THE
END OF TELEVISION
Covet not the sun its
honorarium
nor authorize the stars
their grants to write.
The sojourners spotted
a forest
adrift with language,
but couldn’t make sense of it.
The woods at odds with
the usual channels
and those neighboring
mountains
didn’t look like
pyramids, no matter the scale.
Read this part as if
the sum of lilac
mattered to you. For
love of someone
*else’s vortex, toss
the luminaries aside.
In lieu of flowers,
please donate
and in exchange for
your sympathy I’ll give you
edits on the level of
the line. Poems are to war
as are ghosts to the
proverbial orchard.
Headstones offer us
nothing
but an end to syntax.
Microsoft
Word inverts the sea. I
read
your manuscript. Reader,
I married it.
I fear for the
estuaries.
They are so small this
time of year.
I’m
admittedly a bit late to the game on Arkansas poet Sara Nicholson’s first poetry
book, The Living Method (New York NY:
The Song Cave, 2014). A collection of sharp, stunning lyrics, Nicholson’s poems
shift and shimmy through what is known and not known, seen and not seen, shifting
perspectives from line to line, writing a meditative abstract through a sequence
of direct phrases. Her poems somehow contain multitudes in a unique precision
of condensed space and revel in a quick movement between ideas, images and
facts. There is such a powerful certainty that comes through such shifts,
rolling across the page like a thunderstorm. There is a ferocity that comes
through here, as well as a fierce intelligence as she articulates a sequence of
moments that describe a state of being. As she writes in the poem “O.E.D.”: “I hate
you and I hate / the art of these letters, this language.”
WEEKEND
IN ARCADIA EGO
Our skin, beyond
recognition
makes music in the
blood.
Yet the thought of this
is enough to me make me
count
the numbers that have
become ugly
this semester. I might
get lost
though my blood won’t.
My eyes’ll
drop their verdict in
the leaves.
Methodologies and
flowers, little documents
with wings, leave their
lesions in the dust.
The lyric is something
greater than forest
and less than skin.
Those that I have loved now sleep
within the quotient of our
breathing.
Nothing will have the
wherewithal
to sound me out. Not
the wind,
complex among the
poplars this season.
Not the occasional
email,
reminding us of what’s
missing:
a field of poppies and
a book review,
a really good one. Not
the wolves.
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