Varieties

I am entwined in, with, and by objects,
the small cute-face people  – pompous face ­–
the no-face people, fear or startle-gesture face.
The thing is.  Every time I see his name the world
slashes into ribbons. It was my name after all. Blue
lights flash in the dusk of gawds (gourds) that
are never appreciated as viscera.  I wail: there
are pipettes in me; these drugs attack
the conceptual mind. I’m up at four his name
cutting ribbons into my dust and stagnant
memory energy.  The fuzzy heart is glimpsed
barely in the insect-heavy lights of  haunted
knowledge, but I was just… a text.  What
would make me feel safe’s a total clampdown
on all cell walls. What’s today? Discomfort
squirrels crazily in the human shadow room
where I ache like an ache of strychnine,
arsenic, ptomaine, etcetera. In fact, there

are many varieties of variety

to choose from: 

Amphora
Aurantia
Baby Boo
Big Moon
Black Zucchinu
Blaue Banane
Butternut
Citrullina
Early prolific straightneck
Futsu Black Rinded
Jack O’ Lantern
Kabocha
Lebanese
Maliformis
Orange Früchte
Pumpkin
Pyxidaris
Reticulata
Scallopini
Sweet Meat
Trombone
Vegetable Spaghetti
White Custard
Yellow Hubbard
The decibel lilt of these
in the night garden, dehiscent
and gaily gnarled!
Plumbed murk
of seedy flesh: strings
of lite ribbons
of lonely
and art-like
decibels.
Who can trust
what? The rain
is a machine.
Your soft silver hair
brushes my abdomen.
This is part of “love.”

I suppose I do mind
the clutter, its dense machinic 
excess, but I can’t help it.

I want my goat back.

I ask you:

How can I be
the relatively large giraffe
I know I am?

On things and The Squeakquel

Death holding a sun parasol
a strong man
a panda
a tortoiseshell cat with a food bowl
a white tiger, an orange tyrannosaurus rex, three little matroyshkas, some puppies, a cowboy, a fake lotus, an army-green triceratops, a bunny smoking a a cigarette, a tiny ambulance with a miniature doctor’s kit inside, a meercat, a Kwan Yin, hear/see/speak-no evil monkeys, a mini-snowglobe with a leprechaun inside, tiny mini-cartons of mini vegetables, a tiny metal lantern, wee groceries like bread and orange juice and onigiri, miniscule zaru-soba set, tiny blender with bananas, strawberries, ice, koi, a woodchuck, a metal lantern, a zebra, a relatively large wooden giraffe with gumby hanging from his ear and a tiny pink human infant in his horns, a brass genie lamp, some kind of African antelope with striped legs, a branch, fake poppies and irises in a red plastic faux red-crystal vase, ETCETERA

This is what I see from my desk.

Even a little exposure to me will confirm the extent to which I am (maybe notoriously) entwined in, with, and by objects.  I can’t help myself, I search them out and they come to me.  I find them on the street, I buy them online and in the real world. I arrange them and rearrange them and discard them and give them away and make them and pet and covet and alter them.  I suppose I do mind the clutter but I can’t help it.

On a recent visit to Alli Warren’s Arts & Crafts-style bungalow-studio in Oakland, I was so impressed by the crisp sparsity of her living quarters:  a small pile of library books, a shelf of chapbooks, a shelf of lovingly curated LPs.  With few arrangements of objects to gather dust and stagnant memory-energy, there was an air of freshness.  Konrad Steiner’s little house was only slightly more thingified, although in the garden grew quite baroquely some radicchio that could have been painted by Caravaggio as well as cascades of nasturtiums, some of which I happily munched on. My mom’s house is full of crystals, faux-lotuses, and Kwan Yin statues, but still there is a general air of spaciousness that I don’t think I could cultivate even if I wanted to.

I mention all this as a way to bring myself to begin to write about what I have been wanting for weeks to write about:  Dana Ward’s twin chapbooks, The Squeakquel, pts. 1 and 2, recently out from The Song Cave.  He writes in part 1 that

…I never had much of a feeling for ‘things’. On Easter Sunday last year I was visiting New York & David & Sara were there from San Francisco. After lunch we got onto the subjct of the object (haha), & I admitted to David I never spent a whole lot of time on the topic, & how, with respect to Walter Benjamin (& Proust) this often made me feel insufficiently bathed in melancholia & thus somewhat detached from the haunted modernity I loved as emotional color & theory but never appreciated as viscera. David, a curl of mild shock in his voice, said, “You don’t think of our lives as it’s lived amid things?!.”

