(not that identity shunts
civic ratio or consequence) Sure —
I would prefer to respond to only
the established charms (and forget inconvenience)
but her hair was also a kind of honey
or instrument.
All that is beautiful, from which I choose
even artifice, which I hold above nature
won’t salve these stuttered accoutrements