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I searched for these words up in the attic with narrow ribbons of enlightenment streaming through all-too-small windows igniting the drifting dust specks on fire, and on the streets in the gutters that were gloom-spattered with murky water lunging towards the grated storm guards as if they were salvation. I scrounged through soaked and disintegrating cardboard boxes bearing the letters L O S T A R T S and old, musty and molded trunks that had broken locks and missing keys. I dug them out of  soft-cloth linens, carefully selected them from heaping mounds of scrap -like sifting through a junk yard- to find those precious bits of silver, sweet iridescent bubbles encasing so delicately words like "language" and "cellar." I gathered these knic-knacks and baubles and I alighted them with utmost care through winding black back streets in my little burlap bag to my borrowed safe-haven room. And without turning on the lights, the door was shut and stopped and I was perched with great secrecy, cross-legged upon my bird's nest of a bed, daintily extracting each little orb and examining them and all their wonder. Tri-dimensional little things, that, no matter how you turned them, seemed always to be a bi-dimensional halo of pale, golden light. They shone, each minute embryo, like an old-time city lamp, before such evil things as electricity came and robbed them of a candle's beauty. And its core, as is true with humans, is its most glorious aspect. There is a transparent ocean in there, with roiling waves that spin the currents and coax every particle to circulate. And caught in the eye of that undersea tornado are flecks of glitter, so tiny that you would not be aware of them at all were it not for the magnificent glimmer that they sparked, magnifying and throwing back the fainter glow of that ethereal encircling band. Pixies that danced at the autumn festival. I found these words for you, broken and perfect and shining, and collected them on a shelf where I could view them before I handed them over to you. I collected them with you in mind. Can’t you tell? I found words like “lustrous” and “lust” because they reminded me of you. I arranged them sporadically, and smiled to see “alabaster princess” sitting unintentionally before my eyes. And how you are my Alabaster Princess. But oh dearest-mine, be wary of how you find these words. Use them sparingly, and do not tarnish them. Keep them like nuns keep themselves: ****** If you must write them, then write them in pretty hand-made inks, and decorate each letter with dips and swirls, each letter a flourish. And if you must utter them, say them quietly, and in simple complementary sentences. You can be Kennedy for a day, or speak softly and let them be their own big stick. Keep them uncommon, like you are uncommon, and know when the repetition of weaker words can make them herculean. Guard these words with all your strength: with that sword hanging deftly on your wall, with that letter-opener on your kitchen table, with that pocket knife in your favorite pair of jeans. Those words will save us one day, once the world has reverted back to an aristocracy. With that noble face of yours and this clever brain of mine, love, we’ll con them into making us their master, gold and land or no. even if the sole things we own are our names. And we’ll teach them again how to speak, with all the sweetheart mightiness of poetry that speech was intended to have. And we will learn to bow with all the eloquence of B.C. bible writing. Machiavelli never saw rulers like us. We’ll cry like the Devil on a Sunday morning for the alteration in our names from D’evil, and whomever first declared “they’re there yonder to get their *** shall know my wrath (although that may have been me). Parlez vous Français? Non. These words that I pillaged from the mouths of great stone grave monuments, I hope that you will remember them well. I hope that you will pour over them and gaze at them in all of the bedazzled stupor that I did. And once upon a time, when children loved to read and sought the same type of affection that I have at last found in you, when even the Greek gods were playing with pens and devising an alphabet, I sat there on rocky shore, seasoning with saltwater, drawing with my toe under the waterline, your face. Pretty as a picture, and worth a thousand words.
0
Dec 22, 2010
Dec 22, 2010 at 9:34 PM UTC
Worth a Thousand Words
I searched for these words up in the attic with narrow ribbons of enlightenment streaming through all-too-small windows igniting the drifting dust specks on fire, and on the streets in the gutters that were gloom-spattered with murky water lunging towards the grated storm guards as if they were salvation. I scrounged through soaked and disintegrating cardboard boxes bearing the letters L O S T A R T S and old, musty and molded trunks that had broken locks and missing keys. I dug them out of  soft-cloth linens, carefully selected them from heaping mounds of scrap -like sifting through a junk yard- to find those precious bits of silver, sweet iridescent bubbles encasing so delicately words like "language" and "cellar." I gathered these knic-knacks and baubles and I alighted them with utmost care through winding black back streets in my little burlap bag to my borrowed safe-haven room. And without turning on the lights, the door was shut and stopped and I was perched with great secrecy, cross-legged upon my bird's nest of a bed, daintily extracting each little orb and examining them and all their wonder. Tri-dimensional little things, that, no matter how you turned them, seemed always to be a bi-dimensional halo of pale, golden light. They shone, each minute embryo, like an old-time city lamp, before such evil things as electricity came and robbed them of a candle's beauty. And its core, as is true with humans, is its most glorious aspect. There is a transparent ocean in there, with roiling waves that spin the currents and coax every particle to circulate. And caught in the eye of that undersea tornado are flecks of glitter, so tiny that you would not be aware of them at all were it not for the magnificent glimmer that they sparked, magnifying and throwing back the fainter glow of that ethereal encircling band. Pixies that danced at the autumn festival. I found these words for you, broken and perfect and shining, and collected them on a shelf where I could view them before I handed them over to you. I collected them with you in mind. Can’t you tell? I found words like “lustrous” and “lust” because they reminded me of you. I arranged them sporadically, and smiled to see “alabaster princess” sitting unintentionally before my eyes. And how you are my Alabaster Princess. But oh dearest-mine, be wary of how you find these words. Use them sparingly, and do not tarnish them. Keep them like nuns keep themselves: ****** If you must write them, then write them in pretty hand-made inks, and decorate each letter with dips and swirls, each letter a flourish. And if you must utter them, say them quietly, and in simple complementary sentences. You can be Kennedy for a day, or speak softly and let them be their own big stick. Keep them uncommon, like you are uncommon, and know when the repetition of weaker words can make them herculean. Guard these words with all your strength: with that sword hanging deftly on your wall, with that letter-opener on your kitchen table, with that pocket knife in your favorite pair of jeans. Those words will save us one day, once the world has reverted back to an aristocracy. With that noble face of yours and this clever brain of mine, love, we’ll con them into making us their master, gold and land or no. even if the sole things we own are our names. And we’ll teach them again how to speak, with all the sweetheart mightiness of poetry that speech was intended to have. And we will learn to bow with all the eloquence of B.C. bible writing. Machiavelli never saw rulers like us. We’ll cry like the Devil on a Sunday morning for the alteration in our names from D’evil, and whomever first declared “they’re there yonder to get their *** shall know my wrath (although that may have been me). Parlez vous Français? Non. These words that I pillaged from the mouths of great stone grave monuments, I hope that you will remember them well. I hope that you will pour over them and gaze at them in all of the bedazzled stupor that I did. And once upon a time, when children loved to read and sought the same type of affection that I have at last found in you, when even the Greek gods were playing with pens and devising an alphabet, I sat there on rocky shore, seasoning with saltwater, drawing with my toe under the waterline, your face. Pretty as a picture, and worth a thousand words.
(c) 2006- From I Don't Know These Words
Written by
Dec 22, 2010
Dec 22, 2010 at 9:34 PM UTC
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