Novas Poéticas de Resistência: o século XXI em Portugal

PT EN ES FR

Mark Wallace



from the unpublished poem series The End of America, Book 8




 Showstopper

            Insurance companies bloated with cash

 

                                                           nothing moving

                        “accusing you of the thing I’ve done”

                                               just want my seat in the corner

                                   close to the flood

                                                           and fire statistics

 

            We have ways of making you like it

                                   fast serve, cold serve

                                                           anti-depressant TV

 

            Time to turn up a transcendent

                        view: military

                                               cargo ship bright in the harbor

 

                                               or men playing powerball

                                               with undergraduate voting rights

 

                        so much undetected

                        sadness recorded

on the funding unit clipboard

 

                                                           feel the draft

                                                           through the closing door?

 

            America, I don’t know

            anything of those you leave

                                   picturing themselves to you

                        in the waning bankroll night

 

                                   I’ll wander down

                                   to the ocean and sit

                                   on the wall beside

                                                           the concrete

 

            causeway, dreaming

                        of my own arm in some

                                   other arm, the last

 

                        and best noble lie

 

                                               gritting my teeth

Seeking a little

                        restrained horror

            with a noirish Southern California

 

                                   real estate scam

                                   context

 

suitable for reframing a private

                        crumbling vision

 

                                   Community Resource Center

                                                           in a drop down

 

                        last chance menu

 

                        before the highway goes double

                                   wide right through the breastbone

 

in-bred sonic isolation

                        that roars good when it catches

 

            your dreams with their pants

                                   down around your neighbor’s ankles

 

How badly do you want

                                   to live

 

                        to feel your skin pressed against

 

                                   the vanishing surfaces

                                                           big fog

 

                        pushing in over the empty

                                   rebuilt beach front

 

mansions and three-room condos

                        could be metaphor

 

            the aging body

 

                        without ever saying

 

how each is caught

                        up in the other

 

            “alone” another form of connection

                                   that regulation attempts

 

                        to label in an ownership

                                               maneuver,

 

                                   “my” breath, “your” eyes,

 

            tidy quiet suburban afternoon

                                   inside a swath cut

 

                        by carefully organized

                                                           death;

 

Take a little cancer sample

                                   your tongue’s underside

 

                                   officially permitted

 

            replacement for a learning moment

                                    about anything going on

 

down at the speedway, bets are placed

            Exxon in five, no mojo for Kabul

 

Up on the hill, grasses blow

                        until they’re kindling-dry

 

            and some thirsty boy

 

                                   dizzy

 

            lights them like he thinks he’s the universe






Mark Wallace is the author of more than fifteen books and chapbooks of poetry, fiction, and essays. Temporary Worker Rides A Subway won the 2002 Gertrude Stein Poetry Award and was published by Green Integer Books. His critical articles and reviews have appeared in numerous publications, and he has co-edited two essay collections, Telling It Slant: Avant Garde Poetics of the 1990s, and A Poetics of Criticism. Most recently he has published a novel, The Quarry and The Lot (2011), and a book of poems, Felonies of Illusion (2008). He teaches at California State University San Marcos.

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