selections from Days
and then you want to FaceTime, pour your life into one on screen, you are in a room too
large to hide everyone’s vocabulary sizzling away, something shredding when we talk,
rounding, river, mull, kind of thing, standstills of mouths, another wrong impression,
pushing, white bleeding squeezed into tusk-clean apertures, such compulsions as the
need to violently fade, go poof, masquerade invisibly like space or power, where a mask
of air punctures, as that gossamer would, but then there is also the need to puff, to spill
out onto surfaces, smear volumetric spheres of one’s body, ladle out onto lawns, over
an armchair, onto the ottoman, over the TV, through the carpets, onto someone else’s
presence, onto the cup of their beautiful hand, their care, the little rivulet of their need,
the dent they need filling, somewhere in the background of sentiment narrowed to
irrelevance, she said, in other people’s gardens, worn, sky, a tad overcast, cloud, glue,
one to another, after is before, progeny of lisps, joint prosody to make rubber odes,
something is being blown out, you’re doing the trope thing again, you’re following a line,
red herring, tape, footsteps, something being diminished, traps you can hear, something
thrust into its own stillness, something about remaining alert, something about not
standing on the yellow line, something self-capitalizing, something residual on top,
something sagging in waterholes, shuddering on a broken fluorescent corner, pillaging
veins in an open field, dumb and leather, resurfacing, pouring a tunnel, but if flowering
were there, what’s clipped, nounless, coagulating light, stalking a series of unspecified
dead ends, pressed into nubs of atmosphere, touch someone else’s inhalation, I’m
sitting on a feeling as if sitting on a chandelier, iffy, hunger is sticky, I touch you like
an object that disappears into the sound of tearing, I touch you like a hill in midnight
I’d escaped, hours packed round your hair, a hand, give it to night just once, tomorrow,
nettle path, thin stone, bees empty of time touching consonants, grooves that unfold,
syllable by syllable taken off into grass shadows, crystal on foghorn, the life I read,
make your place in the faces of others, cold but erotic, speaking into your hand that
is not a telescope, and we know where we’re going, or where we should go and then
we are everywhere, blurs, permanent as matter, writing at the computer, to become
grammarians of sweet Amyctis’ body, I am full, feeling full, features on sun, moon has
more features actually, sneers, or as if about to sneeze or keen, salt and pepper, eyes
without pupils, no eyeballs, just smudges like turf mounds seen in the distance like
thongs, crying patches, all the ways in which nature is animal, nature is human, and
then swallows the human, absorbs it like its own blood, poor or rich, all of us roaming in
our clothes like divots, like bumps with mirrors coming out of them, and the moon is a
trickle of light and there is no grief on it, that was just an image, flash in the pan, skinny,
poking through a piece of cloud and the cloud smudges the light like a snail trail, in the
morning, the snails got over everything, snails of light, light, light, I was too shy to speak
in front of the crowd, my friend got bored with me, wouldn’t speak to me, I am bullish
change, she thinks to herself, triplets of weeds, she exfoliates, flip-flopping traffic of lips,
this bruise on paper, brand new soap, I think it’s vegetarian, made of pears, I circle
around, or back, this flag that could smother you if you’re not careful, dragonfly landing
on your eyelashes, sun, sun, so much sun, then blue to dark again until the sun comes
: :
These excerpts from Days by Simone Kearney appear with the permission of the publisher, Belladona* (Brooklyn, NY). Earlier versions of some of these sections appeared in Boston Review in 2013. About the work, Fanny Howe says, “The poet who experiences drama in self-reflection, who feels increasing dread and particularity, separation as abandonment and then specifically wonder. She enters the magnificent temple of the given world. She could be Simone Weil with no notebook or Lyn Hejinian as an orphan with no past. The ugly thing is man-made-in-America. She could almost be in an ER with only her thoughts to survive on. Her verses begin short and swift, then lengthen and almost repeat. That dreaded loop! But she jumps off. Very bare and undefended, she still knows what it is to lay down her life (and herself) for an imperative of her own making.”