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Pataphysician (Pataphysician)
Elitist Bastard Username: Pataphysician
Post Number: 679 Registered: 5-2001
| | Posted on Thursday, September 11, 2003 - 8:39 pm: |   |
On Place du Marche, next to the branch of the Provincial Banks, when it is already broad daylight in some provincial town, the dealer in funeral wreaths kept a shop dedicated partly to the adorning of tombs and partly to the adorning of living heads: and in the empty streets a dog suddenly sits on its backside, he was also a hatter. Throws back its ears, points a yapping snout in the general direction of the sun, Neither of these enterprises alone would have sufficed to keep the whole family, and starts an interminable howling about impending death, with five mouths to feed counting the maid, then the assistant in the hat shop which also sells funeral wreaths is overjoyed to find a plausible excuse, with the senile father, Madame, and Gaston who was twelve. In the monotony of his miserable existence, people around here were very careful of their headgear: for standing there, at the entrance to the shop, a cap lasted them ten years, soft with his hands on his hips. Hats were not much worn, if this dog is howling about impending death and a bowler did service for a whole lifetime. It is because somewhere in the world this morning someone is in the meticulous process of dying, about the only time business picked up was on market days when the peasants of the region came to town. Either that or we would have to doubt canine sincerity, Tuesdays and Saturdays. And the dog, that great mythical symbol, as for the wreaths, there were no set days, has never given us occasion, up till now, it just depended on when people died: to lack confidence in its cynical foresight. It was this second line that provided the little extra comforts. Then the shop assistant at whose dual purpose counter obviously not every month brought the windfall of a burial like that of old lady Cotin of Rue Longue, both the living and the dead of this prosperous country seat provide against inclemency and ingratitude for whom a bishop had actually put himself out. This shop assistant starts weighing up in his mind which citizen it may be. But nevertheless, year in and year out, who has just passed from the first category of his customers to the second. Counting the early November rush, he tries on for size the reality of each one's death. It constituted a fairly regular little business on the whole, Thus... - Pataphysician, Louis Aragon, and Louis Aragon |
Hobart (Hobart)
Mousquetaire Username: Hobart
Post Number: 9 Registered: 8-2003
| | Posted on Thursday, September 11, 2003 - 5:46 pm: |   |
Window on the World By Alfred Corn Time after time a glitch immobilized the screen At Windows Is Shutting Down, the program icon hanging Fire in paradoxical support of its sign-off Caption during that long month of graveyard shifts And pre-dawn vigils I spent sifting online fallout Of terror, pity, and insight posted to the globe. Nine-Eleven, Nine-Eleven, hear it, a ravaged SOS, our call to arms and talisman, The dateline turning septic with its subtext, spun Out by the Web's ten-thousand arachnes, so many Forwarding Auden's "Those to whom evil is done do Evil in return." And done again by enraged Coevals, sheer reaction's critical mass redoubling Topical fission, escalation, devolution, A huge acridity that spikes air-quality graphs, That floats down on a waterproofed black jacket's yellow And gray stripes as the bearded fireman doffs his helmet At the sky, twin tear-streaks guttering a mask of ashes. *** Time travel: From our early-'70s Grand Street loft space In pre-consumer-heaven SoHo, W. And I had contemplated the towers' floor by floor Ascent, a postwar symbol of extra-military Triumph, material and pop culture scoring where Napalm, exfoliants and M-16s had failed. So empire might not seem passé, tired Unity bowed And underwrote a new production, Concept Two, The male North Tower sporting its TV broadcast mast, The female South, an observation deck for tourists. A few floors down, designer restaurant, entitled Windows on the World: Where better celebrate The publication of a poet's debut volume? One, we liked back then to patronize posh venues; Two, a comment on its blue and orange jacket Had called the book "a new window onto the world." Consolation for not being rated the latest star— A Seidman, Burkhart, Jordan, Piercy, or Blackburn— It mostly worked, though befriending envy sometimes hissed, Those years I spent cooling my heels outside fame's shortlist. But not that day. From our table on floor 107, I heard the City sing its psalm, high windows framing Brooklyn and Verazzano bridges, the Woolworth Building, Five high-rise mirrored boxes, Liberty, and the Harbor. On top of the world, bask, green bardlet, in those spacious Skies, don't aim your telephoto lens at the future. *** Where you'd see you, weathered, silvered, skipping farewell Glances at a town three decades your home base. For fame, whatever else it's not or doesn't do, At least pays bills, the scrape and cramp that youth can finesse Costing the veteran pain, angst, and sleeplessness. Advanced degrees in urbanity packed up, July 2001, I dropped the gear in Drive and launched out On the road, no landfall planned before late August. *** Those not tube-addicts will understand how, absent A shaken call from a friend reporting the first strike, One nauseated witness fewer would have seen, no, Felt in his gut both deathbolts and the dual collapse. Felt through the media—TV, Net, and, before Blackout, cell phones. Somehow I got through to friends, None of them missing but all choked by poison gas, Paralyzed speechless with the inconceivable. *** Because the dead disown inflated claims, I have to Question several statements made about the towers: "An architectural masterpiece." No, they were tall, some High-rises elsewhere taller, and many better designed. "The hub of U.S. geopolitics and trade." No, few that worked there qualified as global players. "Site of the first homeland attack since Independence." No, see 1812, the Civil War, Pearl Harbor. "The modern era's worst disaster." No, consider Stalingrad, Dresden, Hiroshima, the Holocaust. "New York's chief symbol." Not, in all honesty, to most, No match for the Bridge, Ellis Island, or Liberty. *** But place detachment beside a sense of mutilation Inferno's aftermath would trigger six weeks later When my night flight on American approached Ground Zero. Spotlit, twenty-four/seven rubble clearance Replaced twin peaks naiveté once took for granted In the downtown spreadsheet printout of Manhattan's skyline. Pilgrimage to the site required a mask to filter Fumes that stank of burnt synthetics and calcium. I choked up gazing at that iconic shard, a giant Upended metal thumb-piano keyboard whose ragged Elegy roaring earthmovers snuffed out as they Processed remains of two thousand and more deceased. Who won't be back. And yet, almost as though to highlight Absence, TV movie reruns these past months Have been reviving, in how many slots, an image Both stricken and eternal: standard chopper panning Shots of the postcard skyline thrusting at us, and, lo, The stereophonic comeback Symbol, tall as life. *** Mortality, box-cutter in hand, conquers all, A cockpit-crasher, terminating our dazed pilots, Freezing the vessel's forward mandate. … Does that senior Chef taking bread from ovens in his vintage kitchen Lofted among the clouds, detect invisible Omens in the autumn light?—a bass-clef hum, Endtime launched on its unyielding slalom, twin Convergence that will call for shutdown once our client, The kamikaze who refused to book a table, Shows up to napalm celebration's ever-afters. *** Befriending soul, when lethal smoke begins to rush From the broken towers' crematory, will we hang back In burning topicality? No, sings the window. Hold hands, eyes meeting as they never have before. Today your tandem launches out on visionary Sunlight, to cast its lot with a world without end— One extra encore for a pair upheld in zero Gravity, anti-Lucifers, twin morning stars, United Symbol here that nothing puts asunder, Love's company unlost so long as love proves life. |
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