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Imagine an overused sickroom, an army hospital in a war zone: the reek of sulfur and saltpeter overpowering sweet rotting meat, a periodic shocking light of casual bombardment reveals brass colored walls. And, and, and ... the noises—too many to catalogue or differentiate. A fever feels better, opening a dream flower— transfiguration follows death, we know this, now. We know colors, liquid figures so familiar somehow. Isn't dying a familiar act? The nurse laving ice water on my puckered brow should excite me (bedraggled, blood-smudged, her hair loose, lips slightly parted from fatigue or an indisguisible loathing for decay). Think: in this given moment five billion people are doing something else. Even those also dying are dying in a different way without ice water. "Quel dommage," you'd say, Liesl, making the bed of a morning. "What're the rich folks doing?" The sun hot and blinding through the east windows The room so white, the sheets green, your brown eyes never averted aromas of grass, exhaust, drying *** where is it all? where does it go? what brings it here this polluted room this anti place this hole where a stomach used to be resides a memory of a stomach recalling hunger as a good thing to be assuaged with pleasure Nurse, close your mouth before your soul escapes
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Sep 16, 2016
Sep 16, 2016 at 12:30 PM UTC
The Tale of the Empty Hand
Imagine an overused sickroom, an army hospital in a war zone: the reek of sulfur and saltpeter overpowering sweet rotting meat, a periodic shocking light of casual bombardment reveals brass colored walls. And, and, and ... the noises—too many to catalogue or differentiate. A fever feels better, opening a dream flower— transfiguration follows death, we know this, now. We know colors, liquid figures so familiar somehow. Isn't dying a familiar act? The nurse laving ice water on my puckered brow should excite me (bedraggled, blood-smudged, her hair loose, lips slightly parted from fatigue or an indisguisible loathing for decay). Think: in this given moment five billion people are doing something else. Even those also dying are dying in a different way without ice water. "Quel dommage," you'd say, Liesl, making the bed of a morning. "What're the rich folks doing?" The sun hot and blinding through the east windows The room so white, the sheets green, your brown eyes never averted aromas of grass, exhaust, drying *** where is it all? where does it go? what brings it here this polluted room this anti place this hole where a stomach used to be resides a memory of a stomach recalling hunger as a good thing to be assuaged with pleasure Nurse, close your mouth before your soul escapes
segment of a long, 'component' poem, meant to remain unfinished and open to later insertions
john-silence
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Sep 16, 2016
Sep 16, 2016 at 12:30 PM UTC
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