Thursday, March 26, 2015

John Martone: from "children’s book" 2014


[To describe John Martone as our greatest living miniaturist, as I have in the past, is to go back for me to a time many years ago when Ian Hamilton Finlay & I corresponded about a poetry of small increments (one-word poems & other such concerns).  For Finlay, I believe, some form of minimalism was at the heart of the concrete poetry he was then exploring & developing, & for myself it entered into aspects of ethnopoetics & appeared most clearly in the numerically based poems (gematria) that I was beginning to write.  It’s with someone like John Martone, however, that this approach turns into a life long project, a minimal work like Finlay's of epic proportions, for which the following can serve as a yet another instance & perhaps (as “children’s book”) a new direction for his ongoing practice.  (J.R.)] 

my morning
a mouse nest


 
mouse-hole
holding
a mind
 
 
 
2 joints of yr
little finger
house mouse
 
 
house mouse —
my thalamus?
amygdala? 
 
 
house mouse
its always a childrens book 
 
 
two mice dead of fear in yr live trap
 
 
weak-eyed
feel our way along the wall
mouse & me 
~ 
little worms
in the brightness
eyes floaters
 
 
 
out of touch
lie down
in snow 
 
suddenly feeling the river below the ice 
 
 
frost-shattered
stone's
a puzzle

knocking the snow
from your boots
no one's home
 
~

in layers
of winter clothes look up
at night geese
 

 
first time
for some
night geese
 

 
night geese
interrupt
a childrens book 

 

night geese
the horizon
passes overhead 

 

night geese
someone slips
on black ice
 


night geese
the old
keep up
 

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