“Now, how do you tie
together the pieces of your life that were torn up from the canvas?
You can't. Thing is, as hard as you wish that to happen, your life,
once fucked up, is fucked up until the very end, until God comes to
clear the mess you've made shooting right in your face. Truth is,
you've really messed things up, son. You had everything a man could
ask for. But you lied and you threw everything to the devil who
welcomed such impetuous acts, such blind rashness with open arms.
Your lies more than anything brought misery down upon you. You were
trying to flee, to get away from the consequences of your lies, but
you were the source, giving birth to ever more lies, and in the end
you had to live all by yourself, for within a prison of lies you had
carefully woven you found yourself trapped. Like a spider. You yarned
it up all around you. And when I say 'in the end', you're what now?
35? This is the end, son. This is the end. You'll have none other
than the self-hatred, the regrets and the solitude, the interminable
waiting for a message which will never come, and you know it will
never come. You'll have your books, which you'll grow slowly to
despise, the writing which you will learn to detest and day after day
you won't do anything else but this, read and write, read and write.
And what you will write will be good, but compared to what it could
have been, well, that's the thing: they're incomparable. The
mediocrity you've always tried to shun and ward off, you'll end up to
your neck in it. This is where your intelligence is leading you. I
don't deny you're an intelligent person, but you're socially awkward,
have always been awkward. Pretended to be ok and smart, but the
ill-at-easeness was gnawing at your guts each time you met someone
nice. You'll never be the one you're pretending to be. And none of
your friends should, upon your death, judge you for the lies and the
pretence, for you never really got to know yourself. Deep down, you
were fucked up from the very beginning. You had no chance. Also, your
friends asked way too much from you, but they knew where you'd been,
and back. You're good enough to empathise, to put yourself into
people's shoes, yet and because you can't be in your own shoes, you
can't know what you feel because you've never been shown how to
listen, how to look, how to love. In essence you pay a total
attention to the rest of the world, and keep none for yourself. The
first one who dropped down on you is yourself. Your averageness
couldn't save you: you had to be mediocre in order to survive, but
now the mediocrity has caught up with you, and you're dying.
Miserably, at that. Your hands hurt so bad you won't tell anyone.
Your teeth are all crooked because you haven't got any money to fix
them. You can barely pay off your debts. Your family hardly ever
calls you. Don't get me wrong: I'm not saying you're a failure. Some
of what you wrote, and all of what you will pen in the few months
before your death are going to mark this century. But you will leave
your imprint as an inadequate, uncomfortable-in-his-own-skin man
whose ambitions were always foiled, who always failed to make an
impression deep enough to have someone stay by his side. A
second-order mind in a third-rate world. You will be the last
Romantic ever to roam this earth, with a splendid posthumous career.
[...] Look at all those lies you said meaning to embellish your
quotidian in people's eyes! Let me tell you: people are no fools.
You're a see-through. Your life was sad enough as it was, there was
no need to pour more syrupy schmaltz on top of it. But you didn't
want to settle for anything less than pure, antique tragic. And some
of the things that happened are nothing short of that – tragic –
but the tinnitus rings on, son. You can pretend not to hear it, yet
it echoes and vibrates and destroys. There, some unseen-before chaos
inside of you, and I can tell, I've seen a few of those myself,
within and without. There is no other way this can end up. You know
it, son, I can see it in your eyes that you've known all along how it
would end up. I'm not saying you won't need a great dose of liquid
courage to achieve that, but it's all for the best. As much for you
as for us. We can't spend whatever time we spend worrying about you,
we have families to take care of, occupations to pursue, destinies to
fulfil. Yours was a done deal a long, long time ago. You were not
born to last. You've just kept on postponing it, even avoiding it, by
some strange tweak of fate. But in the meantime you've written for
the generations to come a simple message: don't waste your time on
earth, just abre los ojos, hermanos, hermanas, and let the
convoluted pseudo-Romantics perish in the flame of forgery, for there
never was another Romantic after Keats but you. You know the world
will be a better place without a tortured poet to heal and nurture.
