Clayton Eshleman
Jig
Nanosounds,
interior stellar
zoom,
zoas of
the poetic art,
ecstacy enstacy of
the gyrosonic
body
I am a worker
wasp on Tyler Duncan’s hand,
watching him swingle
sound flax out of bagpiped hip,
I enter the wasp
nest sound swirl,
melody lines limbically entwine (first parents
with long,
dragon-coiling tails:
spicy early thriller,
a sly
pricey thrill, reply as
icy thriller, really
tip her lyrics, rip
rectally sly heir, rectally
reply Irish, rarely
hysteric pill, really
rich piles try,
layers prey till rich, rich till
slayer prey, arty
lisper rich yell, yell arty
rich perils, lechery
rarity pills, thrill
creepy lay sir, slyly
retire rich pal, icy
thriller replays, a silly
triple cherry, irately
cherry spill, prey ill
slithery arc, prey
later silly rich, prey
alter rich silly,
slyly rich April tree
Jig, dyadic Kundalini
“Caryl Phyllis Reiter”
anagrammatic manger
Before I was
Clayton, I was clan toy,
lacy ton, ant
cloy, any colt.
Rounding thrill
icy corners, my face accordion
unfolds, what
twins are spotted
in its pleats! Tunnels of Tezcatlipoca
turning
plumed—archaic sounds,
a maze of reeds,
each repeat
sprouts
new flutings—
so dart in,
retrace, then
pivot to reoccur. The obstetrical toad is
gigging in his
fertilized skirt.
Foetal propellers are
turning left,
strengthening
energies into a
heart.
Daumier Moments
As if by saber blows, in zebra-striped light, monumental
nymphs pursued by
“The
First Bath,” up to his unlit penis in pond water, with moon-white belly, a
child wades, supported by hi father’s sausage arms.
Under Cezanne, Daumier’s
bathers.
Ragged lance of fugitives, under hard rose light, pushing
into their own hilt.
The human face, unmoored,
alienated, mobile, sneers bubbling slime satisfaction, brows arching as if to
depart, eyes poked like spotted eggs.
Below
an old lawyer, hunched like rockwork on the
Wrestlers interlocking, a Siberian mammoth-tusk hut.
Wrestleresquely, a man embraces a child into a kiss.
The
muddy gray roil of riot-soused mobs.
In a 3rd class train compartment, clump of a
child nursing.
Daumier seems to have been interested in
everything.
A woman drinker, suctioning a cup.
Stooping
in black bowler, regarding a rack of prints, a man encased in the 19th
century, a man even more alone for having draped himself with the world.
Old Quixote, a semi-recumbent wrestler, in amber light,
reading.
Hoisted
in man’s bones, the piratical flag through which all nature blows.
Vermilion
Scarves Resounding Surf
Open
this red door to
the pot-headed lordly and deathless hybrids,
hail and beware of their shadows
consuming the shadow you costume here.
The
earth wears fluid robes,
strewn petals on a yoni gust and blend.
The
sky is a bath incestuous,
Aphrodite’s
pudenda served on an orchid,
or it is Naropa’s leprous
pinkie? or a
heather-stuffed
caterpillar?
Is
Santa Claus now flashing through the chimney of my chest
an amanita blur, all sirloin, no stars?
Goya
hunches by his menstrual harp,
vermilion scarves resounding surf.
“Annhilation is an injustice,” he sings,
“each love, each non-love, is unique.
Think
of the bull in its factory stall,
injected, raised only to provide burger for
extra-terrestrials
like man—
it lives on all fours, as I sit on all ones,
on the creviced dot I
am.
How
many killings since you glimpsed the spider queen’s tiara
beacon,
its sweep across my consensus: that the disasters of war
are the genetic inheritance of man’s petrified snore?”
I
turned to Basho’s compote of cicada-absorbed rock,
to Linda Jacobson’s vision of a stone’s magenta folds.
The
moon swims Atlantisward through the serpent panels of
our spines,
praise for thse
radial stages layered with animals and yellow
sand,
stages interlocked an eastered
by fountains rising from
when we were masts.
