Dean YoungLeaves in a Drained Swimming Pool
Poetry is an art of beginnings and ends. You want middles, read novels. You want happy endings, read cookbooks. Not closure, word filtched from self-help fuzzing the argument. Endsville. Kaput. Form is the shape of the selecting intelligence because time is running out. Form enacts fatality. To pretend otherwise is obfuscation, philosophical hub-bub of the worst sort. A lie. We die. We go to art to learn the unlearnable, experience the unexperiencable. Art reports back. Form is the connect, primal haunt, carbon chain end-stopped. You can tell it's late because we prefer the songs of Orpheus after he's torn apart. Pattern as much a deficiency as a realization. No one gets to count forever. Irreverence is irrelevant's revenge. When you slice yourself open, you don't find a construct. Bloom rhyming with doom pretty much took care of Keats. Wire in the monkey's diencephalon prints out a wave most beautiful. Open form prone to mouse-droppings just as closed to suffocation. The river swims in the fish. The giraffe goes knock-kneed to drink. The girl ties back her hair in a universal gesture. Theories about art aren't art any more than a description of an aphid is an aphid. A menu isn't a meal. We're trying to build birds, not birdhouses. Put your trust in the inexhaustible nature of the murmur, Breton said that and know when to shut up, I'm saying that. We're not equations with hats. Nothing appears without an edge. There's nothing worse than a poem that doesn't stop. No one lives in a box. The heart isn't grown on a grid. The ship has sailed and the trail is shiny in the dew. Door slam, howling in the wood, rumble strips before the toll booth. Enter: Fortinbras. Ovipositor. Snow. Bam bam bam, let's get out of here. What I know about form couldn't fill a thimble. What form knows about me will be my end.
Dean Young's Embryoyo is forthcoming from Believer Books. He teaches at the Iowa Writers' Workshop.