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Expression, Sunset
A crown, which I trust is acceptable as it's one poem. Because of its length I set it apart in the Deep End.
Expression (Sunset) or The Death of Venus The products of combustion are contained in brickwork vaults designed by engineers adept at solitude, their fire explained in darkness. Our intrepid gondoliers inspect the morning from a high balloon recording trace emissions in a code reengineered from signals in the war. No reason for the Peaceful Valley to explode. In fact, we needn’t worry anymore about the Human Epoch, which is soon or maybe later to dissolve in light. The constellation Pisces will unwind its net of epithelia and kite in two directions leaving us behind. The pond was deathly still this afternoon. The pond was deathly still this afternoon as William pulled his shopping cart behind a backstop in the park. A powder moon accompanied his daydream in the blind and covered up his song like no tomorrow. They say it never comes. Yet there’s a scene in William’s history that proves he’s way ahead and wrapped in polyethylene. Tomorrow is a glass on yesterday where nothing happens. We’re inclined to borrow, singing hardship forward in a line with gladness, twining elements of drool and drama that inscribe a 69, a Yin and Yang, a chiral molecule impervious to all the moon can sorrow. Impervious to all the moon can sorrow, frozen mountains slam their wood-crack strains. All color drained, gone even from the dayglow factories that burned once and their trains that throttled through the county night and day. A river choked with surplus nurdles plies the fallen forest like a mindless snail. The sun appears, but always in disguise, and disappears. We’re startled by a pale hypocrisy that jumps across the clay to hobble back into the shadow twist and bracken fall. Consult the lying stars regarding our domain. Consult the mist that folds them in obscurity with Mars and Venus, who were always in the way. When Venus, who was always in the way, committed suicide, her arrow boys became undisciplined. Their hate held sway; green eyes gone lightless as their feathered toys collected dust. Nothing slowed them down. The god of combat, in his bleeding cape of mercury and sulfur, had a war to angle, and a trial to escape (coincident convenience), and a score to settle, and a gathering in town of arrow boys. The table’s set. Regard his vanguard in the gutter and a staff of banners flapping with his limp petard. There is no ending to the epitaph he needs to write. He needs to write a crown. He needs to write a sixteen-sonnet crown of sonnets to revive an atrophied imagination. He needs to paint a clown in order to recharge his palette, plant a seed. Ontogeny might recapitulate phylogeny. It’s happened once before. Today, the page defines an empty frame, a canvas primed and white; the killing metaphor, an outcome predetermined. All the same, he rises, careful not to saturate the grays, and draws a bass drum for the boom of brave Pierrot. He’ll stand him tall beside the plaque that reads Cogito, ergo sum. Accordion and mandolin provide A melody that carries on 'til late. A melody that carries on 'til late will likely nibble, as Ouroboros, a tail familiar with the grass; a great awakening to visions of morose encounters in the past. A balance sheet. Reminders of an echoed reckoning of glory days in ashed recrimination. Aubade. Augoode, or ugly, beckoning like Ahab in the motion picture adaptation. O, the worm returns, a Hollywood conceit. God help us. We won’t bother You again. Just get us out of this, Who put us here, and let us be. Selah, Shalom. Amen. Or write us headlines for a winning year to read, resist, forget, recast, repeat. Recast, resist, forget, rewrite, repeat the Protocols of Zion while the God of War renews his contract with a non-compete. He plays the numbers at a liquor store, returning home to phone in his report, though lately he’s been interviewed on Zoom by operatives who cover up his game for networks on the left. His livingroom suggests he’s off the wagon and the shame is amplified by questions from a court reporter in New York. His latest book, in garish product placement, fills a quarter of the screen. He acts if he’s somehow off the hook when asked of the condition of his daughter. “War,” he pleads, “is endless. Life is short.” Remember brutish, nasty, poor and short? Well that’s the guy who got us here, correct? An agent of the Age of Light, a sort of demagogue whose ironies reflect grave error through a veil of time release. Who made him God? The men of modern science in cahoots with industry and government. The hoi polloi react in big defiance and its outrage kind of cracks the firmament. The cracking mountains slam, the southward geese describe another airborne letter: Q. Our gondoliers recalibrate the glass that measures complements of CO2. The little guy yells, “Blow it out your ass.” Sing War is Over if You Want It. Peace. The Corpse of Love sings “If you want it, peace comes dropping slow.” Beside her rings the snake that laid her low. Below, the blood and grease repel in tinted jewels and rainbow flake, an image in a leaded window, stained, desiring only fire (see Stanza One to find the definition). William sleeps beneath his cart, protected from the sun that burns a pathway through the park and keeps the promise of a paradise regained. The networks in their perfect opposition fill the hour with a tired spin as engineers review the composition of a brickwork archbasilica wherein the products of combustion are contained. . |
This reads beautifully. The rhymes and enjambments are delightful, surprising and satisfying. I don’t understand much of it but there is so much going on here. The bits I do follow keep calling me back for more.
