Friday, December 12, 2025

Did They Figure out How to Dissolve One Another’s Soul with Perfumes’ Drops?

 

Perfume:
a sin distilled
to be served
from flacons
and uncorked lips.

But doubt remains
among those who still
cagily bide their time
at Hell’s own threshold,

wondering whether
corruption remembers
if it came from above
or from below—

Why—does not Hell
still smell of Heaven,
and wonted perfumes
on arms,

necks, and earlobes
fly men wherever they will?
How many nights—
how many Heavens and Hells—

are folded into one
in those reedy, greedy,
fragrant flames?
Something of this, perhaps,

may yet be read
in a morning newspaper—
soon to perish, like so many,
by the glorious sundown dusk.

As Though a Morning’s Breath

 

As though morning,
half-rain, half-thought,
made a pass on flesh
without disturbing it,
the verse moves—
a hush knowing its way.

Spine becomes fan,
fan becomes flame,
heart becomes script—

a page raised to the light
that both dwells and migrates,
threading what is felt
into what is becoming.

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

What Is So Truly Capital about Capitalism? (The Universalized Homogenization Of the Decapitating Hegelian Aufhebung)


Assuming
that some doughty ancient hero
once managed to steal Cerberus,
the Gatekeeper of Hell,
and leave the Underworld
without its sentinel—
what, if such a theft were ever true,
would have happened then?

Would not Hell have lost
its confining shores and boundaries,
spilling over into our world—without end—
the living falling in, untimely,
without even the courtesy
of a visa stamp for the nether realm,
and the dead pouring outward,
with no one left to bar their escape?

And all—everyone, everything—
would be bemused and mixed again,
as in the Ionian fragments
of the world’s origins,
from that Dark Age before Socrates.

Or did someone strip Anubis
of his canine head?
Or was it that same reckless child
who made his mother lose her own
and set upon her neck
the head of a village cow?
Or was it a friend, a brother,
who dared such impious exchange?

And if Eros were in truth
the Lord of All Boundaries,
what of Heaven and what of Hell
would a headless Desire
wreak—or wreck—or remake?

And wasn’t this the unsaid point
still pondered by Mary Magdalene
in her cavern, darkened with vigil—
as she contemplates her skull,
a remnant surely not merely of a dead man
but of one decapitated—
a life severed at its limit?

And if today so much of humankind
longs for dogs and cats in their homes,
isn’t that—yet unbeknownst to us—
a rising pre-motion of premonition
that we may need to grow back
the heads of those long-lost guardians
of the deep and the dead,
those who can tell and scent
what evil is and how it smells,
even when unseen?

Can the dogs and cats we keep
teach us again
what we forgot to remember,
what we learned—fatally—to miss?

Wednesday, December 3, 2025

Words Refined, Released to a Verse


“May I borrow your bar?”
Her smile—that wonder—
which itself recalls mirari,
makes palpable at once
how all of her—
mouth, eyes, skin—

is writ and grammar:
a syntax bending air,
even gravity,
with a single token favor—
that radiant cheer—

turning form to force,
desire to flame
and flame to speech.

But if she borrows—
what is returned?
What alteration remains,
what stays behind—

since no marble goes unlit
once a hand has pressed
its heat into the grain,
and beauty keeps
what beauty drinks—

like a clef poured
back into its melody,
whose hearing
can never be undone.

Bare—unadorned—
yet clarified, untied,
like the sound of a rose
in its sudden scent,

unbarred—
so that even the long-forlorn
passes once more through
into a different radiance,
a re-breathed light—

and hearts, so touched,
are roused again
towards song.

Thursday, November 13, 2025

Liu: “Since I Was Rusticated, I Could Do What I Pleased”

 

Not long ago a bitter woman mocked
a stranger as nothing but a coarse, uncouth peasant—
shriveling her own life with stifled rage
and turning abuse into her private wharf of faith.

Yet, strangely, such derision carries
a long literary pedigree and tail.
It is a magnificent puzzlement
that a gratuitous slur could bear
so much depth unawares.

In Yungchou on the Hsiao River in 806,
Liu Tsung-Yuan dared to call himself
“rusticated”—a proscribed man,
a government’s reject—
yet the word also slipped
into another layer of meaning:

of striking root in the earth’s own reality,
in the humble wisdom of place,
and in the wonder he “couldn’t keep
from passing on to those who come.”

A thousand years later,
Book II of Pushkin’s Eugene Onegin
opens with a motto on that same note:
“O Rus! O Russia!—O country!”—
O the delights of rustic life!

“The peaceful land of refined taste
from an age gone by—lofty,
vast, and wide—where pensive Dryads
kept their secret bed and home;
and much else that’s rather passé now.
A fine solitary retreat, bright and gay;
there a lover of simpler desires
would thank the heavens for his fate.”

Without those roots and rural charms
there would have been no Onegin,
no Pushkin, and far less of Russian verse
or of its stories and great novels.

Had they ever severed themselves
from that life-source and its bond,
we all would now be on a foul
and anaemic diet—

even though—O irony of ironies!—
it is precisely such “Rus,” such rustication,
even such russification,
that bored Onegin and sent Lensky—
out of spite—toward hasty death.

And now, having written this,
I cannot help but cry out in dismay—
wasn’t that woman an angry ghost,
one who died with the wish
for a rustic poet’s death?