Authors: Frederick Seidel
Drank silence. Then the silence drank. Wet chin,
Hot, whiskered darkness. Every elm was ill.
What else is there to give but joy? Disease.
And trauma. Lightning, or as slow as lava.
Darkness drinking from a pool in Java,
Black panther drinking from a dream. The trees
Around the edge are elms. Below, above,
Man-eater drinking its reflection: love.
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Another perfect hour of emptiness.
The final hour, calm as a candle flame.
The evening, enlarging as it neared, became
A sudden freshness, stillness, then the yes,
The fragrant falling yes of summer rain.
The huge grew larger as it neared, the smile,
The smell of rain, and waited for a while,
And went away. Time spilled. It left no stain.
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“The speed of light is not the limit. We
Are free. We glide. Our superluminous
Velocity will take us far. For us,
The superluminous is only the
Beginning of our birth. How born we are.
Compared to how we started. Vast, oh vast.
A lifetime as the measure couldn't last,
The nearest destinations were too far:
A billion years to reach the one inside
You if you couldâwho holds you, whom you hold.
You kick the covers off asleep, are cold,
And someone covers you, is all. And glide
Off into space. Is all. Space curved by speedâ
We really leave the light behind. But hark.
The infinite beginning in the dark
To sigh the universe out of its seed.
The speck that weighs more than the world. Before
The universeâwhich has no meaningâwas
Before the singularity which does.
Invisible nonzero, and we soar.
We sigh from the beginning, and we soar.
We leave the light behind and soar. And soar.”
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The way the rain won't fall
Applies a velvet pressure, voice-off.
The held-back heaviness too sweet, the redolence,
Brings back the memory.
Life watches, watches,
From the control room, through the soundproof window,
With the sound turned off,
The orchestra warming up, playing scales.
It listens to the glistening.
The humidity reels, headier than methanol.
Treelined sidestreets, prick up your leaves.
The oboe is giving the
la
to the orchestra.
Someone shoots his cuffs to show his cufflinks,
Yellow gold to match his eyes, and pays the check.
Someone else is eight years old.
Her humility is volatile.
And when they kiss, he can't quite breathe.
The electric clouds perspire.
It's meteorology, it's her little dress, it's her violin,
It's unafraid. It's about to.
A sudden freshness stirs then stills the air, the century.
The new jet-black conductor raises her baton.
The melody of a little white dog,
Dead long ago, starts the soft spring rain.
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The most beautiful power in the world has buttocks.
It is always a dream come true.
They are big. They are too big.
Kiss them and spank them till they are scalding.
Till she can't breathe saying oh.
Till your hand is in love.
Till your eyes are raw.
Stockings and garter belt without underpants are
The secret ceremony but who would imagine
She is wearing a business suit. She is in her office. She merely touches
The high-tech phone. Without a word,
She lies down across the hassock and eases her skirt up.
How big it is.
Her eyes are closed ⦠She has the votes.
They know she does. They're waiting for her now next door.
The number is ringing.
She squeezes them together. She squeezes them together.
She presses herself against the hassock.
She starts to spank herself.
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She has the votes; they know she does;
They're waiting for her now next door.
Her eyes are closed.
We were discussing the arms race when the moderator died,
Presumably a performance piece, was
What it's called. He said it is.
It actually wasn't so political was only
Broadcast without a live audience.
The telephone is warbling.
The secretary has allowed the call through which means the president
Herself is on the line.
Her dreams are calling her. The press will be there.
Her skirt is all the way up.
I am the epopt. Thou art the secret ceremony.
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A man sits memorizing a naked womanâ
A slot cut in a wall
Which has a metal slide which opens
When he puts a quarter in
Lets him look for hours.
It seems like hours.
He keeps forgetting what he sees.
He pays and stares
Into the brightly lit beyond
Dancing on a stage just beyond the wall, bare feet
On a level with his chin.
He looks up at it,
Without the benefit of music
Just standing there.
And then the music starts again.
The wall in which the slot is cut is curved.
So when the slot is open, besides a dance he sees
Curving away from him to either side an ocean liner row
Of little windows.
Prisoners in solitary confinement
Might get their meals through one of theseâ
Presumably behind each one a booth like his.
The open slots are dark.
A slot of darkness in the wall
Is someone.
Someone hidden is hunching there.
From some slots money waves.
The woman ripples over and squats
In front of it, her knees spread wide.
She takes the billâ
Sometimes she presses herself against the slot.
A man stays in a booth.
The door stays locked. The slot stays open.
He can't remember what he memorized.
It seems like hours.
It is too late.
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Serve me the ice cream bitterer than vinegar
Beneath a royal palm covered with needles.
Tell me a love story that ends with acyclovir
Five times a day for five days.
You never had it so good.
He made me my dog which He took.
Houseflies and herpes He brings.
Buttery ice cream smooth as Vaseline.
Florida. Dawn. Five hundred clouds.
Anal chocolate turning pink.
Oxygen-rich, from an opened artery
In the warm water
In the claw-footed tub. Dawn
Spreads from Gorbachev these arms talks AIDS days.
Will it spread?
Venus on the half-shell, moist and pink rose of saltâ
Belons 000 when they're freshest are as sweet.
