A Sister in Maine?

Thursday, May 21st, 2009 1:51 am — Stories, Rambles, and Other ThingsComments (1)

OK. Today was nothing. A big, wobbly, quivering 0.
I am thinking about a poem, a poem about the smells from 1B.
First came the dead body smell. Then came the ludicrous flowerly poof poof that filled the building with roses and lilacs (and invisible butterflies and birdies and twinkling horsies) but that failed to strangle the dead body smell.
The dead body stink stayed for 2 weeks until the police removed the green sticker from the apartment and The Service was called. The Service delivered days of arch bleach scent, more days of bleach and then more days of who-knows-what. There is a reason you call The Service and you can have no idea but to appreciate what they did to get the rotted stink of human carcass out of that tiny apartment.
I remember how the landlord held court the day J. died last month. He preached arbitrary gospel from the front step of this building as the police called in the incident. The landlord seemed to own the moment, reminding me as I exited and entered this building that “LIFE IS A PENANCE, MARK. ENJOY IT WHILE YOU ARE YOUNG. RUN.”
Then I heard the police, referring to the dead man, tell their radio “We think he has a sister in Maine.”
They never found a sister or a brother or a friend.
After The Service did its work the place came to smell of caulk, clay, and craftsman’s material. As with all those smells the odors filled my kitchen. I shut the window.
Today the smell was of paint, the final coat of forget that seals in the memory.
This is the poem I am thinking about, but what if I never write it? Would that not make it the perfect poem? Unuttered? Unrecorded? A stuff not of critical complaint or paperwork but of braggadocio and mental adrenaline?
Yes. That poem.
Oh fuck you Jack Spicer, fuck you with your poetry about poets thinking about poems about other poets’ remarks about their own poetry. Yes. Fuck you, Jack Spicer.

1 Comment »

  1. I like the poem as-is, add some line breaks and consider it a masterpiece. But then again, I don’t really like poetry, so maybe I am not the voice of reason in this matter.

    Comment by beta — June 15, 2009 @ 6:26 pm

RSS feed for comments on this post.

Leave a comment





















  • Categories
  • Stuff from my Treo 700p





    Prodigies Corporata Times Square, Then and Now Anti-Possession Boatyard Exile Telephone Exchange Name Sightings Florida Waterfront Unfinished Thoughts Pacific Image PowerSlide 3650 Flag Blowing In the Wind 888-950-5553 10/20 Experience Smith Where Outline Elizabeth Jennings Silence The Zero Finger The Mapping Has Begun Daly & Daly American Lives Minolta Buddha Enemies Phone Fracas Foreboding A Sister in Maine? All About Me Employment Termination Notice High Bathroom Sink Wake Up I’ve Been Scanning Family Slides Cardboard Telephone Philip Ossa Phillip Cardillo and Charley White Memories of Patelson’s Not a Valid Coupon Hugo Chávez Lies Heavy Duty Love Mints Coke in a Plastic Bag Layers Museum Base Ball Poetry and Parchment Random Picture always KTPB in Kilgore, Texas, and a Greyhound Bus Trip Sinking ASV Yearbook, 1974-1975 Haiku This code Black Zodiac A Dream About K.S. Sorabji’s Opus Clavicembalisticum Bi-Pillar Towers of Connect! Haiku Pip Buk Passage of passages Passages: Sexton Haiku Fading Cassettes The Yellow Book Reviewed Done Reading Inter, Innocuous, Nib, Lice Towers of Light Motel of Life Library of the Living O Oleander Lifework Polecat All the Way Wonder Lugubrious Intracranial Cavity Dross Told Banalize Folderol Lacrimatory Lousy Men at Forty Thunderstruck Faces Looking out the window Filled with emptiness Johnston Mausoleum What 238889 That. Is. All. Writing blind Grids and girders Palmbreathers Gretchen am Spinnrade Utter Waste Mundane ramblings from this day Richard Nixon’s Piano Concerto #1