You're broken past mending, and we can't afford your breaking anyone
else...you've already done enough damage as it is, haven't you. You
know she could have remained at your side, she could have endured
your whimpering had you not cast her away for the third time. You
knew that, but you couldn't help, could you. You saw she suffered
staying with you, and you couldn't stand it. Ultimately, you were
right to break up, for she had had time to renew herself, to rebuild
what you had unwittingly and unwillingly torn down. You're like a
wrecking ball, son, like an asteroid. Poor girl. But you had the
sense not to inflict your self upon anyone else, and you'll pull
ourself out of harm's way. Hell is paved with good intentions, you'll
soon realise that. Your pacing to and fro will cease, your whiling
away the time will also come to an end, much to our benefit. Your
watching other people having fun, moving on in their life, wondering
when it'll happen to you, all this will stop. The questioning will
stop. The longing, the pain too. And you know you'd make a bad monk,
probably not the worst, for some have set precedents unlikely to be
matched, but as you've been averagely bad at almost anything you've
ever done...it stands to reason that you won't stand out being a bad
monk. I wish you the best, son. This is going to be hard, let's face
it, but you have the guts, you've always had the guts. You've
shilly-shallied in your time, but not this once, and we both know
you'll be brave facing the black one, and I don't know why, but
you've never feared her, like you had come to terms with her before
the terms were even defined. Perhaps that makes you the bravest of
us, perhaps. Now come, it is time.”
Friday, 30 May 2014
Thursday, 29 May 2014
The world burns
The world burns.
The man, on the doorstep to his house,
– one hand in his pocket –
– the other holding a cup of tea –
watches the writhing flames
dance in the pale segment
of grey dawn.
The world has been burning,
day and night,
for thirty years now.
There seems to be no end to it.
The inky carapace of clouds
has not yet been breached,
the sun deemed dead,
the moon, gone.
The world burns,
and the man, in the cool breeze,
– his jacket flaps to an unknown beat
–
ticks off another day in his mental
calendar
– the exact number him only
knows –
until the end of the fire.
Tuesday, 27 May 2014
The longest night
In the dim nowhere we
stand,
erect like rows of pickets
or like sunbleached
obelisks
in Luxor,
our parched skins
speak for themselves.
We look for a sign, alert,
our gaze floating over the
dunes.
The searing sun is still
hung high.
And we think we hear a
voice
but it is just the wind
hissing
over the sands:
“I will open my hand and
I will show you man in a
handful of dust.”
We watch our palms,
watch the dying man's rake
the dying man's claw
the last stand
there is bitterness and
damnation
in those raking fingers
the minutest scratch
carving doom
in the halest flesh.
We know full well that
the dyer's hand,
congested, swollen
and puffed like a bloated
drowned,
only the lines on the
dyer's hand
can show the way there –
where we have need go –
tumefied as a dier's hand.
To hold
a dier's hand is
terrible
nothing has a stronger
grip
and a sadder release.
Somewhere, far away and
yet visible to us,
the summer deck chairs are
being brought in.
The wind swirls the
napkins,
shakes the flowers in
their makeshift vases.
The storm is massing in
the East,
the horizon billowy and
swollen and
streaked with claw-like
arcs.
The first raindrops bloat
the tablecloth,
contort and contract in
unshapely waves.
The party shall continue
inside the grange.
We lost the pace of the
longest night of the year
face buried in 'kerchiefs,
unable to see through
tears,
adversity pushing our gaze
clean to the horizon.
the warmth of a stranger's
hand
glimpsed at a cashier
exchanging notes
surprises us
like painted players stuck
in a
dumbfounded, ridiculous
rigor mortis
the feel and the dream
long gone
of water and that of the
sand
rubbed in the palm of the
hands
begin to fade
the desert and the country
make one, in the dier's
hand,
united for one second
of agony, of glory.
