Tuesday, 25 June 2013

Immersion


"Every human being's essential nature is perfect and faultless, but after years of immersion in the world we easily forget our roots and take on a counterfeit nature."

Lao-Tzu, Chinese philosopher (6th century BCE) 

Monday, 24 June 2013

Survie des agélastes



Non, ne survivons pas à notre génération !

Tailladons-nous les veines, dévorons nos rations !
N'attendons pas comme des moutons la glaciation !
Crier contre l'injustice rend la voix rauque ?
Alors hurlons parce que ce monde ne vaut pas une bauque
et qu'entre injustice et impunité tout nous paraît glauque.
Rions à pleins poumons, dansons, chantons !
La vie n'est rien de moins qu'un marathon.
Étourdissons-nous puis repartons !
Brûlons la chandelle par les deux bouts,
car d'autres moins vivaces resterons debout
car on n'a jamais vraiment eu besoin de nous.

Creating the demand


"The whole art of teaching is only the art of awakening the natural curiosity of young minds for the purpose of satisfying it afterwards."

Anatole France, novelist, essayist, Nobel laureate (1844-1924)

Saturday, 22 June 2013

Tentatives



Toutes ces tentatives
loin d'être naïves
sont incomplètes
désuètes
sommaires
éphémères

le temps excoriera
l'expérience animera
la puissance sommeille
attend l'éveil
la feuille de thé
en forme de paupière
l'hiccéité
formée dans la poussière

il faudra pour cela verser
plus de sang et de larmes
que n'en fit couler Circé
sans l'aide d'aucune arme

il faudra pour cela observer
plus de soleils et plus de lunes
au coucher et au lever –
peut-être les voir de la dune

il faudra pour cela vivre
moins vainement
lire plus de livres
plus silencieusement

il faudra pour cela, aller de l'avant
et être moins ivre moins souvent

Autant que possible (1913)


Et si tu ne peux pas mener la vie que tu veux,
essaie au moins de faire en sorte, autant
que possible: de ne pas la gâcher
dans trop de rapports mondains,
dans trop d’agitation et de discours.

Ne la galvaude pas en l’engageant à tout propos, 
en la traînant partout et en l’exposant
à l’inanité quotidienne
des relations et des fréquentations,
jusqu’à en faire une étrangère importune.

Constantin Cavafis, En attendant les barbares et autres poèmes
 

Friday, 21 June 2013

The longest night



The longest night is the longest day
juxtaposition of sun and sun
moon and moon in ecstatic ballet
light and light over a tiled floor
where names are renamed,
where words acquire new meanings for the night.

And the revelling takes on new shades
and people new hues
when yew trees extend their claws deep into the dusk
when the husk of what was is discarded
in the bonfire
and the pyre is delineated,
fiery line by fiery line,
minute after minute
by the failing light and the rising darkness.

The longest night of the year
lengthens and lengthens
and the lanterns flicker the way to the sphere
with the uncanny patterns,
some dance, enraptured,
some gambol with the giggling and the gay,
by the night immatured.

Behind the black birds-and-buds motifs
is secreted a spiral staircase.
Some, led by the nocturnal connoisseur,
will ascend this null point in space
and still the sclerotic buts and ifs
with the tongue-tying picture
of the city glazed in dazzling darkness
stripped of all merit and of all culpa
during the longest night of the kalpa.

Thursday, 20 June 2013

Ramblings of an old man



Drop for drop
it should stop
when the cistern
becomes an urn.

Vessel grim and churning
harvests the burning
and we keep going
yes, we do.

Dustdrops dissolve
in the quiet surf
become a salve
neath the wharf.

Liquid stones
melting bones
trampled ashes
thesaurus dashes
bloody old crones.

Growing fear
of the nadir
the end is near
the end is near
the last frontier
where all things cohere.

Irises found in the next of kin
flaws in the depths of the skin
and the ceiling reels
the next funeral steels
yet we cover our ears to the din
for all things spin
one and two
one and two
and whirl within
effect and reason
of our chagrin.

Faults and imbrues of our forefathers
fuck us up into a spot of bother
and we pay our dues to our sons and daughters
conscientious saboteurs
hurtling topsy-turvy in the venerable turds.

It really is a rotten business, getting old is.

Wednesday, 19 June 2013

Fragment #1



Good-Friday's
cruxed Jesus
poised his back on the stairs
awaits the darkness and
the living history
to begin
again

Tundra



Not here, not here the desert
in this collapsing world.
Tundra has always exerted magnetism
from the very end,
which is also the beginning.

Few words, a man of few words, this they say that I am.
I punched and kicked and bit the devil out of me,
back in that dusty, tottering tomb.

Silence above all else.
The silence within for the words to reverberate.
I am closing in in order to open up.
I am withdrawing from the world in order to commune with the world.
I am silent in order to speak out.

Though deaf and dumb I spoke the word and I heard the sins
word against sin
word against bread
silence against water
word for water.

My staff will come to tread other deserts
other tundras
whilst I rot here, here where none can find me,
not even by accident, for the tundra hinders.
 

Haiku

leafblower season ablast one path, uncleared still, invites the pace on singing, saffron ginkgo leaves