You may have missed an “a” in S5L1. |
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Rick, What a rollick! It certainly lives up to its goal to revive an atrophied imagination. Some thoughts... I sense a plastic wasteland. It alludes to a wide swath of literary rambles from Eliot to Ginsberg to Lennon and I imagine many more. What it is driving at as yet eludes my understanding, though the humor and pathos of it is clear. The rhyming seems to never stop if I give it some slack. There are some wonderful, unexpected juxtapositions of imagery such as the gondolier in the hot-air balloon. There are lines, too, that are epigraph-worthy, like "Tomorrow is a glass on yesterday / where nothing happens” and, "Impervious to all the moon can sorrow". It all adds up to a feast — a crown of beef-poetry. The whole of It feels tight, packed-in, in a good way. In some ways it reminds me of Hunke in the way it is locked in without anything extraneous to divert or distract. It keeps driving forward toward a point — what that point is or even if there is a point, I don’t know. I’ll come back, though, I’m sure. If it weren’t for Joe's glowing review I might not have taken the time to slowly read and savor the phrasing that is so succinctly obscure, even cataclysmic, in spots, humorous in others, and in some spots darkly beautiful. I know my crit is not much of a deep-end crit. but for now I have only admiration. Retirement should be this productive. Btw, there are also sumptuous sonics throughout, like this one: chiral molecule I don’t know much about crowns (I think Mary Meriam posted one once but don’t hold me to that. I enjoy the size of it once I gave it a chance, though to read a less skilled one would be torture. What I like best about the form is the most obvious: the repeating of the last line in each stanza to be the first line in the next. There’s a symmetry to that that keeps me going. Also, I like the thought of a poem being a crown. Even if it’s a crown of beef — ha! . |
Thanks Joe!
I appreciate your taking the time to get into this one and weigh in early on. The formal mechanisms are important in keeping a reader onboard with a crown, so I'm glad they're working for you here. I mercifully broke the 16 sonnet mandate. Thanks Jim, Glad you like it. Especially good to hear that the "tomorrow is a glass" and "all the moon can sorrow" bits aren't setting off the TILT indicator. I was drawn to them via the paradox or constraint. I appreciate your mentioning Huncke. Writing this felt very much the way it did writing that much longer poem. It has some of the same literary reference and humor engines. Maybe less humor. I suppose there is a top layer "narrative" that can be discerned. Definitely a wasteland, including plastics, involved. Nurdles are what they call basic plastic pellets. a major pollutant in rivers near ethylene crackers. Thanks again to Joe for encouraging you to dig in! Rick |
Here’s some real deep-end criticism for you, Rick: the poem is missing three l’s: till, till, hoi polloi. “Hoi polloi” is of course a supercilious way of referring to the masses, though it’s often mistakenly used for the elite; I couldn’t tell which you had in mind. To be really pedantic, it’s also plural. The depth of these comments is a measure of my subtlety as a critic.
Overall, I find the poem a tour de force—a restrictive form maintained with a light touch, a wild proliferation of images and allusions that cohere over so many lines, precisely and strikingly worded, mesmerizing, philosophical, apocalyptic: “The three men I admire most, the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, they caught the last train for the coast. The day the music died.” |
Thanks Carl.
And, ha! I think til is an option, but it requires a apostrophe. I'll put that in. I think it will boost the tone in a good way, too. And yes, I will correct polloi. I love that hoi polloi means the great unwashed but is mistaken for the elite, perhaps being confused with or by "hoity-toity". I also corrected to make it plural, though I wonder whether it's one of those British vs American deals where IBM is treated as a plural noun in England and correctly as a singular noun in New Jersey. And I'm glad you like the poem. I appreciate what you have to say, including the comparison with the line from "American Pie," which is indisputably the best line in "American Pie". Thanks for taking the time to read it and, again, I'm glad you enjoyed it. Rick |
Short, hasty comment, unworthy of The Deep End:
From Grammerly.com (https://www.grammarly.com/blog/until-till-til/): Quote:
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Rick,
Great to see the deep end being used again. I will have to come back to this in bits and pieces a quick look tells me I am going to enjoy it. Jan |
I enjoy the logorrheic mania of these Mullinese sonnets, and I like the fact that it's a crown, which gives a tad more emphasis to the fifth-line rhymes; my attention span is usually too short for those to chime the way they should across that distance.
A micro-nit: I'm trying to picture a "limp petard." Do you mean "damp petard," similar to "damp squib"? (Even if so, I don't quite get it. Which isn't to say that I totally get everything else, or that I need to before I can enjoy it. I mention this purely for informational purposes, in case you think that's a problem.) |
Thanks Julie,
Glad the mania is clicking. You've probably noticed that I've kissed the 14-line sonnet goodbye for the 15-line version that I derived, which is pretty loose with other rules as well. I especially like that the triple rhyme (lines 5, 10 and 15) don't hit with the regularity of the interspersed quatrain rhymes. They kind of hang back with the final rhyme pulling the three together, as the first of the three may have been lost by the time the second arrives. Of course, I know they're there in the first place.... Limp petard is "leveraging", as the kids say, the secondary definition of limp, which is "flaccid". The limp petard is intended to hint at diminished masculinity. Thanks for coming back. Rick |
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