Two points.  No… three points, really:

1) David and Sara’s apartment is filled with things.  Books, mainly.  Hundreds of books in piles.  I don’t remember a whole lot of other things, but the books are there with a kind of radiant, possibly sinister, seductive energy, because that is what books are:  radiant and sinister and seductive.

2) Dana goes on in these chapbooks to sort of disprove this statement and notice mindfully that in fact he is as intertwined with objects as anyone, his protestations to the contrary notwithstanding: “I was so happy to get the scarf back I can barely tell you how happy I was! It provided me not only with a feeling of narrative completeness but also it perpetuated the seditious upending of my own bland coolness toward objects…” (pt. 2) Plus I remember the time before last when I saw him he was wearing these amazing blue suede boots; no one who was truly indifferent toward objects could choose and wear such footwear.

3) I’m in love with his “prose style.”  “A curl of mild shock in his voice” is just the right amount of mannered and inventive, and it’s just exactly right.

But it’s not prose like, you know, prose.   It’s got poems in it (by which I mean verse poems as “part of” the narrative” as well as poetry woven into the non-verse paragraphs):

“dense machinic excess”

“horrifically licentious little algebras”

“bewildering opacity figured through poetry”

“oh, poetic time”

I’ve written before somewhere that I sensed a whiff of Kerouac in Dana’s tone-constructions, and that statement holds.  Two more observations:

1) He fondles his pop culture references just as lovingly as everything else, but not in such a way that one feels, oh, the obligatory pop culture references.  They are key.

2) There is a moment that feels like Sartre to me.  Do you remember that famous “tree” passage in Nausea?  Let me see if I can find it online… yes, here it is:

So I was in the park just now. The roots of the chestnut tree were sunk in the ground just under my bench. I couldn’t remember it was a root any more. The words had vanished and with them the significance of things,their methods of use, and the feeble points of reference which men have traced on their surface. I was  sitting, stooping forward, head bowed, alone in front of this black, knotty mass, entirely beastly, which frightened me. Then I had this vision. It left me breathless. Never, until these last few days, had I understood the meaning of”existence.” I was like the others, like the ones walking along the seashore, all dressed in their spring finery. I said, like them, “The ocean is green; that white speck up there is a seagull,” but I didn’t feel that it existed or that the seagull was an “existing seagull”; usually existence hides itself. It is there,around us, in us, it is us, you can’t say two words without mentioning it, but you can never touch it. When I believed I was thinking about it, I must believe that I was thinking nothing, my head was empty, or there was just one word in my head, the word “to be.” Or else I was thinking . . . how can I explain it? I was thinking of belonging, I was telling myself that the sea belonged to the class of green objects, or that the green was a part of the quality of the sea. Even when I looked at things, I was miles from dreaming that they existed: they looked like scenery to me. I picked them up in my hands, they served me as tools, 1 foresaw their resistance. But that all happened on the surface. If anyone had asked me what existence was, I would have answered, in good faith, that it was nothing, simply an empty form which was added to external things without changing anything in their nature. And then all of a sudden, there it was, clear as day: existence had suddenly unveiled itself. It had lost the harmless look of an abstract category: it was the very paste of things, this root was kneaded into existence. Or rather the root, the park gates, the bench, the sparse grass, all that had vanished: the diversity of things, their individuality, were only an appearance, a veneer. This veneer had melted, leaving soft, monstrous masses, all in disorder—naked, in a frightful, obscene nakedness. I kept myself from making the slightest movement, but I didn’t need to move in order to see,behind the trees, the blue columns and the lamp posts of the bandstand and the Velleda, in the midst of a mountain of laurel. All these objects… how can I explain? They inconvenienced me; I would have liked them to exist less strongly, more dryly, in a more abstract way, with more reserve. The chestnut tree pressed itself against my eyes. Green rust covered it half-way up; the bark, black and swollen, looked like boiled leather.

