As simple as a page borrowed
from a botanical manual
True politeness will be found,
its
basis in the human heart. But
this is
still only the least of the
ambiguities.
Never by word or action notice
the
defects of another — a space
hence-
forth without reference point,
ex-
panding to infinity, the
polished sur-
face throwing back the arrow.
The
large pipe also without
reference
point or measure will linger
above,
in its inaccessible,
balloon-like immo-
bility. You must sympathize with
the
"contradiction"
between the image &
the text. It must originate with
you. Con-
tradiction can exist only
between two
statements, or within one &
the same
statement. Never interrupt any
one
who is speaking. It is quite
apparent
that the drawing representing
the pipe
is not the pipe itself. It is
very ill-bred.
Sources:
This Is Not a Pipe, by Michel Foucault
The Ladies’ Book of Etiquette (1860), by Florence Hartley
A Dick is a Strange Compass
Unless you’re aiming for the
stars, using your dick as a com-
pass would not only be strange
but also an exercise in
futility. &
even then, you’d need a — what
are they called? fluffer? —
perched
on the prepuce to keep it —
&
you — on the straight &
narrow.
& what good would that be?
Who
wants to be known for having a
narrow organ? & if it wasn’t
nar-
row, it would probably have a
kink in it; & how would that
help
you get to where you want to go?
The Caribou
I am unsure if the caribou
have any life lessons to
offer us, but they certainly
seem self-satisfied as they
sit in the Paradise Milkbar
eating burgers & sipping
shakes while the rest of us
make do with tofu & lactose-
free drinks. Maybe it’s be-
cause they’ve learnt how to
fit into a four-seater booth
without their horns becom-
ing intertwined. Or — or
maybe & — it’s because
they’re revelling in the frisson
of disapproval that is evident
in the passersby when they
sashay across the sidewalk on
their rear legs to reach their
shiny convertibles lined up
one behind the other. Out
on show in the present; but
they’re a blast from the past,
convinced that the bubble
they’re in will protect them
from the now of it, their own
golden cage in which to continue
living in, to them, a golden
age.
Even though he always brings
a salamander along with him, I
refuse to send him spam. Some-
times I substitute polecat for
the
sausage. I think about putting a
question to him in the Cree
langu-
age which he’s fluent in.
There's
a tree growing in my room. I'm
still learning from my mother.
"Things as they are
Are changed upon the blue guitar."
Wallace Stevens: The Man with the Blue Guitar
Mark Young was born in Aotearoa / New Zealand but now lives in a small town in North Queensland in Australia. He has been publishing poetry for almost sixty-five years, & is the author of more than sixty books, primarily text poetry but also including speculative fiction, vispo, memoir, & art history. His most recent books are with the slow-paced turtle replaced by a fast fish, published by Sandy Press in May 2023, & a free downloadable chapbook of visuals & poems, Mercator Projected, published by Half Day Moon Press in August 2023. A new book, Ley Lines II, will be published by Sandy Press in late 2023.
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