Now we feel on our skin,
prickling,
beginning, for us,
what we shall forever know
as the longest night
of our lives.
Saturday, 12 April 2014
Fragment #7
J'ai souvent du mal à viser aux
toilettes
surtout quand, après quelques verres,
je suis un peu pompette.
Alors je pose mon derrière
au centre de la lunette
et fais ma petite affaire
en laissant place nette.
Friday, 11 April 2014
Quarks
Suspended minutes in that hall
-- Like particles of dust --
-- Ebbing, ebbing --
Busybodies of the void.
Those are people,
Passersby just,
Walking like androids.
Their pacing like compasses
Going wild in every direction.
Departured from all senses
Crazed, meaningless amplitude
Legs arching in unwise longitudes,
Strides like a polarised magnet
Repulsing any sort of attraction.
Love is e'er opposite where we face.
Love is that air we breathe
When we resurface
After a long time depth-gazing.
Floating in ether,
Forgetting, forgetting.
Gyring to the ground,
Uncatchable,
Music soft mirroring
The fall,
Echoing the friction.
Particles
To nothing bound.
-- Like particles of dust --
-- Ebbing, ebbing --
Busybodies of the void.
Those are people,
Passersby just,
Walking like androids.
Their pacing like compasses
Going wild in every direction.
Departured from all senses
Crazed, meaningless amplitude
Legs arching in unwise longitudes,
Strides like a polarised magnet
Repulsing any sort of attraction.
Love is e'er opposite where we face.
Love is that air we breathe
When we resurface
After a long time depth-gazing.
Floating in ether,
Forgetting, forgetting.
Gyring to the ground,
Uncatchable,
Music soft mirroring
The fall,
Echoing the friction.
Particles
To nothing bound.
People as fickle as feathers.
I used to think I needed a war
To die with honour
Or find out who I was,
My purpose here.
I would have started this uproar
Had I not seen you against that wall.
It is not your beauty which stopped all,
It is the look into your eyes
Which made wars meaningless.
This look you still have to this day,
Yet no longer war dwells in me.
The both of us have seen
The east sleep
And the faint sliver of light
In the west, on the train
Bound homewards
Where silence used to preside.
Often you wondered what given
Lit window would harbour,
What life unrolled behind it.
Once we saw a silhouette
Carrying a bundle of linen.
It might have been a toddler.
Unsearching your hand into mine
Already.
Love was found among the dust
All ready.
Nothing around us fussed,
We were just in suspension,
Two particles in suspension.
When I was single I used to rue every hour
That passed by without you
-- Long before knowing you --
Even when I spent the night with a her
Who wasn't you I was expecting you,
Looking for clues of you on other girls' bodies,
In the fold of the neck or of the pubis,
Where I would later rest my head and sleep.
When I talked about love
I clearly didn't know what it meant
Trying to sound clever
To look knowledgeable
Yet I had to balance all
With what you'd come to represent.
Often you seem like a part of me
That was amputated by some devil
Before I was born
And, drawn like some split electron
Bound to be one again,
We found each other in this hall
And still two were made unity,
Asymmetrical matter made ideal.
But back into that hall,
Where people pass
-- Bindles of mess --
-- Forever stumbling but
Unable to fall --
Even though you and I are trembling,
I take your hand and hold onto it.
I used to think I needed a war
To die with honour
Or find out who I was,
My purpose here.
I would have started this uproar
Had I not seen you against that wall.
It is not your beauty which stopped all,
It is the look into your eyes
Which made wars meaningless.
This look you still have to this day,
Yet no longer war dwells in me.
The both of us have seen
The east sleep
And the faint sliver of light
In the west, on the train
Bound homewards
Where silence used to preside.
Often you wondered what given
Lit window would harbour,
What life unrolled behind it.
Once we saw a silhouette
Carrying a bundle of linen.
It might have been a toddler.
Unsearching your hand into mine
Already.
Love was found among the dust
All ready.