There is a passage like this in The Squeakquel Part 1, a kind of sister to Sartre’s:

I remember one night as a kid sitting in an over-lit Subway, nursing an enormous Dr. Pepper, being 14, in love with my solemn isolation & considering, lost in a trance of new thoughts, the fact, or the meaning of the hard yellow both [sic] I was sunk in. I was trying to picture its origins & sources, who’d made it & where,, & under what conditions.  Until then there’d been a fuzzy kind of magic that governed my relations to things & their appearance in the world, but the table seemed to quit this spell, suddenly breaking through clouds.  Deprived of my immature chains of causation through which to substantiate the facts of its existence, the table seemed to seek not the breakdown of a magic bet a better brand of sorcery to compliment the absence of a theory I was wholly conditioned to persist in. The table grew tired of feeling my eyes boring into its surface with mute incomprehension, & so, as if to satisfy my mystical impatience leapt up & started dancing there, not possessed, come true.  When it danced it was like a Swiss army knife dancing with each step revealing more lacerating plumage that cut through the tender & tactile air above my head (which had something like the dampness of a sapling), & when it was done with its volleys & cuts a dewy light-bulb had been carved and stationed in the orbit of my skull. It burned warm, & would multiply too; I would find it screwed into the socket of every single lamp, fastened under the cradles of glass-hooded streetlights, & fixed into heaven – the sun.

In both instances, the objects melt with the viewing subjects into a kind of busy revelatory space, but where Sartre gets nauseated, Dana sees kinetics and light.  I think they are tied for “vision” and “imagination” – what do you think?

The worst thing about Dana’s Squeakquel books is that they are too short.  I want to stay ensconced in them for a much longer time and/but I am glad and grateful that they have become part of the objects that surround me in my universe and into which I can project my own bouncy and visionary [?] perceptions.

Horny Makeup Goat

The goat looked me in the eye.
I hoped I didn’t have any dew
in my hair. What scares me,
however—what continuously gets
my goat, what still occasionally
makes me feel weird about sex—
is how easy it is to perform
it as a goat. And of course by goat,
I mean buck-toothed lama
that got worked over by a
Sharpie and has weird shit in its
ears. Horny makeup gets
my goat: Orgasm, Super Orgasm, Sex
Appeal, and DEEP THROAT! Come
on now I know that I am the coolest person
on the planet (its true. My mom said so.)
but I have zero interest in sounding like
one of those Atlantic City HBO
documentary hookers when I
am at the makeup boutique.
Kind of off topic but do you know
what really gets my goat? When people
throw themselves in front of trains. Also
when people drop their nasty cigarette
butts on the ground, like they are special.
Disgusting. Already I have the sore boobs
and fatigue. Blah. And if my pregnant
sister-in-law’s boyfriend shows his
motherfucking face in this house again
there’s going to be a problem. You know
what really gets my goat? Chupacabras.
Those chupacabras really get on my tits,
like Uncapitalized third grade grammar.
You wanna know what chaps my
hide? What gripes my bottom?
What gets my panties all in a bunch?
What really gets my goat
is this notion that English and Maltese
are both “our national languages.”
Excel gets my goat sometimes
Das bringt mich in Zorn.
George Clooney gets my goat,
and the quota system, and
when certain games do not
let you get the complete story
without amping up the difficulty.
Fugly shoes get my goat. Some parents
worry about teen pregnancy. I worry
about my daughter wearing sandals
that look like some sort of bedazzled
fiesta unicorn excrement. Okay,
this really gets my goat. In fact
it gets my goat, chews it up,
swallows it and then regurgitates
it, semi-digested. Now
I want my goat back.
I hope I don’t
have any dew in my hair.

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his work is very excellent
he tells human stories
the guys who earned higher ratings had 
more control over their upper bodies 
and were twisting, bending, moving and 
nodding instead of simply pumping their fists 
in the air. Women scored men whose movements 
were twitchy and repetitive the lowest — so try 
to stay on beat and avoid shuffling back and forth 
aimlessly.
a very “I like myself” kind of pocket
the wide pant
and the very red lip
puking clown
Interest in cats who like Hitler 
isn’t a new phenomenon.