Wednesday, September 25, 2013

A Beautiful Cacaphony Flutters in the Brightness of the Dead Calm as True Objects Lost in the Politeness Fill the Grail of a New Primitive











TRIPTYCH FOR BELIEVERS

Richard Tagett

I
Hung up on body parts in the particulate daylight, you step out of a Beckett play to find yourself in a memory resisting itself, as meat hits the fan so to speak against the white blanket of the grainy void. You never know where it’s going, the body, the boy swathed in bullets with those black eyes pissing a letter-opener in the desert mud near a disabled Mercedes. When things enter the room you think bazooka and check your hat. A puddle of warm ice-cream in anticipation. Here’s where Coney Island drops like a discarded napkin and you can’t go home again. Mucous brimming the banks, a cake of dust in the shape of a rocking chair ticking away. But soon it will snow as exquisite dogs languish from inside a sandwich tied to a parachute. No time for ballads, the table is set.
II
Light solidifies in cells, the keeper of lost keys. They don’t belong to anyone, the keys. Playing the game backwards reveals nothing a blind child could not guess by the hairs on his arm. The lips on old men are lockboxes in the terminal of no-knowing without gratitude for the despair of angels. You have to suffer, you have to fill up in order to implode, to be recognized for the necessities of commerce. They unhinge, finally, the doors you walk through into phantom stairwells in telephonic hum smelling of wet coal and doll’s hair. Precipitous adjectives gush from a cracked faucet in the chancellery restroom. Someone is stifling laughter from underneath a card table where an electric utility had fallen from his sleeve. They say that trussed birds derive no pleasure from the music of mangled wagons and that gas seeps like a well-kept secret imperiling dust mites in the spleens of hooded maidens locked away from the light. Everything is descending, even the scholarship of the ancient adverbs. Mouths twist into almonds and you wonder how the noise can drown itself out with nothing but nouns and dinner plates and gallows, with history a hiccup waiting to happen.
III

The music is an absence of colliding masses. You can cut your feet on the proverbial and be too close to hear it, the other music, the suffocation of things that can’t fly. A beautiful cacophony flutters in the brightness of dead calm as true objects lost in the politeness of daylight fill the grail of a new primitive. You choke on little candles and all through the night your legs cramp in the sweat of the moonlight. For no good reason a tenderness of geese is billowing in the curtains, as holes in the face open and close and paper scorches sky with futile encryption. Those armchairs foundering in the scum of the surf. Deafness craving disaster green in the spine, knowing the cocktail party’s over. Now it’s all red and your lips are trembling in believability, but it’s only a flickering image in the dark quadrant of your eye bending the light as they mow the daisies under the stars, for no good reason.



3 comments:

  1. I kind of chortled at the mention of Mumford's affiliation with a "strange Christian organization" which I was also a part of in my college years. Most of what I remember about my time with Vineyard was that everyone was bleeding-heart-save-the-world and LOVED the music of U2 (and other overly earnest ambiguously religious stuff). Nice people though. Least judgmental crew I've ever been around.

    I don't have a ton of haterade for Mumford, I just grew up on so much bluegrass and folk that I don't hear anything really thrilling and find the "oh we're so emotional and authentic" shtick a little ridiculous. I kind of wonder if they're like Creed with mandolins (and I used to like that band too, way back when Limp Bizkit ruled the airwaves and I had yet to discover college radio). The whole thing about costumes is interesting though, but that's a whole other conversation.

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    1. My pet theory on Mumford & Son hatred is that eventually the reign of hipster bands for fedora-wearers eventually would hit a backlash and Mumford & Sons just happened to be up when it hit. I wouldn't know a Mumford & Sons song if you played me one right now, though I can't imagine it could possibly suck any more than any fucking Decembrists song (which, unfortunately I *would* recognize).

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  2. Me too. Snubbed, I mean. I mean how could they've overlooked that last post. That was pure genius.

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