Sounds like it was recorded
in a garage, piano
chords bounding and disappearing
in a vast chamber, the roof
lifted, his figure coiled, low-
boned, nocturnal. Through spaces
the original intention forms
and is painful, erudite,
collapsing; he would walk around
his instrument, measuring
a distance of centuries,
matching a brilliance he would keep
to himself until clarity
would compel him to begin.
Master or servant, listening to
a voice which would confuse such
distinctions, needing those rests
which swell into deafness, then
pounding back with something like fear.
What risks you will take when you
retire, your knuckles stilled against
a perfect machine, supple,
aloof, dignified. Accolades
are always shared: yours defend
the paradox of music
and silence, the score of a grave
like a muse you must master.
[The Fiddlehead No. 187, Spring 1996]
Friday, May 10, 1996
Rimbaud at Marseilles
His infant lust after language:
asylums filling with voices
of the profound: they lay on rolled
sails, inventing new flowers to name.
In small rooms fires erupt
from tea-cups, poppy seed and one-
legged visions pull his body back
intact to Somali shores, caravans.
He would clutch for hands, searching
for scars and panic he recalled placing
with a knife kept sharp for intimates;
staring into cut eyes of strangers.
Some wounded, some mended, his limping
love chasing down absinthe drunks
or child-like savages; Harar
or Paris, or the hospital
of the Immaculate Conception.
[Published in The Fiddlehead No. 187, Spring 1996]
asylums filling with voices
of the profound: they lay on rolled
sails, inventing new flowers to name.
In small rooms fires erupt
from tea-cups, poppy seed and one-
legged visions pull his body back
intact to Somali shores, caravans.
He would clutch for hands, searching
for scars and panic he recalled placing
with a knife kept sharp for intimates;
staring into cut eyes of strangers.
Some wounded, some mended, his limping
love chasing down absinthe drunks
or child-like savages; Harar
or Paris, or the hospital
of the Immaculate Conception.
[Published in The Fiddlehead No. 187, Spring 1996]
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