The
Shapeliness of Shapelessness
I slipped down, down into my shoe, where I quickly found it was
impossible to climb out. Not that I had shrunken exactly, or that
the shoe had suddenly exploded in height. No, I was now a
semi-liquid, a gelid sea thinking about how the world was now the shape
of a shoe. After pondering this for a bit, I rose and congealed,
a frozen wave looking about, noticing that I had regained my old height
and then some. A wave always about to fall is how I must describe
myself.
For some reason, I was wearing a top hat and
holding a cane with an ivory porpoise for a handle. I looked
about for a street sign but could find one nowhere. Without a
street, numbered door, or even a No
Parking warning, I was nameless. Perhaps I should be
called What Ignited the Magma at the Core of the Earth Melted Me into
This Unsightly Entity.
This is where it gets confusing. I then
slipped into a punctuation mark, though I can't discern which, due to
the lack of light. I could be inside a misplaced comma, or
perhaps stuck in the period loitering at the end of this
sentence. Then again, I might be in a jar of blameless blackberry
preserves in your pantry.
Should you ever venture near me, do use
caution. I could rise up at any time, a wave beyond all restraint
and control. Therefore, it would be wise if you kept your mouth
firmly closed at all times. Not that I would ever wish to abide
inside you, sloshing about and gaping up at the shapeliness of your
soft, teasing tongue.
So
You Want to Pay Your Debt with a Pouch of Parsnips
The Head grew so large that it dwarfed its body, and soon trunk and
arms and legs were subsumed into the Head, as if they always belonged
there. One morning a doctor, carved out of a walking stick, came
to see the Head, and he tossed a Handbook
to Simplified Levitation into the open grave he found behind the
Head's right eye. Eventually a miniature city grew around the
base of the Head, where in certain alleys you could buy a palpitating
pencil, amnesia-ridden pistol, or a ticket to the elevator that took
you to the garden terrace near the top of the Head (though no one who
rode the elevator ever returned). In the winter, clouds formed
around the Head, so thick you could only see the mouth, which would say
at fifty-five-minute intervals: Be
still. This tongue carries the first letter of every sentence you will
ever utter. Perhaps you've already heard how the Head
counts its teeth each day before closing its eyes, and then counts them
again after opening its eyes. One afternoon a drone flew around
the Head, even briefly entering the left ear cavity. And when the
drone pilot displayed the video footage at the local movie theater, all
that could be seen was a flour-dusted baby resting on a fleshy red
mattress, otherwise known as the Head's tongue. How can the Head speak with those enormous
thorns rising along the tongue's inner ridges? someone asked
aloud. But then, we've learned it does no good to ponder such questions
about the creature we call the Head.
On
the Discovery of a Secret Document Lodged in the Ex-President's Nasal
Cavity
Then someone named Charlotte-But-Call-Me-Chocolat began to flicker and
fade, levitating a small island, owned by Jeff Bezos, or maybe Steve
Bannon, just off Costa Rica. That's when Norway began to
appear, bit by fishy bit, at a weedy bus stop in Patterson, New
Jersey. With scalpel, needle, tweezer, hook, and chisel, I
started repairing injured language in a windy Danish farmhouse. A
knife-sharpener I'm sure I met before in Purgatory, Indiana, told me: Don't go near any bowl that's swallowed a
black leather jacket. History is littered with loud
presidents thrashing in colossal beds. At 4 a.m., I photographed
you photographing a radioactive poppy seed, edible chalk, and a
cucumber with a Ronald Reagan pompadour. Yellow specks the color
of translucent bread said: Yes, we
were once a bust of Apollo long before the invention of bioluminescent
bandaids. Behind your mutating motherboard, there was a verbal
spread that read: Visible only to
the temporarily visible. Back in
Flatbush, I devoured the honey-almond cerebral cortex stashed in the
pantry, though I despised the cockatoo that kept quoting Frank Sinatra:
Oh, I just wish someone would
try to hurt you so I could kill them for you. History is
littered with loud presidents, drooling over the sublime, thrashing in
colossal beds. Soon metafictional chaos choked the gutter, sewer,
Sappho's elbow. But I remembered not to avert my eyes, even when
my eyes closed the eyes behind my eyes. To delay the decay of a
violin, Laurie Anderson once said, repeat these words through Lou
Reed's death mask: When love is gone
/ There's always justice / And when justice is gone / There's always
force.
John Bradley lives in lives in DeKalb, Illinois. His poetry has
appeared in Caliban, Cloudbank,
Hotel Amerika,
Otoliths, SurVision, and other journals. His most recent
book is Dear Morpheus, The Glue That
Is You (Dos Madres Press). A frequent reviewer for Rain Taxi, he is currently a poetry
editor for Cider Press Review.