a spur-of-the-moment piece |
one. seahorses whinny under the coral canvas i write old words on; broken windows and murky depths with hands of moss and algae drag me under a bed full of ticking clocks and laughing monsters. my god, someone save me where did you put those old-time circus tricks that you throw on the dinner table? two. if there was ever a time for you to sew your mouth shut, it’d be now. the old aquarium you keep your skeletons in is about the burst open; and you don’t have the time to clean the water up. you gonna drown, hunny, you gonna drown. three. that new heater isn’t going to heat me up now- it’ll freeze me &keep me as some soft pet to sleep on cashmere with a diamond collar. a diamond collar? i’ll sell it to you for a penny. you can sell it for a million. cashmere won’t cost you much, just give me what you’ve got and i’ll run away and mock you while i sell your soul to some dirty old man in a tuxedo with a cigar in his draping mouth. i can persuade him. four. i locked myself in this cellar or else the ink won’t work on dead paper. i scribbled dead sentences before an old devil grabbed me by my legs and dragged me off into that dark closet where everyone’s afraid to look. we sat and ate dinner under a chandelier while a demon played away on a broken violin. while the possessed danced around us in old clothing made of gold and silver and the souls of young writers. das ende. so i decided to stay for the night and let them sew me into a warped visual of the world. i felt the old corset she wore and the petticoats under her. i felt the ink and graphite press into my feet as i grabbed another sheet of paper. a lucid dream; but something more: for i etched on the wall a sort of odd disgusting thing of industrial waste and zeppelins. come and see, and what i saw was the words jumping from old paper to another. what i saw was my hands breaking from obese paragraphs and i loved every second of it. |