Is It the King?
Farid Matuk
Effing 2006
I've always been fond of edges in a question. I live on an arterial road.
Am throttled by a complete lack of vanity, Moors.
Our eyes feel congested, oh I blew our noses and throats. Our ears I think the earth was looking...as far as the road.
I live on an arterial road.
I hear springs ease / as a man leaves the body.
I omitted of his car if I hear anything.
Farid Matuk starts Out of a tin-cold. Me? I've cleared a parking space, the clearing, say, in front of my cream shaded Spanish bungee port out in the edges. A clearing An owl call / helps the night / cleave Bee Creek, and what pitched grandeur that "cleave" brings let loose, a good lose, Between extended / branches (changing light) / cold sun-up, a good case / is made for the here-there / and now-there recapturing the outdoors.
Inside I read two- or three-word lines in "Orange County Knows How to Party," and the more variably lineated "But, Richard [Pryor], Will You Show Me an Ethic of Freedom?" and there's nothing to discredit, to disbelieve. Then "Early Notes": Four a.m. you stand at the foot of my bed...branching of some intention and I realize he's not getting some or any -- we have to not fight it! you inch across the stuccoed / ceiling, etc. Losses, but losses that don't count, and dying and most everyone dying / is happy for spring.
The edges now-here are not vain, not striving, dispossessed, I only care that you love my country. Therefore there's retrieval of losses that do count, Velcro (easy), Impala, (harder), Charles Olson (the hammer), a country of train pucks / between the nodes of another century's economy. And what else is left, what will we put in the arc / for the new country?
You shame me, Matuk to Olson saying, Matuk explains, the poem is in the alley way / where it's always been.