Are you, Muse, the spume off Laussel, archaic
dust dimpled & savory that I nourish to steel myself
against
the Selfhood that lays claim to all rapture?
Is your fertility still based in the blood-filled bison horn
Laussel grasps in her right hand raised slightly below her
head?
Might the
egg-shaped relief of a double figure near
Laussel
be a
Paleolithic premonition of the serpent-encircled Orphic egg?
Greeks believed that at death a man’s spinal marrow
emerged from his loins in serpent form.
Since bones are the framework of life,
the semen-like marrow in the skull was for centuries
thought to be the source of semen.
Thus the singing skull, the oracular skull,
an archosis going back to brain-eating Australopithecus
erectus.
In every
desire a uterus shelved with skulls.
I
released the energy from the gateless gate of a rock
face.
The
wonder of inhabited nothingness bubbled & waned in me, microscopic doodad.
Then I heard manticores chortling with their triple
band-saw mouths--
or was I hearing the love-songs of Max Beckmann?
Ochre
dots circulating around a breast-like wall
protuberance in Le Combel
bearing
in their menstrual, apotropaic sigils the presence of Cro-Magnon woman
embedded so deep in collective mind
I can only wonder if planetary peril is not inscribed
in image’s beginnings.
Is our
war on animals a planetary cannibalization to
reach non-existence
in a
masque performed by hydrogen mountains & sulfur assassins?
The torn
heaven tent draped over our lightmares.
Blake
under covers at night. As if an anaconda entered
as I tried to sleep
&
wept insomnia into every shutter of my piles.
Hades is
the king of remembered images.
Orpheus
did bring Eurydice back. He couldn’t bring
her THROUGH.
To keep
images in the embrace of each other &
maintain the intercourse of their self-revealing
conversations.
The artist is neither revolutionary nor conservative,
but a worker of the in-between, a messenger from
the centerless flux.
Is
anything left of the beginning?
How about
the soul’s dragonfly metastases?Or the petrified lightning rampant in a bear?
A sloth
in a skin-tight body hose of drowned men.
After a
vaporized storm, glassy eyes float about,
burial mounds invading the bolted stars.
Rainer Marie Rilke to Lotte Hepner, November 8, 1915: “When
a tree blossoms, death as well as life blossoms in it, and the
field is full of death, which from its reclining face sends forth a rich experience of life, and the
animals move patiently from one to another—and everywhere around
us, death is at home, and it watches us out of the cracks of
things, and a rusty nail that sticks out of a plank somewhere, does
nothing day and night except rejoice over death.”
At the
core of our Milky Way galaxy:
animal
eyes in a blackish, red density of dust clouds, horns in smears of light.
As if life on earth is anticipated in this 300 light-years
panorama.
Coitus as
the earthly version of cosmic superimposition.
Sciomantic
penetrations course a vineyard.
At times
I see miles of pools, piles of pumas sunning
their scorpion sores,
four
boars mating in a silken anguish.
Or are we
all animals of snow, impelled by that first
avalanche of mother milk,
haloed by
circumpolar whiteness?
James Hillman writes that “Soul is vulnerable and suffers;
it is passive and remembers, It is water to the spirit’s fire,
like a mermaid who beckons the heroic spirit into the depths of passions to extinguish its certainty.
Soul is imagination, a cavernous treasury—to use an image from St. Augustine —a
confusion and richness, both.”
In sleep’s porphyry mist, Daphne’s lauraceous hues.
A nude
asleep in a water-lily harness rotating through
my breakfast. Drink from this tambourine.
The
portentous, alpine edges in every doorway.
[N.B. The preceding will appear next year in Eshleman’s new collection, Penetralia, from Black Widow Press, which will also publish Clayton Eshleman / The Essential Poetry this fall. A third major publication, scheduled for December byWesleyan University
Press, is A Sulfur Anthology, in
celebration of Eshleman’s great magazine of the 1980s & 90s. Entering a new decade in his life he remains
a poet of enormous power & range, always provoking those powers to their very
limits. In a previous posting I wrote: “In
my writings over the years, the work of certain contemporaries, like that of
multiple generations of forerunners, has given me a series of touchstones
against which to test my own ideas & powers as a poet. … With Eshleman, as with other contemporaries,
a kind of dialogue remains ongoing & mutual: an interchange that has
spanned nearly five decades & has fueled moves on my part, & possibly
on his, that would have been impossible without such interaction. … I believe
that Clayton, at an early point, had made the decision to be totally relentless
in his calling as a poet, & I came to prize that relentlessness & his
determination to pursue a poetry that would take him to his limits – & us
along with him. There is with that a
singular intelligence that emerges in the way he comes at a subject, an idea or
an experience, & gives it an unexpected shape & meaning. Along with this he also – like the best of us
– draws from the full range of what he can discover in the world, through his
own observation or from that of others.”
(J.R.)]
[N.B. The preceding will appear next year in Eshleman’s new collection, Penetralia, from Black Widow Press, which will also publish Clayton Eshleman / The Essential Poetry this fall. A third major publication, scheduled for December by
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