Chincoteagues from the bay are as plump.
Freshly squeezed is as sweet.
This is your life. You live in France,
Klaus Barbie, in 1983, and '84, and '85, and '86, and '87.
And every day is the bissextus.
And every dawn is Hiroshima.
Hallali!
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My life.
I live with it.
I look at it.
My spied on, with malice.
It's my wife. It's my husband.
It sleeps with me.
I wake with it.
It doesn't matter.
If I'm unfaithfulâif I drank too muchâ
It's me. It's mine. It's all legal.
I smell the back of my hand,
And like the smell.
Twenty-five years ago when I was still alive.
I was twenty-five.
My penis pants. My penis
Rises, hearing its name, like a dog.
I ought to cut it off
And feed it to itself.
Like the young bride in the Babel story
Forced to eat her husband's penis
By the peasant who has cut it off.
A railroad telegrapher and a peasant
On the White Army side have found some Jews.
Russia 1918.
Interior railroad boxcar.
The boxcar door is slid open from the outside
Like a slowly lifted guillotine blade.
There they are.
I am fifty today. I hold the little cape and sword.
I dedicate this bull
That I'm about to kill
To the crowd.
To the crowd.
To the crowd.
To the crowd.
To the crowd. To the crowd. To the.
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I don't want to remember the Holocaust.
I'm
thick
of remembering the Holocaust.
To the best of my ability, I wasn't there anyway.
And then I woke.
My hands were showing me how they wash themselves.
They're clean. The heart is too. The hands are too.
They flush in unison like a row of urinals
Every few hours automatically. Two minutes Cockfosters.
My heart was pure. And stood on a subway platform in London
Staring at the sign. One minute Cockfosters.
I wasn't there anyway.
I don't believe in anything.
I was somewhere else
Screaming beneath an avalanche.
Skiers wearing miners' headlamps were not
Skiing down the mountain in the dark,
It would be beautiful. Seeds of light floating slowly on the dark
Downward without a prayer
Of finding any elephants to save because
The International Red Cross and the Roman Catholic Church had not.
I cannot move.
I move my face from side to side
To make a space to breathe. I cannot breathe.
The screaming stops.
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The solemn radiance
On the radio is Poulenc.
The boy soprano seems to dream
He doesn't breathe.
And then the much shyer wings,
Of new materials, that add enormous range.
Oh, the power of the perfume!
The boys choir glides high above
The airborne orchestra.
Sweetness poured calmly and with innocent
Translucency blown
Into a glass.
While it's still warm it cools.
The glass is warped
On purpose, beautifully.
Poulenc, Auric, Milhaud, et cetera. Les Six.
A champagne flute contains the tears of Christ.
For this is France.
The radio predicts the weather for the region with such charm.
Charm followed by more rain will crucify the harvest.
And it is cold. So far,
The summer day is pure
Boy soprano blue without a cloud.
The naive fields of sunflowers don't know they suffer.
Suffer the little sunflowers to come unto me.
Their childish big faces gaze at everyone with love.
They sing so sweetly in the cold. They sing completely.
Shy wings repeat the
Seven last words of Christ,
I don't feel anything but it hurts.
I'm typing this with fingers of cold wax.
I can see my breath in the salon.
In August,
With green leaves warbling liquids of birdsong,
We have reached the Pole.
The Poulenc ripples chastely as an eel
Off the shores of silence, immaculately
To the place where they press olives.
Jesus prostrates himself on the ground.
Jesus jaywalks through the perfumed night air
Back and forth. How sweet it smells.
He is davening and stops.
Abba, Father.
He looks for them and finds them
Fast asleep, Peter especially. Could
You not watch with me one hour? They couldn't
Even stay awake.
They sleep in the dark.
Who when I thought my son was dying slept.
My son was dying slept.
There she was.
Who when I thought my son was dying slept
And slept while I paced,
While they performed the emergency operation.
For hours. But then I too.
Could you not watch with me one hour?
Can't wake from my life either.
I too must wake.
The sun streams in and makes
Sunbeams of my solid house.
Blond air is my igloo.
The houseflies cryogenically unfreeze
And regain consciousness in order to be flies.
Before they fly, they jitter-walk around and pause
To rub their two front legs together.
Androgynous Akhenaten is singing his hymn to the Aten.
The awed wide-eyed words rise
On the wings of my houseflies,
Franciscan in their intimacy which shook the earth.
The radio is singing Christ is risen.
The sunflowers are singing to the sun.
These words I say to you are sunflowers singing to the sun.
There was a God
With human chromosomes, nearly human ⦠I fly
Across the inland flatness of the Cher
In my old car, in love. I give you God. I fly my car.
I'm bringing God back to God.
It doesn't matter what happens.
And when I said my car was me, instantly
My dingy bronze Simca's alternator was broken, yesterday.
We overheat up to the red.
We'll try to float to a garage.
I'm going nowhere fast. The
Same old 66.
Same difference.
Shades of the past. It doesn't matter what happens.
Just outside the door,
The dear cur snores on its tires. It sleeps in la France profonde.
The centerlines are silver, the roads are gold, en Berry today.
Shed a joyous tear for me
And my bronze-colored pal.