Earth of the Shanameh!
Pink
earth quilted with tufts of violet grass,
earth of clouds like tangled, albino eels,
earth of miniver and
rose rock alive as coral reefs,
in them the dead are glimpsed, fuscous hands gripped in
prayer,
earth of cobalt thrasher-filled trees,
chirping purple buds,
all is alive save for the death carousel
I
load into the projector of my awareness,
and in Jacobson’s dreamscapes I rediscover
agasp
with 9 eyes,
Ginsberg’s
tidepool bubble talk high on
seals like fat brown
worms,
an azure sky with amber thistle stars lighting up
flocks of
nuzzling
boulders,
ah, to be 2 hares here,
one enraged by the boldness of a dilated peony,
the other bemused in its bramble bower lined with
dragons,
absent the right-angled hell holes ruled by
soldiers,
absent the Ethiopian child in her skin husk.
for Linda Jacobson
Body
Sludge
Should
one sell a $200 Kirby Home Renovation Outfit, with a lifetime guarantee, to a
housewife who has a hard time paying rent?
I’m
inspired because I sang hard as I pounded out Kirby songs at the piano,
Find
a diner in which to sit when not on a sales call.
I’m 17, facing a guy who drops raw egg in his shake “in order to come
good.” Shiny face,
skinny neck, cropped hair, dirty white collar, Office Manager and “Closer,” the
super-ex-salesman who “drops by” at your after-dinner appointment when not only
the wife but the husband balks.
Without
asking her to sign, you place the contract on her knees, saying “press hard, maam, there’re three carbons.”
“If I
were to give you this machine, would you come in once a week to sign our Thank
You ledger?” “How would you get
there?” “Well, maam,
why don’t you just stay home and send us your bus fare, for that is the weekly
payment on a Kirby!”
Or
hold the piece of once-white cloth I’d rubber-banded to the exhaust pipe right
to her nose and ask this rehearsed question: “D’you
know what this is, maam?” She’s staring at a silver-dollar-size mound
of grey grease I just pulled through her bedsheet. “We call is body sludge, ma’am, you could fry an egg in it!”
(For
some of the guys, the body sludge demo is the kick of a call—it gets you into
her bedroom—sometimes the sheet is still warm, curled body hairs, etc., as you
pull back the covers and set the machine, without its bag, right on her bed.)
But
mostly we sat in the diner the Closer found, while one of us canvassed for
leads:
“Good
morning, maam.
Have you heard of the Kirby Quiz Program, WABC,
Next
thing she knows, one of us is on her door step with the 80 pound box. Foot in door, machine out,
get into the demo before she knows what hit her. They called this “creative saleswork,” because you
went to them.
Blacks
never made payments, so we hit low-class white neighborhoods. Some houses had no rubs. So we demoed on the couch, or on the
walls. If they had a car, simonize it.
These
were the first hours of social consciousness for me, awareness of the other,
imposition, morals. I knew I was “over”
her, like a big animal over a little one, but in 1952, I also merely had a
weird summer job, working with grown men, maybe making 3 times what I’d make as
a lifeguard . . .
But a
log was rolled over for me. I saw an underside, another shade of white, the odor of poverty, the
dirt, grease and dust Kirby was dependent upon.
And diner life was more depressing than being down on a crumb-sodden
rug, for we salesmen were essentially out of
work. I knew Jack Distlehorst
whose dad had the
Over
dinner, my father’d say: “Well, how’d you do
today?” I thought a sale was more than
ok, but I wondered in bed: who are these people. These people.
Who was I to do this?
My
Claus Oldenberg monument for the 1950s American midwest is a hand holding out a piece of muslin with its
grey dollop of body sludge, fixed under the raised eyebrows of a housewife in
faded terry cloth bathrobe and curlers, who only a decade earlier was a
cheerleader spreadeagled in mid-air as her
partner-in-sweat-to-be dribbled out onto the gym’s polished-to-a-gleam pine
floor.
for Ron Padgett