Nothing around us fussed,
We were just in suspension,
Two particles in suspension.
When I was single I used to rue every hour
That passed by without you
-- Long before knowing you --
Even when I spent the night with a her
Who wasn't you I was expecting you,
Looking for clues of you on other girls' bodies,
In the fold of the neck or of the pubis,
Where I would later rest my head and sleep.
When I talked about love
I clearly didn't know what it meant
Trying to sound clever
To look knowledgeable
Yet I had to balance all
With what you'd come to represent.
Often you seem like a part of me
That was amputated by some devil
Before I was born
And, drawn like some split electron
Bound to be one again,
We found each other in this hall
And still two were made unity,
Asymmetrical matter made ideal.
But back into that hall,
Where people pass
-- Bindles of mess --
-- Forever stumbling but
Unable to fall --
Even though you and I are trembling,
I take your hand and hold onto it.
Nothing else can mean more
than your hand into mine
Here because it was inevitable
a call impossible to ignore
Than your lips against mine
in this hall where all pass forgettable
us to dwell oblivious of time.
Thursday, 6 March 2014
Resurface
The ground too hard to bury their dead,
The battered men outlive the long winter,
Content, on one hand. Somehow life
Was meant to endure, to sustain the little breath
It had infused here, centuries ago,
Seemingly by an unfortunate case
Of circumstances.
Wednesday, 27 November 2013
Unwitting teachers
"I have learnt silence from the talkative, toleration from the intolerant, and kindness from the unkind; yet strange, I am ungrateful to these teachers."
Kahlil Gibran, poet, and artist (1883-1931)
Thursday, 21 November 2013
Hard and sad
"He is a hard man who is only just, and a sad one who is only wise."
Voltaire, French philosopher (1694-1778)
Wednesday, 20 November 2013
Fragment #6
The stench would long remain in her
nostrils, as her doll dragged behind her on a leash. The black bags
lined up to where the sky ended. The stench would come back to her in
the deeps of night, when sweating and panting she would see the bags
waking into motion, summoned by invisible threads, and stack in the
quicklimed pit, in order, as close as they were in life.
As for now, her doll would join the
rest of her belongings in her plastic bag. The ground was dirty.
She made
I met her at a point when I thought
that nothing could abate the pain pricking my sides.
She made me see the light where I saw
only, only darkness.
She held my head so as to face it.
She made me remember what I had
forgotten.
She made me smile and laugh because I
had forgotten the sound of my own voice.
I had to listen again to the sound of
the wind in the reeds to know the sound.
She made me breathe again in the open
air.
She opened a rend in the clouds to make
me feel the rain.
She made me whole, again, and see the
colours of the sky at the break of day.
She tore the crust off a loaf of bread,
and handed it to me. Instinctively, I munched it between my molars.
This I had forgotten too.
She was there when I wasn't anymore,
and understood that I couldn't dwell amongst the everyday.
She made me realise the everyday was
where I had to be to understand.
So there I went, heavy of heart and
with a sore soul. I struggled and came out, after what seems aeons of
buffets and sighs, victorious, amongst the living.
She made me ride unknown storms and
stand upon the wreck of the bloody plains, beholding.
I couldn't have done any of these
things I take pride in without her.
She made me find the strength whilst
having none.
She made me try with all my heart, made
me see what I could, made me, made me.
Curved hills and levelled mountains to
do so.
If only I had met her.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
This is no longer home
On the train back to the old place unsure if any memory is left there Surely there must be an old cigarette burn hissing embers fusing ...
-
There's a thread on Facebook and all over the Internet that goes: "Shakespeare said: I always feel happy. You know why? Because I...
-
Mon weekend parisien, mis à part l'exposition "L'or des Incas" à la Pinacothèque , une petite expo sur Théodore Monod au...
-
J'ai eu un peu de mal à le prendre, celui-ci...avec un peu de patience, et surtout sans trembler (les deux pieds bien vissés au sol, he...