Friday, 10 August 2018

Time there


Time didn't stop, it just didn't
matter anymore

back to the old computation
of suns and moons
of counting in twelves
thumb on the pulp of the phalanges

to the bird pecking
the breadcrumbs at lunch
– it will certainly be there
when the place will be dead
perhaps checking the spot
every once in a while
till it then dies too –

to the after-dinner walk on the shore
or the dinner itself
both dictated by needs only
thirst, hunger, sweat, satiety

to the pile of read books
and the local daily

details effaced in the mind
smoothed like a stretched but
unbreaking plastic table cover

time there just wasn't
impressions couldn't remain
memories faded upon waking
stayed only what served the instinct.
 

Extortion


"The one thing we know about torture is that it was never designed in the first place to get at the actual truth of anything; it was designed in the darkest days of human history to produce false confessions in order to annihilate political and religious dissidents. And that is how it always works: it gets confessions regardless of their accuracy."

Extract from a (fantastic) article in The Atlantic, Oct. 25, 2007.

Andrew Sullivan, writer (1963-)

Here is the link to the article.
 

Monday, 6 August 2018

Granny


She no longer recognised our faces,
She who used to have a tremendous memory;
She smelt of ammonia and faeces,
She who used to wear perfume like Givenchy.

It had started not long after her birthday,
It had gone downhill quite rapidly since then.
It made her look for words and the time of day,
It made her lose her temper now and again.

She had battled cancer for ten years but it's this –
This disease which was to have the best of her;
She had lived through so many wars and crises
It was hard to imagine a world without her.

It took over before the weekend started.
She was weak, cold to the touch, restless, in pain.
She knew, though. So she pointed, and instructed:
Decoction of hemlock, hellebore, and wolf's bane.

It was the last middle finger from a proud woman.
She might have held onto that idea all along,
Even to stay the bitterness with a dash of lemon.
She shivered, muttered what we thought was an old song,
Then lay motionless. No whimper to say she was gone,
Thus reminding us what it was to be human.

Sunday, 5 August 2018

Fragment #43


Where the ferruginous waterway spilt
the algae coloured it vividly
cascaded to the rusty wheel
grinding the foam without pause
from daybreak to daybreak

The breeze catspaws on the lake
the sunrays play with the hills
dragonflies almost too bright
hesitant over the warmed surfaces
seem to reflect time in their wings

Saturday, 4 August 2018

Fragment #60


Back to being alone
imperfect teeth and random thoughts
the routine anger and habitual sadness
logic stumped
life seen from a distance
at times brushing the fingertips
tingling the blood
but the darkness
the darkness always wins
leaves panting on the wayside
a small chip of the heart
surgically chiselled off
never to grow back – 

Friday, 3 August 2018

Ensemble


On n'y fait rien, ici, sauf y filer du temps.
Sans patience parce qu'elle n'a pas lieu d'être :
on ne s'émeut plus, on attend, on attend,
on ne cherche rien parce qu'on croit tout connaître.

On s'est défilés il y a longtemps.
Le temps défile en photos ratées :
on se moque l'un de l'autre, on se ment,
on ne se regarde plus que pour trinquer.

Puis on contemple son assiette lentement,
ou la télévision, ou le mur d'en face :
on ne croyait pas devoir se haïr autant –
le portrait à deux est pourtant bien en place.

On fuit alors qu'on croyait aller de l'avant,
on s'étreint parce qu'on a signé un contrat :
on s'éteint, on s'éteint toujours plus lentement –
on s'endort bien à l'abri dans de beaux draps.

Thursday, 2 August 2018

Withering Lights


"I am now quite cured of seeking pleasure in society, be it country or town. A sensible man ought to find sufficient company in himself."

in Wuthering Heights, Emily Brontë, novelist (1818-1848) 

Tuesday, 31 July 2018

Haters gonna hate


"I imagine one of the reasons people cling to their hates so stubbornly is because they sense, once hate is gone, they will be forced to deal with pain."

Me and My House" in Harper's (November 1955), James Baldwin, writer (1924-1987)

Wednesday, 25 July 2018

Faire avec


« On doit faire avec, » c'est ce qu'on me dit.
On fait avec les grincements de dents,
les noms-dits, les ouï-dire, les maux dits –
ceux qu'on crie quand on est à un tournant.

On fait avec le désamour, l'absence ;
on accepte sans broncher la routine,
celle à rebours du sens, qui bute les sens.
On doit faire semblant à travers les mines.

Faire avec, c'est un peu comme faire sans,
comme si c'était un luxe de choisir,
comme si ça devait être dans le sang
de se taire, de n'avoir aucun désir ;

c'est prendre le risque de rester seul.
Faire avec c'est parfois faire un enfant :
c'est croire qu'on est mieux quand on n'est plus seul,
c'est s'aveugler face au gouffre cinglant.

Faire avec, c'est penser qu'on est maudits
alors qu'on peut toujours faire autrement.

Tuesday, 24 July 2018

La plage


Tous en menhirs couchés sur la plage
alignés en quinconce solaire face à l'océan
sarcophages de chair brûlante sans âge
immobiles taches dans le jaune néant
offrandes à la mer, au ciel, aux mirages.

Moutons broutant la lumière qui les tue
occultes arrangements de couleur
dessinant des glyphes visibles des nues
stoïques et réjouis malgré la chaleur
ils s'offrent au soleil, à l'horizon nu.

Ils ont tous les pieds rivés au rivage
stèles votives frappées de stupeur
comme pour suivre en premier le naufrage
ou alors tétanisés par la peur
faisant mine d'ignorer les ravages.

Silly little details

  You said it was the way I looked at you played with your fingertips drowned in your eyes starving your skin you felt happiness again your ...